ORGANISMS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENT. The Biosphere = any part of the earth which supports living things –Includes land, water, and soil –Consists of biotic.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Principles of Ecology Chapter 2.1.
Advertisements

Ecology.
Chapter 2 Notes, Ecology.
Principles of Ecology Chapters 3, 4, 5, & 6. What is Ecology? Ecology is the study of interactions between organisms and their environment.
Intro to Ecology and Symbiotic Relationships. Ecology: How individual organisms interact with each other and with their environment How individual organisms.
Introduction to Ecology
What is the biosphere and how is it organized?
Principles of Ecology Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3.
Chapter 5 Lesson One: Interactions in an Ecosystem
Ecoloy - definition The branch of biology that developed from natural history is called ecology. Ecology is the study of interactions that take place between.
Ecology Study of organisms and their interaction with each other and the environment.
ORGANISM → POPULATION a functioning creature Ex. One squirrel group of organisms of the same species Ex. All the wolves in a specific area.
4-2: What Shapes an Ecosystem? Biology 1. Ecology tell you where an organism lives Ecology also tells you about the climate What shapes the ecosystem.
Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16.
Community Interactions
ECOSYSTEMS. ECOSYSTEMS & ECOLOGY Ecology is the study of the interactions of living organisms with one another and their physical environment.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2. Organisms & Their Environment Ch. 2, Sec. 1.
Ecology The Study of the Environment. Biosludge  What is it?   sludge-fertilizer-upsetting-neighbors/
Ecology Chapter 3. Ecology The study of the relationship between organisms and their environments.
Ecosystems and its Components. What is an ecosystem? An area in which organisms (plants, animals and micro- organisms) interact with each other and with.
Ecology The relationship among organisms and their environment.
2a- Ecology & Living Relationships
Ecology. The Biosphere Earth that supports living things, includes air, land, and water Nonliving environment: Abiotic factors Air currents Temperature.
Competition – two species share a requirement for a limited resource  reduces fitness of one or both species.
Ecology. ECOLOGY What is the study of living things and how they interact with their environment?
Community interactions
Organisms and Their Relationships
Ecology Observing nature. Ecology  The scientific study of interactions among organisms and their environments  Includes descriptive and quantitative.
Lecture 8 Organisms and Their Relationships Ozgur Unal 1.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
Topic: Ecology Learning Goal: I can describe relationships (producer/consumer, predator/prey, and parasite/host) as they occur in food webs. Essential.
Ecology. WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer Ecology.
Chapter Two Ecology. Ecology study of interactions between organisms and environment.
Organisms and Their Environment. Why are we studying the environment? -Understanding what affects the environment is important because it’s where we live!
What is Ecology? Mrs. Sandy Gomez. What is Ecology?  The scientific study of:  Interactions among organisms  Interactions between organisms and their.
Ecology Class Notes 2. A. What is Ecology?  1. Ecology is the way organisms (living things) interact with their environments (surroundings).  2. The.
Review: Levels of organization ORGANISM POPULATION COMMUNITY ECOSYSTEM BIOME BIOSPHERE.
The Web of Life: Interactions among living organisms Populations Interactions in Communities.
Section 2.1 Organization and Relationships. Organization in Ecology organism: smallest level (one) population: group of organisms of one species that.
Ecology studies 2 things: Ecology studies 2 things: ● the interactions of organisms with each other ● the interactions between organisms and their environment.
Ecology. WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer Ecology.
Ecology. WHAT IS ECOLOGY? Ecology- the scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments, focusing on energy transfer Ecology.
ECOLOGICAL RELATIONSHIPS. Ecology l The study of relationships between organisms and their environment.
Community Interactions Community: Many different species interacting in the same environment. Three types of interactions: – Competition – Predation.
ECOSYSTEMS AND COMMUNITIES. Learning Goal: In this lesson we will learn about abiotic and biotic components of an ecosystem. We will also learn about.
Principles of Ecology Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3.
Ecology.
Ecology.
Ecology Use the image above to make a list of all the things you can think of in a pond ecosystem.
Intro to Ecology.
ECOLOGY.
ECOLOGY VOCAB.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
ECOLOGY THE STUDY OF HOW ORGANISMS INTERACT WITH EACH OTHER AND WITH THEIR ENVIRONMENT.
ECO: “home” OLOGY: “study of”   …the scientific study of the interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environments.
Ecological Organization
Community Interactions
Warm Up 10 4/7 ______ is the day to day condition. 2. ________ is the average, year after year condition. List the 3 main gases of the greenhouse effect.
What is ECOLOGY?  The study of the relationship of organisms to their physical (nonliving) and biological (living) environment.
What Shapes an Ecosystem?
ECOLOGY THE STUDY OF HOW ORGANISMS INTERACT WITH EACH OTHER AND WITH THEIR ENVIRONMENT.
PRINCIPLES OF ECOLOGY Chapter 2.
Ecology Notes.
Ecology Notes.
Ecology Notes.
ECOLOGY VOCAB.
Ecology.
Ecology Notes.
Presentation transcript:

ORGANISMS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENT

The Biosphere = any part of the earth which supports living things –Includes land, water, and soil –Consists of biotic (living) things and abiotic (non-living) things Biotic factors: plants, other animals, fungi, bacteria, etc. Abiotic factors: air temperature, length of day and night, soil quality, amount of rainfall, etc.

Ecological Levels of Organization Individual Organism –Each organism has a habitat where it lives out its life Example: a lawn, a pond, a grove of pine trees Size of habitat varies for different species –Several different species can share a habitat Example: a pond contains many different species of fish, plus bugs, plants, bacteria, etc. –Each species occupies a niche in the habitat—how it lives, what it eats, etc. No 2 species can occupy the same niche in the same habitat

Population = group of organisms, all the same species, living in a particular area at the same time –Example: we can talk about the elk population in Rocky Mountain National Park Community = several interacting populations living together in an area –Example: the forest community in RMNP, which includes elk, deer, bears, many different plants, etc. Ecosystem = community and the abiotic factors –example: the forest community and the climate, temperature, pollution, wind, etc. Biosphere

Symbiosis = a close, permanent relationship between 2 different species 3 kinds: mutualism, commensalism and parasitism Mutualism = symbiotic relationship in which both species benefit –Example: lichen, which is a combination of an algae and a fungus fungus is “fed” by food made by the algae, which can do photosynthesis Algae benefits because the fungus is better able to find and soak up water

–Example: cleaner wrasse lives on other fish Fish gets cleaned by the wrasse Wrasse gets food from whatever it can scavenge –Example: E. coli which lives in your gut E. coli breaks down your food for you E. coli gets a lot of nutrients from your food

Commensalism = one species benefits, the other is neither helped nor harmed –Example: birds that ride on cows’ backs Birds get food to eat when the cow walks and stirs up insects Cow doesn’t care—it doesn’t get anything back from the bird at all

Parasitism = parasite harms, but does not kill, the host; parasite benefits, host is harmed –Example: tapeworm which lives in intestines of animals Tapeworm eats your food and harms you –Example: brown-headed cowbird is a “nest parasite” Lays eggs in nests of songbirds so the other birds will raise their young for them