Energy Movement in Ecosystems
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Transcript Energy Movement in Ecosystems
EXOTIC SPECIES
Chapter 1.12
An introduced or non-native
species.
This species is living outside
its native range and has
arrived by human activity,
either deliberate or
accidental.
-the function or position (j0b) of an organism or
population within an ecosystem. What the
organism eats, what eats it, when it breeds,
when it is most active and other roles in the
ecosystem.
-the particular area within a habitat occupied by
an organism.
The introduced species;
maintains itself in a limited range of habitats. The species does not disturb
the ecosystem because it occupies an empty niche.
spreads and affects others in the ecosystem. This threatens native
biodiversity.
becomes dominant and alters or upsets the whole ecosystem.
affects several ecosystems and threatens biodiversity in each ecosystem.
Killer Bees
African “killer bees” were introduced in Brazil in
1957 to increase the honey production.
They out-competed and displaced the natural
populations of bees and caused a decline in honey
production!
These bees are aggressive and will swarm and
attack animals they feel threatened by. 150
people have died from “killer bee” attacks.
Discovered in 1990’s in Lake Erie
Brought in by ships visiting from the Caspian Sea
This mussel found lots of food and spread quickly
through the Great Lakes.
Attached to any hard object and blocked water
intake pipes choking hydroelectric plants and cut
off freshwater supplies for industry.
Is now a permanent part of the Great Lakes food
web.
Zebra mussels;
compete with the native pearly mussels.
provide food for ducks and bird
Provides shelter for snails, insects, small crustaceans and water mites
their larvae are also a good food source
Eat algae allowing other aquatic plants to thrive
Remove pollutants from the Great Lakes
Water is 60% clearer than before the zebra mussels
These toxins are then passed on to predators and can be toxic to animals further
up the food chain.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qxxgflwX2Fg
Gobi Fish
Found in the Welland Canal in 1996.
Likely came from a ship that had visited the Black Sea
Feed on zebra mussels
Feed on the eggs of native species such as walleye, perch
and small mouth bass
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nmU
ture=related
Snakeheads are native to Africa and Asia.
Snakeheads were once a large part of an aquarium fish
industry and in some cultures considered a food
delicacy. They arrive in local waters by people who
abandon them.
They are an aggressive fish which outcompetes native
species.
These fish can move overland from lake to lake.
Read pages 40 44
Construct a chart and list the positive and negative
effects of the introduction of the zebra mussel into the
Great Lakes.
Copy the food web which contains the zebra mussel.