Title: Ecology
1Ecology
2What is ecology?
- Ecology study of house
- Study of interaction among plants, animals, and
the environment
3Levels of Organization
Big
- Biosphere
- Part of Earth where life exists
- Biome
- Area of earth that has similar geography
climate - Ecosystem
- Living and non-living parts of an area
- Community
- Living part of ecosystem
- Population
- Members of the same species
- Species
- Population that reproduces in the same area
Small
4Biomes
5Biome Climate Flora Fauna
Tundra
Temperate Deciduous
Tropical Rain Forest
Taiga
Savannah
Desert
6Ecosystems
- Ecosystems- non-living living part of an area
- Abiotic non-living
- Biotic living
7Succession
- Disaster followed by increasing numbers of
species - Disasters Clear land, fire, tree fall, volcano
erupts - Pioneer organisms- hardiest organisms
- Examples Algae, moss, lichens, bacteria
- Grasses ? Shrubs ? Trees
- Climax community- maximum number of species
sustained by ecosystem
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9Abiotic Factors Nutrient Cycles
- Carbon- oxygen cycle
- Carbon released by animals
- Carbon consumed by plants
- Plants release oxygen
- Oxygen consumed by animals
10Abiotic Factors Nutrient Cycle
- Water Cycle
- Groundwater taken up by plants released into
atmosphere via evapotranspiration - Other groundwater flows to lakes streams
- Water in atmosphere condenses forming clouds
- Water falls from clouds back to ground
- Becomes groundwater
11Abiotic Factors Nutrient Cycling
- Nitrogen Cycle
- Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
- Legume
- Nitrogen ?ammonium (NH4)
- Decomposers/Saprophytes
- Nitrogenous waste ?ammonium (NH4)
- Nitrifying bacteria
- Ammonium (NH4) ? nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and
nitrates (NO3) - Denitrifying bacteria
- Nitrogen dioxide (NO2) and nitrates (NO3) ? free
nitrogen
12Communities
- Communities- all the living organisms within a
community - Includes different species of organisms
13Communities within an Ecosystem Interactions
- Commensalism
- 1 benefits, other unaffected (/0)
- Examples Hippos birds Sucker fish sharks
- Mutualism
- Both benefit (/)
- Examples Lichens ? fungi moisture) algae (food
water) Protazoa (digest) termites (shelter,
food) Bacteria (converts N) roots of legume
(makes food) - Parastism
- 1 benefits, other harmed (/-)
- Examples Athletes foot, tapeworm
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15Interactions within Communities Contd
- Competition- two species in same area require
same food, water, and space - Interference competition- prevent the other
species from obtaining the resource - Example Physical attack
- Exploitation- indirect competition in which one
species uses up resources before the other can
16Communities within an Ecosystem Nutritional
Relationships
- Autotroph- produces its own food
- Example Bacteria, plants, chemophotosynthesis
- Also referred to as producers
- Heterotroph- consumers
- Eat other animals for food
- Example humans
17Types of Heterotrophs
- Carnivore- eats meat
- Includes predators scavengers
- Predator- cheetah
- Scavengers- vultures
- Herbivores- eats plants
- Example Caterpillar
- Omnivore- eat plants and animals
- Example Some humans, bears
- Decomposer- eats dead material
- Example Bacteria, Fungi
18Energy Flow in Ecosystems
- Sun is the main source of energy in all
ecosystems - Food chains- linear sequence indicating who eats
whom - Example Grasses ? rabbit ? fox
19Food Webs
- More realistic than food chains
- Shows more interactions among species
- 1. Producers (autotrophs/plants)
- 2. Consumers (heterotrophs)
- Primary consumer- herbivore
- Secondary and tertiary consumers- carnivores
omnivores - 3. Decomposers (saprophytes)
- Example fungus, bacteria
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21Energy Pyramids
- Most energy biomass at the bottom of the
pyramid - Each step up the pyramid is about 1/10th the
energy biomass of the step below it - Bottom Producers
- Middle Herbivores
- Top Carnivores
- Omnivores between herbivores carnivores
22Populations
- Populations- All members of a given species
- Exponential Growth
- Represented by J-curve
- No limiting resources
- Carrying capacity
- The maximum number in a population that can be
sustained by resources in the environment - Limiting Factors
- Amount of nutrients and food available for
population
23The Human Population
- Thomas Malthus
- Economist who stated food supply is the human
limiting factor - Other limiting factors
- War, diseases, global warming, water availability
- Solutions
- Hydroponics, crop rotation
24Species
- Species Organisms in the same area that are able
to reproduce - Species occupy niches
- Niche- role within the ecosystem
- Fundamental niche- where a species exists based
on abiotic factors - Realized niche- where a species exists based on
biotic factors
25Biodiversity
- Biodiversity- number of species in a given area
- Greater biodiversity, greater stability in
ecosystem
26Positive Human Impact on the Environment
- Population control
- Limit number of children
- Conservation of resources
- Plant trees, reduce soil erosion, water
- Pollution control
- Scrubbers
- Species preservation
- Refuges, national parks, state parks
27Positive Human Impact on Environment
- Use of biological controls
- Integrated pest management (IPM)
- Introduce natural predator
- State environment protection laws
- Freshwater wetland act
- Federal environmental protection laws
28Negative Human Impact on Environment
- Overconsumption
- Water, food, oil
- Adverse effects of technology
- Need for natural resources
- Water pollution
- Factories dump PCBs heat
- Air pollution
- Acid rain
- Burn coal oil
- Get sulfur dioxide
- Pesticides
- Waste
29Rank Country Electricity - consumption (billion kWh) Electricity - consumption (billion kWh)
1 United States 3,892
2 China 3,271
3 Japan 1,080
4 Russia 1,003
5 Germany 549.1
6 Canada 530
7 India 517.2
8 France 480
9 Brazil 402.2
10 Korea, South 385.1
11 United Kingdom 348.5
12 Italy 316.3
13 Spain 276.1
14 South Africa 241.4
15 Taiwan 233
30Rank Country Oil - consumption (bbl/day) Oil - consumption (bbl/day)
1 United States 20,800,000
2 China 6,930,000
3 Japan 5,353,000
4 Russia 2,916,000
5 Germany 2,618,000
6 India 2,438,000
7 Canada 2,290,000
8 Korea, South 2,130,000
9 Brazil 2,100,000
10 Mexico 2,078,000
11 Saudi Arabia 2,000,000
12 France 1,999,000
13 United Kingdom 1,820,000
14 Italy 1,732,000
15 Iran 1,630,000
31Negative Human Impact on Environment
- Poor land management
- Need more cities, less sprawl
- Importation of organisms
- Bring in pests
- Example Gypsy moth, zebra mussels, kudzoo
- Exploitation of Wildlife
- Excessive hunting of furs tusks
32Result of Negative Human Impact
- Global instability reduced biodiversity
- Biodiversity number of species in a given area
- Greater biodiversity, greater environmental
stability - Negative impact is irreversible!
33Global Warming
- Increased carbon in atmosphere
- Caused by fossil fuels emitted from cars,
factories, electricity - Carbon acts as an insulating blanket
34Abiotic Results
- Shifting climate patterns
- More intense storms in one area, drier climate in
another - Warmer closer to the poles
- Alaska 2.4 C over last 50 years
- Ocean currents shifting
- Rising sea levels
- Caused by melting glaciers, ice caps, polar ice
sheets
35Global Warming Contd
- Effects on organisms
- Migration north to cooler climates, or to tops of
mountain ranges - Migrating animals arrive to destination sooner
- Endangered extinct species
36Questions to Ask
- When will our advancing technology stop working?
- How can we take action?
- How is my generation having an impact on the
environment?