Title: Habitats, Niches, and Community Interactions
1Autotroph
Heterotroph
2Food Web
3Energy Flow
4Energy Pyramids
5Habitats, Niches, and Community Interactions
6Biotic and Abiotic Factors
- Ecosystems are influenced by a combination of
biological and physical factors - Biotic Factors the biological influences on
organisms - Abiotic Factors Physical, or nonliving, factors
- i.e. temp, precipitation, humidity, wind,
nutrient availability, soil, sunlight, etc.
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8Habitats and Niches
- Habitat the area where an organism lives.
Includes both the biotic abiotic factors - Niche the full range of physical biological
conditions in which an organism lives the way
in which the organism uses those conditions
9Niche includes
- Place in the food web
- Range of temp. organism needs to survive
- Type of food organism eats
- How it obtains food
- Who uses the organism for food
- Physical conditions required to survive
- When how organism reproduces
10Competitive Exclusion Principle
- No two species can share a niche in the same
habitat!!...example is the Warblers
11Warbler Niches Each of these warbler species has a different niche in its spruce tree habitat. By feeding in different areas of the tree, the birds avoid competing with one another for food.
12Community Interactions
- Community interactions, such as competition,
predation, and various forms of symbiosis can
powerfully affect an ecosystem.
13Competition
- Competition occurs when organisms of the same or
different species attempt to use a resource at
the same place and time.
Trees in competition for light
14Predation
- Predation one organism captures and feeds on
another
Lynx and Hare
15Symbiosis
- Symbiosis Any relationship in which two species
live closely together - Mutualism both species benefit
Clownfish and sea anemone
Hummingbird and Flower
16- Commensalism one species benefits, other neither
harmed nor helped
Barnacles on a whale
17- Parasitism one organism lives in or in another
harms it
A flea or tick feeds on the blood of its host and
may also carry disease-causing microorganisms
Mistletoe in a tree
18Characteristics of Populations5.1 pg. 119-122
19Characteristics of Populations are
- Geographic distribution (area inhabited by
population) - Density
- Growth rate
- Age structure
20Factors that affect population size are
- Number of births
- Number of deaths
- Number of individuals that enter or leave
population - Immigration move in
- Emigration move out
21- If a population has abundant space and food and
is protected from predators disease, then
organisms will multiply and the population will
increase.
22Exponential growth occurs when the individuals of
a population reproduce at a constant rate.
J-shaped Curve Exponential growth
Occurs under ideal conditions with unlimited
resources
(Has not reached its carrying capacity)
23S-shaped curve Logistic Growth
Populations are limited by space, food, etc.
Carrying capacity largest number of individuals
that a given environment can support