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Organization in the
    Biosphere
What is Ecology?
• Study of the interactions between living
  things & the environment




 Everything is connected to everything else
What is Ecology?
• Abiotic factors
  – Any non-living part
  of the environment


• Biotic factors
  – Any living part of the
  environment
How would the following
                    abiotic factors affect the
                      living things in their
                          environment?

• Light

• Temperature

• Water

• Soil & Minerals
How would the following
                     biotic factors affect the
                       living things in their
                           environment?

• Organisms that eat the same food

• Size of species

• Number of plants

• Type of predators
Levels of Organization

1. Organism
  – An individual


2. Population
  – A group of organism’s living in the same area
Levels of Organization
3. Community
 – All the populations living in the same area
Levels of Organization
4. Ecosystem
  – All the interactions between populations and
    communites
  – Both biotic & abiotic factors




5. Bioshpere
  – All parts of the Earth that support life
Organisms & Ecosystems
• Habitat
  – The part of the
    environment where an
    organism lives.
  – May change or even
    disappear
Organisms & Ecosystems
• Niche
  – The role or “job” of an
    organism
  – Describes how they live
    & reproduce
  – Each organism has their
    own niche
Organisms & Ecosystems
• Competition
  – When organisms fight
    over limited resources
  – Often occurs if two
    species try to occupy
    the same niche
  – E.g.
Organisms & Ecosystems
• Competition
  – The more similar the
    needs of
    populations, the more
    intense the competition
  – Competition for the
    same niche may result
    in one population being
    eliminated
Types of Relationships
• Symbiosis
  – A close relationship between organisms for
    different species.
  – May be good or bad

 MUTUALISM       PARASITISM         COMMENSALISM
Types of Relationships
• Mutualism
  – Both organisms benefit
  – E.g.
Types of Relationships
• Commensalism
  – One organism benefits & the other is neutral
  – E.g.
Types of Relationships
• Parasitism
  – One organism benefits & the other is harmed
  – E.g.
Energy Flow
• Energy is needed for survival.
• What is the ultimate source of energy?




• How a species obtains energy is an
important part of its niche.
Energy Flow
• Producer = Autotroph
  – Make their own food



• Consumer = Heterotroph
  – Must get food from other organisms
Energy Flow
• Herbivore
  – Plant eater
• Carnivore
  – Meat eater
• Omnivore
  – Both plant &
    meat eater
Energy Flow
• Scavenger
  – Feed on dead
    organisms
• Decomposer
  – Breaks down the
    bodies of dead
    organisms, a recycler
Energy Flow
• Food Chain
  – Shows how energy
    moves through an
    ecosystem
  – Trophic level
    • Each “feeding” step
Food Chain            Level 4 Tertiary consumer       Sun

                                             Top
• Begin with energy                          carnivore

  from sun                Level 3 Secondary consumer

• Plant are always                     Carnivore
  the first level         Level 2 Primary consumer
• Usually 4-5 levels
                                      Herbivore
• All levels connect to
                          Level 1 Producer
  decomposers

                                                         Fungi
                                Decomposers
                                         Bacteria
Energy Flow
      • Pyramid of Energy
        – Tracks the amount of
          energy found at each
          trophic level of a food
          web
Energy flows through…
               secondary
                                loss of
               consumers        energy
sun            (carnivores)

                                loss of
                                energy

            primary consumers
            (herbivores)
                                loss of
                                energy


      producers (plants)
Loss of energy
 • Loss of energy between levels of food chain
     – To where is the energy lost? The cost of living!




          17%
          growth

                                                  energy lost to
only this energy                                  daily living
moves on to the     33%
 next level in      cellular
the food chain      respiration         50%
                                        waste (feces)
Energy Flow
     • Each trophic level uses
       about 10% of its energy
       to build new tissue
     • This new tissue is used
       as food for the next
       trophic level
       – What does this mean for
         the remaining levels?
     • The remaining 90% is
       lost.
Energy Flow
• Food Web
  – Shows all possible
    feeding
    relationships
  – Links many food
    chains
Energy Flow
• Pyramid of Biomass
  – Biomass = amount of organic matter
  – Since energy decreases, total mass of living things at
    each trophic level also decreases
But what about nutrients?
•Nutrients cycle around through decomposers

                          consumers

                                               decomposers

                          producers
                                                     phosphorus
potassium       iron
                                      carbon

  nitrogen

             calcium
                       soil                         magnesium
Nutrients cycle…
                                      n

• Nutrients must be recycled          u
                                      t
                                      r
  to be available for the next        i
  generation                          e
                                      n
• decomposers return                  t
                                      s
  nutrients to the soil after
  creatures die
     • fungi
     • bacteria
                                 decomposers
Energy flows                         Nutrients cycle

           loss of      secondary
           energy       consumers
     sun                (carnivores)

                                          decomposers
           loss of   primary consumers
           energy
                     (herbivores)



loss of
energy     producers (plants)
                                                   soil
Nutrient Cycles – Carbon Cycle
• Found naturally in
  atmosphere as CO2
• Photosynthesis
• Respiration
• Decay & Fossil fuels
Nutrient Cycles – Water Cycle
               • Life depends on
                 water, cycled through
                 atmosphere & Earth

               •   Evaporation
               •   Precipitation
               •   Transpiration
               •   Run off
Nutrient Cycles – Nitrogen Cycle
                • Found naturally in
                  atmosphere, but
                  unusable
                • Nitrogen fixation
Self-sustaining ecosystems
must have…
                                          constant input
                                          constant input of energy
                                          of energy

                      nutrients cycle

 Matter cannot
 Don’t forget
 be laws of
 thecreated or
 destroyed
 Physics!




                                                     inputs
                             Cycling of               energy
                             nutrients
                 biosphere                            nutrients
Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems

• Limiting Factors
  – Any factor that limits
    the make up of an
    ecological community
  – May be biotic or
    abiotic
  – E.g. temperature,
    wind, lack of rain, food
    sources, shelter,
    mates, etc.
Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems

• Carrying Capacity
  – The maximum number
    of organisms the
    environment can
    support
Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems

                     • Ecological
                       Succession
                       – The orderly,
                         natural changes
                         & species
                         replacement
                         that occur over
                         time.
                       – E.g.
Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems

• Primary Succession
  – Succession that
    results in new soil &
    land formations
  – Takes thousands of
    years
  – E.g. what occurs after
    a lava flow or glacier
    retreat
• Pioneer species
  – The first species to inhabit a new area
• Climax community
  – The stable mature community that persists and
    undergoes very little change
Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems

• Secondary Succession
  – Succession that
    occurs after a
    community is
    disrupted by natural or
    human disasters
  – Takes hundreds of years
  – after a forest fire or
    hurricane
Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems

Pond Succession

– Gradual accumulation
  of sediment
– Plant growth begins
Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems

• Animal Succession
  – Plant succession is a limiting factor for animal
    succession.

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Ecology

  • 2. What is Ecology? • Study of the interactions between living things & the environment Everything is connected to everything else
  • 3. What is Ecology? • Abiotic factors – Any non-living part of the environment • Biotic factors – Any living part of the environment
  • 4. How would the following abiotic factors affect the living things in their environment? • Light • Temperature • Water • Soil & Minerals
  • 5. How would the following biotic factors affect the living things in their environment? • Organisms that eat the same food • Size of species • Number of plants • Type of predators
  • 6. Levels of Organization 1. Organism – An individual 2. Population – A group of organism’s living in the same area
  • 7. Levels of Organization 3. Community – All the populations living in the same area
  • 8. Levels of Organization 4. Ecosystem – All the interactions between populations and communites – Both biotic & abiotic factors 5. Bioshpere – All parts of the Earth that support life
  • 9. Organisms & Ecosystems • Habitat – The part of the environment where an organism lives. – May change or even disappear
  • 10. Organisms & Ecosystems • Niche – The role or “job” of an organism – Describes how they live & reproduce – Each organism has their own niche
  • 11. Organisms & Ecosystems • Competition – When organisms fight over limited resources – Often occurs if two species try to occupy the same niche – E.g.
  • 12. Organisms & Ecosystems • Competition – The more similar the needs of populations, the more intense the competition – Competition for the same niche may result in one population being eliminated
  • 13. Types of Relationships • Symbiosis – A close relationship between organisms for different species. – May be good or bad MUTUALISM PARASITISM COMMENSALISM
  • 14. Types of Relationships • Mutualism – Both organisms benefit – E.g.
  • 15. Types of Relationships • Commensalism – One organism benefits & the other is neutral – E.g.
  • 16. Types of Relationships • Parasitism – One organism benefits & the other is harmed – E.g.
  • 17. Energy Flow • Energy is needed for survival. • What is the ultimate source of energy? • How a species obtains energy is an important part of its niche.
  • 18. Energy Flow • Producer = Autotroph – Make their own food • Consumer = Heterotroph – Must get food from other organisms
  • 19. Energy Flow • Herbivore – Plant eater • Carnivore – Meat eater • Omnivore – Both plant & meat eater
  • 20. Energy Flow • Scavenger – Feed on dead organisms • Decomposer – Breaks down the bodies of dead organisms, a recycler
  • 21. Energy Flow • Food Chain – Shows how energy moves through an ecosystem – Trophic level • Each “feeding” step
  • 22. Food Chain Level 4 Tertiary consumer Sun Top • Begin with energy carnivore from sun Level 3 Secondary consumer • Plant are always Carnivore the first level Level 2 Primary consumer • Usually 4-5 levels Herbivore • All levels connect to Level 1 Producer decomposers Fungi Decomposers Bacteria
  • 23. Energy Flow • Pyramid of Energy – Tracks the amount of energy found at each trophic level of a food web
  • 24. Energy flows through… secondary loss of consumers energy sun (carnivores) loss of energy primary consumers (herbivores) loss of energy producers (plants)
  • 25. Loss of energy • Loss of energy between levels of food chain – To where is the energy lost? The cost of living! 17% growth energy lost to only this energy daily living moves on to the 33% next level in cellular the food chain respiration 50% waste (feces)
  • 26. Energy Flow • Each trophic level uses about 10% of its energy to build new tissue • This new tissue is used as food for the next trophic level – What does this mean for the remaining levels? • The remaining 90% is lost.
  • 27. Energy Flow • Food Web – Shows all possible feeding relationships – Links many food chains
  • 28. Energy Flow • Pyramid of Biomass – Biomass = amount of organic matter – Since energy decreases, total mass of living things at each trophic level also decreases
  • 29. But what about nutrients? •Nutrients cycle around through decomposers consumers decomposers producers phosphorus potassium iron carbon nitrogen calcium soil magnesium
  • 30. Nutrients cycle… n • Nutrients must be recycled u t r to be available for the next i generation e n • decomposers return t s nutrients to the soil after creatures die • fungi • bacteria decomposers
  • 31. Energy flows Nutrients cycle loss of secondary energy consumers sun (carnivores) decomposers loss of primary consumers energy (herbivores) loss of energy producers (plants) soil
  • 32. Nutrient Cycles – Carbon Cycle • Found naturally in atmosphere as CO2 • Photosynthesis • Respiration • Decay & Fossil fuels
  • 33. Nutrient Cycles – Water Cycle • Life depends on water, cycled through atmosphere & Earth • Evaporation • Precipitation • Transpiration • Run off
  • 34. Nutrient Cycles – Nitrogen Cycle • Found naturally in atmosphere, but unusable • Nitrogen fixation
  • 35. Self-sustaining ecosystems must have… constant input constant input of energy of energy nutrients cycle Matter cannot Don’t forget be laws of thecreated or destroyed Physics! inputs Cycling of  energy nutrients biosphere  nutrients
  • 36. Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems • Limiting Factors – Any factor that limits the make up of an ecological community – May be biotic or abiotic – E.g. temperature, wind, lack of rain, food sources, shelter, mates, etc.
  • 37. Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems • Carrying Capacity – The maximum number of organisms the environment can support
  • 38. Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems • Ecological Succession – The orderly, natural changes & species replacement that occur over time. – E.g.
  • 39. Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems • Primary Succession – Succession that results in new soil & land formations – Takes thousands of years – E.g. what occurs after a lava flow or glacier retreat
  • 40. • Pioneer species – The first species to inhabit a new area • Climax community – The stable mature community that persists and undergoes very little change
  • 41. Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems • Secondary Succession – Succession that occurs after a community is disrupted by natural or human disasters – Takes hundreds of years – after a forest fire or hurricane
  • 42. Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems Pond Succession – Gradual accumulation of sediment – Plant growth begins
  • 43. Maintenance & Change in Ecosystems • Animal Succession – Plant succession is a limiting factor for animal succession.

Editor's Notes

  1. Woodpeckers make holes in this cactus to live. When the woodpeckers are finished with this housing, the elf owl and the screech owl move in. The elf owl eats insects and the screech owl occupies the samehabitat, but have different niches.