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FCAT Science Review

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Cycling of Material in the Biosphere. Interconnectedness of Earth's Systems and the Quality of Life. Predation ... Examples include vultures, ants, crows, hyenas. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FCAT Science Review


1
FCAT Science Review
  • Interdependence of Living Things
  • Energy Flow in Ecosystems
  • Cycling of Material in the Biosphere
  • Interconnectedness of Earths Systems and the
    Quality of Life

2
Predation
  • Predator organisms that kill and eat other
    organisms
  • Prey organism being eaten
  • Prey gt Predators

3
Symbiotic Relationships
  • Symbiosis - occurs when one species lives in a
    close association with another species over a
    period of time
  • Mutualism benefits both organisms
  • Parasitism one organism lives on or in another
    organism (host), benefits the parasite, but harms
    the host
  • Commensalism one organism benefits, the other
    is neither helped or harmed

4
Mutualism
5
Commensalism
6
Parasitism
7
Energy Flow in Ecosystems
  • Most of the energy that flows through an
    ecosystem comes from the sun
  • Energy is needed by living organisms for all of
    lifes functions (reproduction, growth, movement,
    etc.)
  • Energy flow through the ecosystem is one-way
  • Energy is lost as heat at every step in the food
    chain, which limits most food chains to 4 or 5
    links.

8
Food Chains and Webs
  • Most food chains begin with a photosynthetic
    autotroph (an organism that uses light to
    manufacture food). They are also known as
    producers because they produce the food that is
    used for the rest of the community.
  • Plants, Algae, Phytoplankton
  • Chemosynthetic bacteria do NOT use light to make
    food, but use the energy found in chemicals to
    make food.

9
  • heterotrophs (an organism that cannot make its
    own food). They are also known as consumers,
    because they must consume food for energy.
  • Herbivore eats only plants, is also known as a
    primary (1?) consumer
  • Carnivore eats only meat,
  • could be a secondary (2?) consumer an organism
    that eats an herbivore
  • could be a tertiary (3?) consumer an organism
    that eats a carnivore
  • Omnivore eats both plants and animals, could
    act as a primary, secondary, or tertiary consumer
    in the food chain, depending on what the organism
    is currently eating.
  • Scavenger feeds on the tissues of dead animals,
    could act as a primary, secondary, or tertiary
    consumer in the food chain, depending on what the
    organism is currently eating. Examples include
    vultures, ants, crows, hyenas.
  • Decomposer feeds on wastes and dead matter from
    all levels of the food chain. The primary
    decomposers in ecosystems are bacteria and fungi.
    They break down decaying matter and return the
    nutrients to the ecosystem (soil or water) so the
    producers can use them again. For this reason
    they are important to the food chain as recyclers
    of nutrients.

10
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11
Ecological Pyramid
  • Ecological pyramids can be used to show the
    amount of biomass, energy, or number of organisms
    in each trophic level.

12
  • Because the transfer of energy and matter is
    inefficient, only about 10 of what is on one
    level can be transferred to the level above it.
    This is called the 10 law.

13
Cycling of Materials in the Biosphere
  • The elements carbon (C), oxygen (O), hydrogen (H)
    and nitrogen (N) are essential to living things
    and their activities. In an ecosystem, these
    elements cycle between organisms and their
    environment in patterns called biogeochemical
    cycles.

14
Water Cycle
15
Carbon Cycle
16
Nitrogen Cycle
17
Ecosystems and Quality of Life
  • Humans and the Water Cycle
  • less than 3 of the water on the planet is fresh
    and drinkable
  • pollution of the water supply trash, chemicals,
    sewage, toxic wastes, etc.
  • deforestation reduces the amount of water that
    will transpire (evaporate across the leaf) into
    the atmosphere
  • Humans and the carbon cycle
  • cutting down forests less plants to take in CO2
  • burning fossil fuels releases CO2 into the
    environment
  • increased levels of CO2 may lead to changes in
    the climate because CO2 traps heats in the
    atmosphere (greenhouse effect leading to global
    warming)

18
  • Humans and the Nitrogen Cycle
  • erosion and irrigation can wash nitrogen out of
    the soil
  • sewage and fertilizer runoff can add excess
    nitrogen to rivers lakes and ponds where algae
    and plants grow out of control.
  • growing the same crops repeatedly can deplete the
    nitrogen from the soil
  • crop rotation with soybeans or other legumes can
    replace the nitrogen
  • adding commercially produced fertilizer, but its
    expensive and uses lots of energy from fossil
    fuels to make
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