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Aim: How Can We Describe Ecology and the terms used in the unit.

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Presentation on theme: "Aim: How Can We Describe Ecology and the terms used in the unit."— Presentation transcript:

1 Aim: How Can We Describe Ecology and the terms used in the unit.
Do Now: Explain how Genetic engineering can help a person with diabetes. H.W.: Read Pages 684 – 687 Do Questions 1-5

2 Ecology The study of the relationships between organisms and their environments.

3 What is Ecology? Ecology is the study of organisms and their environments. An Environment is the surroundings of an organism. An Organism is any living thing

4 What do organisms get from their environment?
Organisms need Food, Gases, Water, Shelter, and proper Temperature.

5 What is an Ecosystem? An ecosystem is a group of organisms and their environment. Examples of an ecosystem are: Pond, forest, fish tank, desert.

6 What are the two types of Factors in an ecosystem?
An Abiotic Factor is any non-living part of an environment. Examples are: Light, water, air, soil, and rocks. A Biotic Factors is any Living part of an environment. Examples are: Animals, plants, fungi, protists and bacteria.

7 What is a Community? What is a population?
A community is all of the biotic factors in an ecosystem. What is a population? A Population is the number of One species in an ecosystem. Examples are: # of bald eagles.

8 What is a Habitat? What does a habitat provide?
A Habitat is an organisms home. Examples are: Under a rock, a nest, hole in a tree. What does a habitat provide? All the things the organisms need to survive. Ex: Shelter, food, water.

9 What is a Niche? What are limiting factors?
A Niche is the role an organism plays in an ecosystem and its environment – How it obtains food and shelter, finds a mate, cares for young, and avoids danger. Examples are: Decomposer, herbavore in a field and herbavore in a tree are separate niches. What are limiting factors? Limiting factors are things that control the size of the populations of a species. Examples are: Predators/prey, food, water, disease, weather.

10 Aim: How can we describe how organisms affect each other?
Do Now: Explain the difference between an Ecosystem, a community and population? H.W.: Read 696 – 700 do questions 1-4.

11 How do Organisms affect each other?
Competition: Competition is when two different species need the same resources from the environment. Examples are: deer and Elk in the same forest.

12 Mutualism Mutualism is when two different species help each other out.
Examples are: Sea anemone and clown fish; butterfly and flower.

13 Parasitism Parasitism is when one organism takes advantage of another.
Examples are: Fleas and ticks on dogs.

14 Commensalism Commensalism is when one organism lives on another but does not hurt the other organism. Examples are: Moss on a tree.

15 Aim: How can we describe the different Biomes of Earth?
Do Now: 1. Hand in H.W. 2. Compare and contrast Mutualism, Commensalism and Parasitism. H.W.: Read Pages 744 – 751 do questions

16 There are 6 major biomes on Earth.

17 What is a Biome? A biome is an environment with a specific climate (weather) and ecological community (organisms).

18 1. Deciduous Forest Four seasons – warm summer + cool winters.
Trees lose leaves in fall. Very fertile soil. Oak, elm, maple, beech Deer, squirrels, birds, fox Deforestation (cutting down the forest) is a problem.

19 2. Coniferous Forest Cold and Moist.
Conifer trees (have needles + produce cones). Poor soil Bear, lynx, owls, mouse, beaver. Found in mountains. Deforestation is a problem.

20 3. Rain Forest Hot and wet – lots of rain. Tropical – near equator.
Trees grow all year. Large variety of organisms (biodiversity) Parrots, lizards, monkeys, frogs Animals live in trees. Deforestation is a problem.

21 4. Desert Hot and very dry. Plants store water in leaves and trunks.
Cactus and shrubs. Lizards, rodents, camels. Many animals are nocturnal. Irrigation for farming is a problem.

22 5. Grassland/Savanna Mostly grasses – not enough rain for trees.
USA – bison, mice, snakes, hawks. Africa – lions, zebra, antelope. Overuse by farmers and cattle is a problem.

23 6. Tundra Cold and dry. Frozen soil called permafrost.
Small plants, grasses, lichens, moss. Caribou, wolves, oxen, fox. Have thick fur to stay warm. Oil drilling can be a problem here.

24 Aim: How can we describe the different Biomes of Earth?
Do Now: 1. Hand in H.W. 2. Describe the major factor that determines a biome and the nature of that factor for each biome. H.W.: Write a paragraph – Which biome would you want to live in most? Why might you not want to live there?

25 Aim: How can we describe Energy roles and Energy Flow in an ecosystem?
Do Now: 1. Take out H.W. 2. H.W.:

26 Energy Roles and Energy Flow in an Ecosystem.
All Energy enters an ecosystem from the sun and is cycled in the ecosystem through the organisms which Live there.

27 Producer A producer is an organism which makes its own food.
Ex: Plants.

28 Consumer A consumer is an organism which eats other organisms.
There are 5 types of consumers: Herbivore. Carnivore. Omnivore. Scavenger. Decomposer.

29 Herbivores A Herbivore is an animal that eats Only plants.
Examples are: deer, cow, horse, rabbit.

30 Carnivores A carnivore is an animal that eats Only animals.
Examples are: Snake, owl, lion, shark.

31 Omnivores An Omnivore is an animal that eats both plants and animals.
                                                                                            Omnivores An Omnivore is an animal that eats both plants and animals. Examples are: Rat, raccoon, bear, human.

32 Scavengers A Scavenger is an animal that eats dead organisms.
Examples are: Vulture, hyena, ants.

33 Decomposers A Decomposer is an organism which breaks down dead organisms and wastes into simple substances and returns them to the soil. Examples are: Bacteria, fungi.

34 Food Chains Food chains show ONE path of ENERGY () from one organism to another. Example of a food chain is as follows: Grain  Grasshopper  Mouse  Owl Producer Consumer Autotroph Herbivore Carnivore Green Plant Primary Consumer Secondary Consumer Tertiary Consumer 1st order consumer 2nd order consumer 3rd order consumer

35 Food Pyramids Food Pyramids show relationships between these organisms in a balanced ecosystem. Owl .1% Mouse 1% Grasshopper 10% Grain 100% Suns Energy Sun

36 As Energy Flows through the Food Pyramid from bottom to top…
Size of the organism Increases. (Predators are larger than prey). Number of the organisms decrease. (more prey than predators). Mass of the organisms decreases. (fewer organisms on top). Energy available decreases. (energy is lost from life process).

37 What is a Food Web? A Food Web shows many paths of energy in a community. Organism Role Food Carrot Producer Sunlight, CO2, H2O Grass Grain Rabbit Herbavore Carrot, grass Grasshopper Grass, Grains Mouse Omnivore Grasshopper, grains Bird Fox Carnivore Rabbit, mouse, bird Owl Mouse, grasshopper

38 What is a food web? A food web shows how energy flows through an ecosystem.

39 Food Chains and Webs Identify the parts of the food web.
Source of energy – Sun. Producers – Pine tree, grass, algae, green plants. Consumers – Deer, hawk, rabbit, dragonfly, frog, turtle, worm, fish, tadpole, human. Decomposers – bacteria and worm Abiotic factors – mud, sand, water, rock, air, sun, cloud.

40 Give Examples of a Food Chain from the Food Web.
Grass  Rabbit  hawk Algae  Fish  human.

41 The Water Cycle Water is heated and evaporates (turns to gas)
As the water rises, it cools and condenses (turns to liquid) This forms into clouds The water falls back to Earth as precipitation (rain, snow)

42 The Carbon Dioxide – Oxygen Cycle
Animals take in O2 for respiration and release CO2 as a waste product Plants take in CO2 for photosynthesis and release O2 as a waste product 3. CO2 is also released during decay

43 The Nitrogen Cycle Plants take in nitrogen to make proteins.
Animals eat plants and other animals to get proteins. When animals die or release wastes the nitrogen is decomposed by bacteria and is returned to the soil for plants to use again.

44 Succession Def: A gradual change in an ecosystem over time. Changes in the abiotic environment cause changes in the biotic life. Primary Succession – First growth on bare rock (rock, lava, cement). There is no soil. Small plants (moss, lichen) and no animals. Secondary Succession – Plant life begins to change as soil develops. Animals are present and change as plant life changes. Ex: overgrown field, forest fire, pond filling in Climax Community – A stable community which remains unchanged for years. Ex: Rainforest, desert

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47 The changes in an organism from birth to adulthood
Life Cycles The changes in an organism from birth to adulthood Incomplete metamorphosis: Young looks like smaller version of parents. Complete metamorphosis: Young do not look like parents.


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