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Ecology Notes Chapters 13-16.

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Presentation on theme: "Ecology Notes Chapters 13-16."— Presentation transcript:

1 Ecology Notes Chapters 13-16

2 I. Factors in the environment;
A. Biotic; All organisms (living things) that inhabit an environment and their relationships to one another. All organisms depend directly or indirectly on other organisms for food , shelter, reproduction and / or protection. B. Abiotic; nonliving factors. Includes climate, temperature, light, soil, water, and air.

3 II. Levels of organization;
A. Organism; individual made of cells that requires nutrients and uses energy in the environment B. Population; group of organisms that are all of one species, living at the same place, at the same time.

4 C. Biological Community; All populations
of different species that live in the same place at the same time.

5 D. Ecosystem; Population of plants and
D. Ecosystem; Population of plants and animals that interact with each other in a given area, and with the abiotic components of that area. E. Biome; Major regional or global in size. Includes interactions between biotic and abiotic factors in an area characterized by specific climatic factors.

6 A. Mutualism; Both species benefit. 1. ants and acacia trees.
III. Symbiosis; The relationship in which there is close association between organisms of different species. A. Mutualism; Both species benefit. 1. ants and acacia trees. The acacia tree provides nectar and protein for the ants. The ants provide protection for the tree, from other insects and bacteria.

7 2. protists in the guts of termites: the. protists have an enzyme that
2. protists in the guts of termites: the protists have an enzyme that digests the cellulose in wood. 3. nitrogen fixing bacteria in the roots certain plants: they remove nitrogen from the air and change it into a form the plant can use.

8 B. Commensalism; One species. benefits, the other is neither
B. Commensalism; One species benefits, the other is neither harmed, nor receives a benefit. 1. Cattle egrets and cattle: as the cattle walk through the grass, they cause insects to jump out of the grass. The egrets can easily find the insects. The cattle are not affected.

9 2. Demodicid mites and humans; microscopic
2. Demodicid mites and humans; microscopic mites found in about 70% of teen agers and about 99.9% of adults. They live in the follicles of eyelashes, consuming dead cells and oils.

10 C. Parasitism; One species benefits
C. Parasitism; One species benefits (parasite) at the expense of another (host). This is not the same as predation, where a predator kills and eats its prey. With parasitism, the harm to a host may occur over a period of days, weeks or even years. 1. Tick feeding from the blood of a dog.

11 2. Mistletoe on a tree. Steals nutrients from the tree, and may eventually kill it.


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