Title: Unit 2 Chapter 2
1Principles of Ecology
2What is ecology?
- Ecology study of interactions that take place
between organisms and their environment
3Biosphere
- the portion of the Earth that supports living
things - Ex ocean, forest, atmosphere.
4Abiotic vs. Biotic factors
- Abiotic nonliving parts of the environment
- Ex light, air, temperature, soil
- Biotic living parts of the environment
- Ex bacteria, protist, fungus, plant, animal
5Which is Biotic/Abiotic?
6Levels of organization
- In biology, we begin at the chemical level which
make up cells - Which make tissues
- Organs
- Systems
- And finally, the individual organism
7Levels of organization from smallest to largest
in an Ecosystem.
- Organisms
- Individual
- Population
- Community
- Ecosystem
- Biosphere
8Levels of organization
- In Ecology, we begin with the individual and move
through the levels to the planet, Earth
9Individual
- made of cells, uses energy, reproduces, responds,
grows, and develops
10Population
- group of organisms all of the same species, which
interbreed and live in the same area at the same
time
11Community
- interacting populations in a certain area at a
certain time
12Ecosystem
- interacting communities and abiotic factors
13Habitat vs. Niche
- Habitat place where organism lives
- Niche role or position a species has in its
environment
14End of What is Ecology Notes?
- Now lets do some practice!!!
15Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem Notes Du (2)
16Ecology and the flow of energy and matter
- By the end of this portion of the notes you
should be able to describe how matter and energy
flow through trophic levels using various models,
including food chains, food webs and ecological
pyramids
17How organisms obtain energy
- Autotroph (producer) photosynthetic or
chemosynthetic, makes own food - Heterotroph (consumer) eat other organisms,
cannot make own food - Decomposer breaks down dead or decaying
organisms, recycles matter
18Autotroph
19- The sugar produced by autotrophs (through
photosynthesis) can then be used by heterotrophs
for energy -
20Heterotrophs - scavengers
- Scavengers feed off of dead or decaying living
things but do not recycle matter back into the
ecosystem
21Heterotrophs - herbivores
- consume only vegetative matter
- mostly primary consumers.
22Heterotrophs - carnivores
- obtain energy from eating other consumers
- Secondary and tertiary consumers
23Decomposers
- Bacteria and fungi break down living matter and
help release nutrients. - Decomposers are found at every level of the food
chain. - They are natures recyclers.
Typical examples fungus and bacteria
24Autotrophs
Third-order heterotrophs
Second-order heterotrophs
First-order heterotrophs
Decomposers
25How Energy Flows
- From producer (autotroph) to consumer
(heterotroph)
AUTOTROPH Water CO2 ? Sugar O2
HETEROTROPH Sugar O2 ? water CO2
26Food chain
- Series of steps in which organisms transfer
energy by eating and being eaten - The arrows show the direction energy flows.
- Trophic levels feeding step
berries ? mice ? black bear
27Food web
- shows interactions between organisms (all
possible routes)
28Energy pyramid
- Shows how much energy is available at each
trophic (energy) level. - Only 10 of the available energy is transferred
up to the next trophic level. The rest is
released as heat
Pyramid of Energy
Heat
0.1 Consumers
Heat
1 Consumers
10 Consumers
Heat
Heat
Parasites, scavengers, and decomposers feed at
each level.
29Pyramid of Numbers
- Each level represents the number of organisms
consumed by the level above it.
30End of Lecture 2
31Ecology Notes 3
32Two cycles in nature
- Carbon cycle
- Nitrogen cycle
33- Carbon Cycle
- driven by photosynthesis respiration
- recycles carbon, a primary component of all
organic compounds
CO2 in Atmosphere
CO2 in Ocean
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35Carbon cycle
36- Nitrogen Cycle
- driven by decomposition of nitrifying bacteria
and fungi - atmospheric nitrogen must be converted to a
usable form (by plants)
N2 in Atmosphere
NO3 and NO2
NH3
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38 Nitrogen cycle
39Now lets Practice
- Time to Draw some cycles.