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Energy Flow in the Biosphere, Chapter 3-1 & 3-2

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Presentation on theme: "Energy Flow in the Biosphere, Chapter 3-1 & 3-2"— Presentation transcript:

1 Energy Flow in the Biosphere, Chapter 3-1 & 3-2

2 REMEMBER CELL BIO

3 ________ __________  ___________ ATOMS
INTEREST GRABBER- THINK BACK TO CHAPTER 7 MOLECULES ORGANELLES ________ __________  ___________ ATOMS IMAGE SOURCES: see last slide

4 ____________  ____________ 
CELLS TISSUES ____________  ____________  Similar cells working together IMAGE SOURCES: see last slide

5 ___________  __________ ___________
ORGAN SYSTEMS ORGANS ORGANISM ___________  __________ ___________ Different tissues working together Different organs working together IMAGE SOURCES: see last slide

6 ___________________________________
ORGANISMS POPULATIONS COMMUNITY ___________________________________ SAME SPECIES LIVING TOGETHER IN AN AREA Ex: “herd” DIFFERENT POPULATIONS LIVING TOGETHER IN AN AREA BIOLOGY; Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall;2006

7 _______________________ _____________
ECOSYSTEMS BIOMES BIOSPHERE _______________________ _____________ All the organisms that live in a place together with their NON-living environment Group of ecosystems that have same climate and similar communities The portion of the planet in which all life exists IMAGE SOURCES: see last slide

8 Organisms so similar to one another that they can breed and produce fertile offspring = _____________ SPECIES

9 EX: Horse X donkey = mule
EX: Horse X donkey = mule 64 chromosomes 62 chromosomes 63 chromosomes Horses and donkeys are different species. If you breed them, the result is a mule which can NOT have offspring!

10 The portion of the planet in which all life exists = _________________
The scientific study of interactions of organisms with each other and with their environment = ______________ The portion of the planet in which all life exists = _________________ (includes land, water, atmosphere) ECOLOGY BIOSPHERE Extends from about 8 km above the Earth’s surface to 11 km below the ocean’s surface

11 WHAT SHAPES AN ECOSYSTEM?
BIOTIC FACTORS __________________ All the living things an organism interacts with All the non-living things that affect an organism Ex: climate, temperature, sunlight soil, humidity, wind ABIOTIC FACTORS Images from: Pearson Education Inc; Publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall

12 HABITAT __________________ = The area where an organism lives
A rattlesnake lives in a desert in the American Southwest HABITAT

13 NICHE _____________ = place it lives PLUS the
_____________ & ______________ interactions it has in that place NICHE includes: Where it lives PLUS . . . What it eats? What eats it? Where in the habitat it lives? In a tree, in a pond, underground Its actions… hibernating, migrating, etc When & how it reproduces? NICHE biotic abiotic

14 HABITAT vs NICHE? Habitat is like an address OCCUPATION
HABITAT vs NICHE? Habitat is like an organism’s ____________ Niche is like an organism’s ______________ address OCCUPATION

15 NO TWO SPECIES CAN SHARE THE SAME NICHE !
Competitive exclusion principle = ______________________________ BIOLOGY; Miller and Levine; Prentice Hall; 2006

16 The Earth is SOLAR POWERED!
ALL LIVING THINGS USE ENERGY The Earth is SOLAR POWERED! _____________ is the main source of energy for life on Earth. SUNLIGHT

17 AUTOTROPHS = PRODUCERS Can make their own food
ALL LIVING THINGS USE ENERGY AUTOTROPHS = PRODUCERS Can make their own food PHOTOSYNTHESIS Most autotrophs use _______________ to capture solar energy Main producers on land = green plants In water = algae BIOLOGY; MIller and Levine; Prentice Hall; 2006

18 Some autotrophs can make own food in the ____________________
They use energy stored in ________________ of ______________________to produce carbohydrates = ___________________ Ex: Bacteria that live in HOSTILE places Like volcano vents, hot springs, marshes absence of light chemical bonds INORGANIC MOLECULES CHEMOSYNTHESIS BIOLOGY; MIller and Levine; Prentice Hall; 2006

19 HETEROTROPHS = ____________ Get energy from consuming other organisms
CONSUMERS HETEROTROPHS = ____________ Get energy from consuming other organisms

20 HETEROTROPHS = CONSUMERS
HERBIVORES ________________ = eat only plants eat only animals eat both plants & animals CARNIVORES OMNIVORES

21 HETEROTROPHS = CONSUMERS
DETRITIVORES ________________ = feed on plant & animal remains EX: mites, earthworms, snails, crabs break down and absorb organic matter EX: bacteria & fungi DECOMPOSERS

22 ↑ ↑ CONSUMERS (Heterotrophs) PRODUCERS (Autotrophs)
Energy flows through an ecosystem in a series of steps in which organisms transfer energy by being eaten CONSUMERS (Heterotrophs) ________________ _________________ = _________________ PRODUCERS (Autotrophs) FOOD CHAIN

23 In most ecosystems feeding relationships are more complex
Pearson Education Inc, Publishing as Pearson Prentice Hall In most ecosystems feeding relationships are more complex FOOD WEB A ______________ links ALL the food chains in an ecosystem together.

24 PRODUCERS FIRST Each step in a food chain or web = _______________
ALWAYS make up the ________ trophic level. TROPHIC LEVEL PRODUCERS FIRST

25 Lower levels must be bigger to support the level above.
Only about_____ of the energy from each level is passed on. 10%

26 Some energy is used for life processes such as growth, development,
movement, metabolism, transport, and reproduction. The rest is lost as ________ HEAT

27 WHAT DO CELLS USE ENERGY FOR ?
ACTIVE TRANSPORT Na+ - K + PUMP Endocytosis Exocytosis Animation from: See a movie Animation from:

28 WHAT DO CELLS USE ENERGY FOR ?
Movement Synthesis of biomolecules Meiosis: Cilia: Replication: Transcription: Translation:

29 Growth and Development REPRODUCTION
Family image from:

30 SOUTH DAKOTA CORE SCIENCE STANDARDS
LIFE SCIENCE: Indicator 3: Analyze how organisms are linked to one another and the environment. 9-12.L Students are able to identify factors that can cause changes in stability of populations, communities, and ecosystems. Define populations, communities, ecosystems, niches and symbiotic relationships. Predict the results of biotic and abiotic interactions. Examples: Dormancy and migration Fluctuation in available resources (water, food, shelter) Biogeochemical cycles Energy flow Cooperation and competition in ecosystems

31 SOUTH DAKOTA CORE SCIENCE STANDARDS
LIFE SCIENCE: Indicator 3: Analyze how organisms are linked to one another and the environment. 9-12.L Students are able to identify factors that can cause changes in stability of populations, communities, and ecosystems. Define populations, communities, ecosystems, niches and symbiotic relationships. Predict the results of biotic and abiotic interactions. Examples: Fluctuation in available resources (water, food, shelter) Energy flow

32 Core High School Life/Earth Science Performance Descriptors
High school students performing at the ADVANCED level: predict the effect of an interruption in a given cycles High school students performing at the PROFICIENT level: predict how life systems respond to changes in the environment; explain how H20, N, C, and O cycle between living and non-living systems; describe how various factors may affect global climate; High school students performing at the BASIC level: given pictorial representations of the H20 and C cycles explain how elements and compounds move between living and nonliving systems describe one factor that may affect global climate

33 IMAGE BIBLIOGRAPHY Paint image by Riedell Paint image by Riedell

34 http://bioweb. wku. edu/courses/BIOL115/Wyatt/Biochem/Carbos/Carb_poly

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