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Energy and Materials in the Environment

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Presentation on theme: "Energy and Materials in the Environment"— Presentation transcript:

1 Energy and Materials in the Environment
copyright cmassengale

2 copyright cmassengale
What is Ecology?? The study of interactions that take place between organisms and their environment. It explains how living organisms affect each other and the world they live in. copyright cmassengale

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Habitat & Niche Habitat is the place a plant or animal lives Niche is an organism’s total way of life-how they interact with their envir. copyright cmassengale

4 The Nonliving Environment
Abiotic factors- the nonliving parts of an organism’s environment. Examples include air currents, temperature, moisture, light, and soil. Abiotic factors affect an organism’s life. copyright cmassengale

5 The Living Environment
Biotic factors- all the living organisms that inhabit an environment. All organisms depend on others directly or indirectly for food, shelter, reproduction, or protection. copyright cmassengale

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Abiotic or Biotic? Biotic copyright cmassengale

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Abiotic or Biotic? Abiotic copyright cmassengale

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Abiotic or Biotic? Abiotic copyright cmassengale

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Abiotic or Biotic? Biotic copyright cmassengale

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The Biosphere Life is found in air, on land, and in fresh and salt water. The BIOSPHERE is the portion of Earth that supports living things. copyright cmassengale

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Energy Flow Energy in an ecosystem originally comes from the sun Energy flows through Ecosystems from producers to consumers Producers (make food) Consumers (use food by eating producers or other consumers) copyright cmassengale 11 11

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Producers Sunlight is the main source of energy for most life on earth. Producers contain chlorophyll & can use energy directly from the sun copyright cmassengale 12 12

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Autotrophs An Autotroph is any organism that can produce its own food supply! Autotrophs are also called Producers Plants, algae, some protists, & some bacteria are examples copyright cmassengale 13 13

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Niche of a Producer Captures energy and transforms it into organic, stored energy for the use of living organisms. May be photoautotrophs using light energy (e.g. plants) May be chemoautotrophs using chemical energy (e.g. cyanobacteria) copyright cmassengale 14 14

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Photoautotroph Producer That Captures Energy from the sun by: Photosynthesis Adds Oxygen to the atmosphere Removes Carbon Dioxide from the Atmosphere Algae copyright cmassengale 15 15

16 Called a Black smoker (thermal vent)
Chemoautotrophs Capture energy from the bonds of inorganic molecules such as Hydrogen Sulfide Process is called Chemosynthesis Often occurs in deep sea vents or gut of animals Called a Black smoker (thermal vent) copyright cmassengale 16 16

17 Tube Worms living in Black Smoker
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18 Consumers Heterotrophs eat other organisms to obtain energy. (e.g. animals) Herbivores Eat Only Plants Carnivores Eat Only Other Animals copyright cmassengale 18 18

19 Consumers Heterotrophs eat other organisms to obtain energy.
Omnivores (Humans) Eat Plants & Animals Scavengers Feed On Dead Plant & Animal Remains (buzzards) Detritivores -Decomposers Fungi & Bacteria copyright cmassengale 19 19

20 Feeding Relationships
Energy flows through an ecosystem in one direction from producers to various levels of consumers copyright cmassengale 20 20

21 Feeding Relationships
Food Chain Simple Energy path through an ecosystem Food Web More realistic path through an ecosystem made of many food chains copyright cmassengale 21 21

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Food Chain 3rd Order consumer 2nd Order Consumer 1st order Consumer 4th Order Consumer Producer (trapped sunlight & stored food) copyright cmassengale 22 22

23 Name the Producer, Consumers & Decomposers in this food chain:
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Food Web copyright cmassengale 24 24

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26 Trophic Levels Each Level In A Food Chain or Food Web is a Trophic Level. Producers Always The First Trophic Level How Energy Enters The System Herbivores-Second Trophic Level copyright cmassengale 26 26

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Trophic Levels Carnivores/Omnivores Make Up The Remaining Trophic Levels Each level depends on the one below it for energy. copyright cmassengale 27 27

28 Ecological Pyramids Graphic Representations Of The Relative Amounts of Energy or Matter At Each Trophic Level May be: Energy Pyramid Biomass Pyramid Pyramid of Numbers 28 28

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Energy Pyramid copyright cmassengale 29 29

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Biomass Pyramid copyright cmassengale 30 30

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Pyramid of Numbers copyright cmassengale 31 31


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