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Ecology Why are the cycles important?

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Presentation on theme: "Ecology Why are the cycles important?"— Presentation transcript:

1 Ecology Why are the cycles important?
How do organisms interact with each other? How can we show trends in populations over time? Ecology

2 What does it mean when we talk about the ecosystem? What is Ecology?

3 Ecology The study of interactions between organisms
Recall the levels of organization: Organism Species Population Community Ecosystem Biome Biosphere

4 Energy Flow Starts at sun
Some make food from chemicals, not sun = chemosynthesis

5 Producers- produce their own sugar, gain energy from sun

6 Consumers- consume other things to get their energy

7 What about mushrooms on a fallen tree
What about mushrooms on a fallen tree? How are dead deer on the side of the road broken down naturally?

8 Detritivores = feed on dead matter

9 Decomposers = break down organic matter

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11 Food Chain One organism passing energy to the next, and so on
Straight line Arrow = the way energy is moving

12 http://www. dist102. k12. il. us/resources/Science%20Kids/food-chain

13 Food Webs Many organisms giving and receiving energy
Arrows = energy movement

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15 Trophic Level each step in a food chain or food web

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17 Ecological Pyramids Shows the amount of energy or matter in each trophic level of chain or web 3 types Energy- only 10% of energy is transferred to next level Biomass-mass of all the organisms in that level Numbers- how many organisms in that level

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19 Biomass Pyramid

20 Numbers Pyramid

21 Water Cycle Water moving through environments
Transpiration- from trees to clouds Evaporation- from body of water to clouds Precipitation- from clouds to ground Condensation- making clouds Run-off- doesn’t soak into soil Ground water- rivers underground

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23 Carbon Cycle Carbon moving through environments
Decomposition- decaying organisms Oil, coal, and fuels come from compressed decayed organisms

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25 Nitrogen Cycle Nitrogen moving through environment
Plants need nitrogen to make food

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27 Phosphorous Cycle Moving phosphorous through the environment
Needed to make DNA and RNA Mostly in rock, minerals, and land

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29 Niche Place an organism holds in an ecosystem, includes what it eats, when it eats, how it mates, how it gets food, and interaction with other organisms Species has evolved to fit that niche PERFECTLY

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31 http://www. fieldstonealliance

32 Habitat Where a species lives, where it can be found

33 Competitive Exclusion Principle
No two species can occupy the same niche in the same habitat at the same time

34 Competition Organisms or species fighting over resources

35 Resource Anything necessary to life: water, sunlight, food, shelter, etc.

36 Predation Predator feeds on prey

37 Symbiosis Relationship in which two species live closely together

38 Mutualism Both benefit

39 Commensalism One benefits, other is not helped harmed

40 Parasitism One benefits, other is harmed

41 Primary Succession No soil exists, first organism to come along
Happens with volcanoes and rock exposed from glaciers melting

42 http://farm3. static. flickr. com/2254/1937932386_03c78fa3e0. jpg

43 Secondary Succession Soil exists, something was once there, cleared by natural disaster

44 Major Biomes Taiga Estuaries Chaparral Shrublands Tropical Dry Forest
Tundra Deciduous Forest Desert Tropical Rain Forest Estuaries Shrublands Grassland Coral Reef Tropical Savanna Ocean

45 Tropical Rain Forest

46 Tropical Dry Forest

47 Tropical Savanna

48 Desert

49 Grasslands

50 Shrublands

51 Deciduous Forest

52 Taiga

53 Tundra

54 Limiting Nutrient Nutrient in short supply, will run out first
Greatly affects all organisms in the ecosystem


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