What is Ecology? Study of the relationship between organisms AND between organisms and their environment.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ecology The study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment.
Advertisements

Ecology Study of interactions between organisms and their environments.
Ecology The study of interactions between organisms & their environment.
Principles of Ecology Biology.
Chapter 3: The Biosphere
Chapter 3.  The study of interactions between organisms and their environment.
Principles of Ecology Chapter 2.
Ecosystems.
Ecosystems.
The Biosphere.
AP Biology Ecosystems AP Biology biosphere ecosystem community population Studying organisms in their environment organism.
AP Biology Ecosystems AP Biology biosphere ecosystem community population Studying organisms in their environment organism.
Ecology. What is it? Definition: The study of interactions between living and non-living things in the environment in which they live Abiotic = non-living.
Ecosystems biosphere ecosystem community population Studying organisms in their environment organism.
Ecosystems Essential Questions:  What limits the production in ecosystems?  How do nutrients move in the ecosystem?  How does energy move through.
Ecosystem Dynamics.
Ecosystems biosphere ecosystem community population organism.
What is Ecology? Study of the relationship between organisms AND between organisms and their environment.
Ecology. Ecology is the study of the interactions among organisms and their environment.
Food Chains, Food Webs, Trophic Levels, nutrient Cycles... Ecosystem Ecology.
Chapter 3: The Biosphere
The Biosphere Vocabulary Ecology Biosphere Species Population Community Ecosystem Biome Producer Consumer Autotroph Heterotroph Decomposer Food Chain.
Energy Flow in Ecosystems and Biogeochemical Cycles.
Chapter 3: The Biosphere
Ecosystems.
Ecology Notes Ecology: The study of the interactions among organisms and their environment.
Principles of Ecology Chapter 2. Ecology The study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment.
Ecology Review Living things do not live in vacuums, their daily lives are based on _interactions_ with both _living_ and _nonliving_ things. What is an.
AP Biology Ecosystems. AP Biology Essential questions  What limits the production in ecosystems?  How do nutrients move in the ecosystem?  How does.
Mrs. Geist Biology, Fall Swansboro High School.
The Biosphere. Warm Up April 17  What is a predator?  What is a herbivore?  What is a carnivore?
Ecology.
Principles of Ecology Section 1: Organisms and Their Relationships Section 2: Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem Section 3: Cycling of Matter.
Energy Flow in Ecosystems & The Biosphere. Important Vocabulary 1. Ecology: study of the relationships among organisms & between organisms & their physical.
PRINCIPALS OF ECOLOGY CHAPTER 3 BEGININIGS OF ECOLOGY ECOLOGY- SCIENTIFIC STUDY OF INTERACTIONS BETWEEN ORGANISMS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENTS ECOLOGY- SCIENTIFIC.
CHAPTER 2 – PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Section 2-2: Nutrition and Energy Flow (p.46-57)
Ecology An introduction…. Question Are organisms, including humans, “islands”. Why or why not? Support your answer.
Ecosystems.
Ecosystems biosphere ecosystem community population Studying organisms in their environment organism.
Ecology The scientific study of interactions among organisms and their environment The scientific study of interactions among organisms and their environment.
The Biosphere.
AP Biology Ecosystems AP Biology Ecosystem  All the organisms in a community plus abiotic factors  ecosystems are transformers of energy & processors.
Instructions for using this template. Remember this is Jeopardy, so where I have written “Answer” this is the prompt the students will see, and where.
Chapter 3: The Biosphere What is ecology?. Ecology Ecology – the study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment Interdependence.
AP Biology Ecosystems AP Biology biosphere ecosystem community population Studying organisms in their environment organism.
WARM UP  What do you call the first level of a food pyramid? –Primary consumer –Producer –Secondary consumer –Tertiary consumer.
Biology Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology. 2.1 Organisms & Their Environment Ecology-the study of interactions that take place between organisms and their.
 Ecology is the study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment.  Biotic Factors = living  Abiotic Factors = nonliving.
Ecology Ecology is the study of organisms within their environment. Ecology is the study of organisms within their environment. Matter cycles Matter cycles.
Energy Flow in Ecosystems & The Biosphere. Important Vocabulary 1. Ecology: study of the relationships among organisms & between organisms & their physical.
Click on a lesson name to select. 2-1 Organisms and their Environment Objectives Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors Describe the.
Ecology Notes. Ecology Ecology is the study of interactions between organisms and their environment.
1.How do these organisms interact with one another and with the nonliving parts of the environment? 2. What might happen if the zebras were removed?
AP Biology Ecosystems AP Biology biosphere ecosystem community population Studying organisms in their environment organism.
Study of interactions between organisms and their environments.
Ecology Review Game Ecology test review.
Ecosystems.
Ecosystems.
Ecosystems.
Ecology.
Catalyst Describe the rule of 10%..
Ecosystems.
Ecosystems.
Ecosystems.
What is Ecology? The study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment. Environmental conditions include: Biotic factors (living) Abiotic.
Ecosystems.
Ecosystem All the organisms in a community plus abiotic factors
Ecology Biosphere.
Chapter 18: Ecology.
Presentation transcript:

What is Ecology? Study of the relationship between organisms AND between organisms and their environment

Abiotic vs. Biotic Factors Abiotic (nonliving) - soil, temperature, sunlight, water, gases, minerals, etc. Biotic (living) - any organism

Organization of the Living World Biosphere Ecosystem Community Population Individual

Population All the members of the same species that live in the same area

Community All populations of organisms living in the same place

Ecosystem All biotic and abiotic factors in a particular environment

BIOSPHERE All regions of the earth where life can exist

Energy Flow through an Ecosystem Food Chains and Food Webs

Energy Flow The source of all energy on earth is the sun The sun’s energy is trapped by plants in photosynthesis and transformed into carbohydrates Energy is measured in calories (kcal)

How do organisms get energy? The trophic levels Producers (autotrophs - make their own food) Consumers* (heterotrophs - get food from their environment): - primary (herbivores - eat only producers) - secondary (eat primary consumers) - tertiary (eat secondary consumers) *A consumer can be all three types at the same time (omnivore)

Food Chains and Webs Show the path of energy through an ecosystem Arrows follow the direction of energy flow All food chains and webs have producers at the base

Food Webs Food webs show many food chains and how they are connected to each other Food webs are more accurate representations of the true relationships between organisms

Energy Flow in a Food Web At each step in the food chain, 90% of the energy is lost as heat Each organism in the chain receives 10% of the energy from the organism it consumes (except for producers which get their energy from the sun) In the diagram above, only 10% of the available energy is passed on to each trophic level

Pyramid of Energy and Biomass Biomass - total amount of living tissue

Pyramid of Energy and Biomass producers Primary consumers Secondary consumers Tertiary consumers Decreasing biomass Decreasing energy

Cycling of Nutrients vs. Energy Nutrients are recycled Energy is not recycled Nutrients are recycled Energy is not recycled

Water cycle evaporation precipitation Transpiration (excess water exits through leaves as water vapor) runoff Condensation to form clouds Uptake through roots The Water Cycle groundwater

CO 2 (air) ConsumersProducers Carbohydrates (photosynthesis) photosynthesis respiration decomposers Death & decay respiration Fossil fuels (oil, coal) Millions of years, high pressure and temperature Factories, cars Used as energy for combustion CARBON CYCLE

N 2 (gas) nitratesammonia Bacteria change ammonia into N 2 fixing bacteria change N 2 gas into plants Used by Consumers Eaten by ammonia Decomposition After death Denitrifying bacteria Change nitrates to N 2 gas NITROGEN CYCLE Decomposition After death Bacteria change ammonia into

Phosphate (soil) Consumers Producers Eaten by Uptake through roots Die & decompose Aquatic producers and consumers die Body of water (lakes, oceans, etc.) PHOSPHORUS CYCLE Phosphates in soil seep into streams Rocks & sediments Die & decompose

Habitat vs. Niche Habitat - an organism’s environment Niche - an organism’s role in its environment

Niche of Organism A Niche of Organism B Competition When niches of 2 organisms overlap, competition results

Symbiotic Relationships Relationship between two organisms in which one organism benefits

Symbiotic Relationships Mutualism - both organisms benefit from relationship (+,+) Parasitism - one organism benefits at the expense of the other (+, -) Commensalism - one organism benefits while the other is unaffected (+, 0)