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• An ecosystem is made up of a community of organisms and the non-living environment.
• The living components of the ecosystem are called biotic factors, which include plants, fish, invertebrates, and single-celled organisms.
• The non-living components, or abiotic factors, include the physical and chemical components in the environment—temperature, wind, water, sunlight, and oxygen.
• Biotic and abiotic factors influence each other in an always changing balance called dynamic equilibrium.
Biotic and Abiotic Factors in Ecosystems2.1
VOCABULARY
ecology
organism
habitat
population
community
ecosystem
biosphere
biotic factor
abiotic factor
dynamic equilibrium
limiting factor
Ecological Roles and Relationships2.2
VOCABULARYnutrients
producer
autotroph
phytoplankton
consumer
heterotroph
herbivores
primary consumer
zooplankton
carnivore
omnivore
detrivore
decomposer
biodegradation
predation
predator
prey
predator–prey cycle
• An ecosystem is a complex network of interactions.
• All organisms must take in water, food, and nutrients. Nutrients are elements and compounds that organisms need to live and grow.
• Organisms can be producers, consumers, herbivores, carnivores, or decomposers in ecosystems.
• Eventually nutrients cycle back into the ecosystem for the producers.
Symbiosis2.3
VOCABULARY
symbiosis
mutualism
commensalism
parasitism
host
parasite
• Symbiosis refers to any close relationship between
two different species. There are three types of
symbiotic relationships:
1. Mutualism is a relationship in which both species
obtain some benefit from the interaction.
2. Commensalism is an interaction in which one
organism benefits while the other is unaffected.
3. Parasitism occurs when one organism (the
parasite) lives and feeds on, or in, the body of
another organism (the host).
• Nutrients are cycled back into the ecosystem, but energy only moves in one direction through the community from producers to herbivores to carnivores.
• Trophic level describes the position of the organism in relation to the order of nutrient and energy transfers in an ecosystem. Organisms that eat the same type of food belong to the same trophic level.
• Food chains show a single pathway taken by nutrients and energy through the trophic levels.
• In reality, ecosystems have more complex food webs, showing the different cross-linked food chains.
Trophic Levels and Energy Flow2.4
VOCABULARY
trophic level
food chain
food web
• Ecologists use three different types of ecological
pyramids to illustrate ecosystems:
1. Pyramid of energy: represents
how much energy is available
in each trophic level
2. Pyramid of numbers: represents the actual number
of organisms present in each trophic level
3. Pyramid of biomass: represents
the total mass of living things in
each trophic level
Ecological Pyramids2.5
VOCABULARY
ecological pyramid
food pyramid
pyramid of energy
pyramid of numbers
pyramid of biomass
Interactions in Ecosystems2CHAPTER
• Ecosystems are made up of living
things (biotic factors) and non-living
things (abiotic factors), which are
connected to each other in complex
interrelationships.
• Nutrients are cycled within an ecosystem.
producers consumers decomposers producers
Interactions in Ecosystems
• Energy flows through ecosystems.
• This energy comes from an outside source: the Sun.
• Ecologists represent food and energy
flows in food chain, food web, and pyramid
diagrams.
2CHAPTER