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Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

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Page 1: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Ecology

Page 2: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Warm Up:

• 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project?

• 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it at?

• 3) What is a consumer? What are the types of consumers?

• Objective: Students will describe relationships between organisms that make up a community by researching on the internet the four types of relationships.

Page 3: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

WHAT IS ECOLOGY?

Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer

Ecology is a science of relationships

Page 4: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Producer- plants, algae, or bacteria that create their own food from the suns energy

Page 5: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Consumer-animals that must eat producers for energy

Page 6: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Primary consumers-eat plants (herbivore & decomposers)

Secondary/tertiary consumers-prey animals (carnivores, omnivores, & decomposers)

Page 7: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

The environment is made up of two factors:

• Biotic factors- all living organisms inhabiting the Earth

• Abiotic factors- nonliving parts of the environment (i.e. temperature, soil, light, moisture, air currents)

Page 8: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Organism

Population

Community

Biosphere

Ecosystem

Page 9: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Organism - any unicellular or multicellular form exhibiting all of the characteristics of life, an individual.

•The lowest level of organization

Page 10: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

POPULATION

a group of organisms of one species living in the same place at the same time that interbreed

Produce fertile offspring

Compete with each other for resources (food, mates, shelter, etc.)

Page 11: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Community - several interacting populations that inhabit a common environment and are interdependent.

Page 12: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Ecosystem - populations in a community and the abiotic factors with which they interact (ex. marine, terrestrial)

Page 13: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Biosphere - life supporting portions of Earth composed of air, land, fresh water, and salt water.

•The highest level of organization

Page 14: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Habitat vs. Niche

Niche - the role a species plays in a community; its total way of life

Habitat- the place where an organism lives

Page 15: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Habitat vs. Niche

A niche is determined by limiting factors.

Limiting factor- any factors that restricts an organisms in a specific environment.

Page 16: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Type of Niche

Fundamental niche-the role a species can have in its natural habitat

Realized niche-the role a species actually ends up having

Page 17: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Limiting Factors

•Amount of of……food, water, temperature, space, mates

Page 18: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Feeding Relationships• There are 3 main types of feeding

relationships

1. Producer - Consumer

2. Predator - Prey3. Parasite - Host

Page 19: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Symbiotic Relationships

Symbiosis- two species living together

3 Types of symbiosis:

1. Commensalism

2. Parasitism

3. Mutualism

Page 20: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it
Page 21: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Symbiotic Relationships

Commensalism- one species benefits and the other is neither harmed nor helped

Epiphytes: A plant, such as a tropical orchid or a bromeliad, that grows on another plant upon which it depends for mechanical support but not for nutrients. Also called xerophyte, air plant.

Page 22: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Symbiotic Relationships

Commensalism- one species benefits and the other is neither harmed nor helped

Page 23: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Symbiotic Relationships

Parasitism- one species benefits (parasite) and the other is harmed (host)

Page 24: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Symbiotic Relationships

Mutualism- beneficial to both species

Page 25: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Type of relationship

Species harmed

Species benefits

Species neutral

Commensalism

Parasitism

Mutualism

= 1 species

Page 26: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Trophic Levels

•Each link in a food chain is known as a trophic level.

•Each levels represent a feeding step in the transfer of energy and matter in an ecosystem.

Page 27: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Trophic Levels

Biomass- the amount of organic matter in a habitat

• Available energy and biomass decrease as you move up in level

•Lost to the environment

Page 28: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Trophic Levels

Producers- Autotrophs

Primary consumers- Herbivores

Secondary consumers-small

carnivores

Tertiary consumers-

top carnivores

E

N

E

R

G

Y

Page 29: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it
Page 30: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it
Page 31: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Trophic Levels

Food chain- simple model of food/energy moving in a community

Page 32: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it
Page 33: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Trophic Levels

Food web- shows ALL possible feeding relationships in a community

Page 34: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Food chain Food web(just 1 path of energy) (all possible energy

paths)

Page 35: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it
Page 36: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it
Page 37: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Nutrient Cycles

Cycling maintains homeostasis (balance) in the environment.

New matter isn’t created or destroyed, it is recycled

Page 38: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Water cycle

•Evaporation

•Liquid to gas

•Transpiration

•Water leaving the leaf of

•Condensation

•precipitation

Page 39: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Water cycle-

Page 40: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Carbon cycle-

•Photosynthesis and respiration cycle carbon and

oxygen through the environment.

Page 41: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Carbon cycle-

Page 42: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Nitrogen cycle-

Atmospheric nitrogen (N2) makes up nearly 78%-80% of air.

Organisms can not use it in that form.

Lightning and bacteria convert nitrogen into usable forms.

Page 43: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Nitrogen cycle-

Only in certain bacteria and industrial technologies can fix nitrogen.

Nitrogen fixation-convert atmospheric nitrogen (N2) into ammonium (NH4

+) which can be used to make organic compounds like amino acids.

N2 NH4+

Page 44: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Nitrogen cycle-

Nitrogen-fixing bacteria:

Some live in a symbiotic relationship with plants of the legume family (e.g., soybeans, clover, peanuts).

Page 45: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Nitrogen cycle-

•Some nitrogen-fixing bacteria live free in the soil.

•Nitrogen-fixing cyanobacteria are essential to maintaining the fertility of semi-aquatic environments like rice paddies.

Page 46: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it
Page 47: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Atmospheric nitrogenLightning

Nitrogen fixing

bacteria

Ammonium Nitrification by bacteria

Nitrites Nitrates

Denitrification by bacteria

Plants

Animals

Decomposers

Nitrogen Cycle

Page 48: Ecology. Warm Up: 1) What is ecology? What are we studying so far in your poster project? 2) What is a producer? What trophic level would you find it

Toxins in food chains-

While energy decreases as it moves up the food chain, toxins increase in potency.

•This is called biological magnification

Ex: DDT & Bald Eagles