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Ecology-Chap 2 Study of interactions of organisms with each other and their environment

Ecology chap 2

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Page 1: Ecology chap 2

Ecology-Chap 2Study of interactions of organisms with each other and their

environment

Page 2: Ecology chap 2

Level of organization

• Cells -> organisms -> population -> community -> ecosystems -> biosphere – All connected so they all affect one another• When something happens to one; all affected –

domino effect

Page 3: Ecology chap 2

Environment

• All external factors affecting an organism– Abiotic –light, temperature, salinity, turbidity,

weather conditions, pH, waves, currents– Biotic-predators, prey, parasites, etc.

Page 4: Ecology chap 2

Habitat-Where they live– Examples: rocky shores (cali and Maine), sandy

shores (jax beach), mangroves (south FL), coral reefs (keys), deep sea (Hydothermal vents

Page 5: Ecology chap 2

Niche –Role in ecosystem “their job”

• Can be viewed on an a abiotic side OR a biotic side, looking at both at same time gets very complex an is difficult to illustrate

• Lets take a look at the biotic side……

Page 6: Ecology chap 2

Competition

• Occurs when organisms require same limited resources (food, light, space, mates)– Can be within same species (intraspecific) OR

between similar species (interspecific) – Prevents 2 groups of organisms from occupying

the same niche– Usually no 2 organisms can use exactly the same

resources in exactly the same place at exactly the same time……..WHY?????????

Page 7: Ecology chap 2

Sooo…..

• Some species have adaptations that have allowed them to be successful?– Plankton feeding fish• Sea bass- eat close to reef• Damselfish-each futher away (adaption to feeding in

different location)• Now these two species are feeding on the same thing

BUT not in the same space.

Page 8: Ecology chap 2

Predator Prey relationships

• Number of individuals is dependant on the abundance of their food source.– Ex if the number of bull sharks were too increase

to massive numbers because of a lot of food, then the number of fish they eat would go down, then eventually bull sharks would decrease

Page 9: Ecology chap 2

Keystone species

• Has great effects on foodwebs/ecosystems• Increases biodiversity • Example sea otters in Pacific Coast

(Washington State)

Page 11: Ecology chap 2
Page 12: Ecology chap 2

Symbiosis-”living together” cohabitating

• 3 main types– 1. mutualism- both benefit– 2. commensalism- one benefits, other neither

harmed nor helped– 3. parasitism- one lives off another• Parasite benefits and host is harmed

Page 13: Ecology chap 2

Mutualism• Clownfish gets home• Anemone-gets protection so other fish

don’t eat tenacles

So dependent on each other that need each other to survive. Coral give zooxanthellae N, P, and CO2 and zoo give corals carbohydrates

Page 14: Ecology chap 2

Commensalism

• Shark-no benefit or harm; remoras get free ride and eat leftover food

Barnacle gets ride and place to live; whale no benefit or harm

Page 15: Ecology chap 2

Parasitism• Sea

Cucumber – pearl fish feed on respiratory tissue and reproductive organs

Page 16: Ecology chap 2

Do pg. 31 # 1-4 Short Answer