Unit #10: Ecology (Part 4) ECOSYSTEMS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Principles of Ecology You will describe ecology and the work of ecologists. You will identify important aspects of an organism’s environment You will trace.
Advertisements

ecology ecosystem abiotic
Introduction to Ecology. What is Ecology?  Study of organism interactions with other organisms and the environment.
Ecology the study of living things and their environment.
Ecology. Ecology - the study of interactions among organisms and between the organisms and their environment. These interactions occur in the biosphere.
Ecology. WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments. *Focus is on energy transfer *Ecology.
Ecosystem Structure.
Ecology Standards 6a. Know biodiversity is the sum total of different kinds of organisms & is affected by alterations of habitats 6b. Know how to analyze.
 An ecological system  consists of a living community and all of the physical aspects of its habitat  physical factors are known as abiotic factors.
1 What is Ecology? copyright cmassengale. 2 What is Ecology?? The study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment. The study.
 An ecological system - consists of a living community and all of the physical aspects of its habitat - physical factors are known as abiotic factors.
The Ecosystem An Introduction S4L1b iCan demonstrate the flow of energy through a flood web/good chain, beginning with sunlight and including producerss,
Ecology. WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer Ecology.
Ecology Introduction PG  Ecology = scientific study of interactions between organisms, and between organisms and their environment –Biosphere =
Study of interactions between organisms and their environments. Ecology.
HUMAN AND SOCIAL BIOLOGY 10 CMH / 9CMH FOOD CHAIN Femitech Production.
Ecosystems. Ecosystems Biology 12E Investigate and explain the interactions in an ecosystem including food chains, food webs, and trophic pyramids. Ch.
Ecology Accelerated Biology. Ecology o o Ecology – The scientific study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their physical environment.
Chapter 2 SECTION 2 NUTRITION AND ENERGY FLOW. Ecology is the study of interactions between organisms and their environment. Ecology combines the science.
Ecology Vocabulary. 1) Ecology The study of the relationship between organisms and their environment, interactions with their environment as well as each.
1 What is Ecology? copyright cmassengale. 2 What is Ecology?? The study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment.The study.
What is Ecology?. Organisms and Their Environment.
POD Week of 8/20-8/24 _____________ is the process by which organisms keep their internal conditions relatively stable. _____________ is the process by.
1 What is Ecology?. 2 Organisms and Their Environment.
Ecology and Energy in Ecosystems. WHAT IS ECOLOGY? *Ecology is the study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment. *Living.
Chapter 2: Ecology Flushing High School Trisha Ferris.
Ecology Unit.
“Study of (natures) house”
Agenda: Intro to Ecosystems Food webs & energy flow
Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem
Ecosystem Ecology AP Bio Ch. 55.
Ecosystem Structure.
Ecology Terms Ecology = the study of the interactions between living organisms, and between living organisms and their environment.
Ecology Guided Notes.
Drill 4/29/16 Look at the photos below and name the ecological level. Why did you pick that level?
How Ecosystems Work Homework: Chapter 5: Read Pages
18.1 Ecosystems What are ecosystems made of? Our Biosphere.
Flow of Energy Through the Trophic Levels
HUMAN AND SOCIAL BIOLOGY FOOD CHAIN Femitech Production
The flow of matter and energy through an ecosystem.
Organisms and Their Environments
ECOLOGY.
ECOLOGY.
ECOSYSTEMS Chapter 47.
Ecology Module 15.
What is Ecology? Ecology is the scientific study of the interactions of organisms and their environment. All organisms live and interact in the biosphere.
Introduction to Ecology
copyright cmassengale
Ecology Module 15.
Biotic and Abiotic Factors
Ecological Organization
Catalyst Describe the rule of 10%..
ECOLOGY Chapter 2 Notes.
ECOLOGY.
Ecology Module 15.
ECOLOGY THE STUDY OF HOW ORGANISMS INTERACT WITH EACH OTHER AND WITH THEIR ENVIRONMENT.
Ecology Module 15.
ECOLOGY.
What is Ecology?.
Principles of Ecology 7-1.
Energy Flow Through an Ecosystem
Ecology Biosphere.
Ecology.
Chapter 18: Ecology.
Ecology.
Ecology Module 15.
Ecology Part I.
Ecology The study of interactions between organisms and their environment .
ECOLOGY.
Energy Flow in Ecosystems (LT 1.6)
Presentation transcript:

Unit #10: Ecology (Part 4) ECOSYSTEMS Ms. Day AP Biology

Introduction to Ecology Study of interactions between living and non living things. Explains how living organisms affect each other and the world they live in.

Habitat & Niche Habitat is the place a plant or animal lives “the address” Niche is an organism’s role in life “its address and its job” All resources used by that organism

Biotic Factors of the Biosphere ALL LIVING PARTS OF AN ECOSYSTEM Think: “BIO” means “life” Plants Animals Fungi Decomposers I’m BIOTIC!!!

Abiotic Factors of the Biosphere ALL NON-LIVING PARTS OF AN ECOSYSTEM Think: “A” means “anti/against” Climate Water/Rainfall, Light, Temperature, Wind/air currents Rocks and soil Particle size, Mineral composition, pH Periodic disturbances fire, flood, earthquake, etc.

Organizing life Interactions between organisms fit in into different levels according to complexity

LEAST inclusive (SPECIFIC) MOST inclusive (BROADEST) Levels of Life ORGANISM 1 living thing: made of cells/DNA, uses ATP, reproduces, responds to stimuli, grows/develop SPECIES group of the same organisms that can interbred POPULATION group of the same organisms living in the same place at the same time that can interbreed COMMUNITY group of the DIFFERENT organisms (populations) living in the same place at the same time ECOSYSTEM (includes BIOMES) All abiotic (nonliving) and biotic factors in an area BIOSPHERE = all the ecosystems together on Earth MOST inclusive (BROADEST)

TERRESTRIAL BIOMES

Trophic Structure in Ecosystems Ecosystems divided into trophic levels (feeding levels) Primary producers—autotrophs (mostly photosynthetic but can be chemosynthetic) Primary consumers—herbivores Secondary consumers—carnivores that eat herbivores Tertiary consumers—carnivores that eat other carnivores Detrivores/Decomposers—consumers that eat dead or decaying matter

Food Chain: shows energy pathway Arrow head = predator Arrow tail = prey

Food Webs Feeding relationships woven into elaborate interconnec-tions between species

Sun = GENERALLY supplies all energy to ecosystems RECALL… Sun = GENERALLY supplies all energy to ecosystems

Energy Flow in Ecosystems Each level has different amount of stored chemical energy When you go UP a level, some energy is lost Gross primary productivity (GPP)= total chemical energy made by producers TOTAL PHOTOSYNTHESIS (adds biomass) Net primary productivity= total chemical energy – energy used for cellular respiration by plants TOTAL PHOTOSYNTHESIS -CELLULAR RESPIRATION

CALLED 10% rule (trophic efficiency) ~10% of energy at each level converted to new biomass CALLED 10% rule (trophic efficiency)

Biomass = amount of living matter in a given habitat LOTS OF BIOMASS HERE

Toxins in the Environment In some cases, harmful substances persist for long periods in an ecosystem One reason toxins are harmful is that they become more concentrated in successive trophic levels biological magnification toxins concentrate at higher trophic levels, where biomass is lower Zooplankton 0.123 ppm Phytoplankton 0.025 ppm Lake trout 4.83 ppm Smelt 1.04 ppm Herring gull eggs 124 ppm Concentration of PCBs