chapter 3 (ecology)

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Ecology

Chapter 3: The Biosphere

What is Ecology?

• Ecology – the study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment

• Levels of Organization– Biosphere – the largest of the areas of the

earth containing the portion of the planet that life exists, including land, water and air (atmosphere)

Levels of Organization

Levels of Organization• Individual – similar organism (can mate)• Population – group of individuals that live in the

same area• Community – populations that live together is a

defined area• Ecosystem – all the organisms that live in a

similar area along with the nonliving material• Biome – group of ecosystems (similar climate)• Biosphere – entire earth

Ecological Methods• Scientists use 3 basic methods to conduct

ecological research– Observing – qualitative and quantitative

observations– Experimenting – used to test hypotheses, can

set up artificial environments and manipulate conditions

– Modeling – models are made to study events that have occurred over large time periods, or are large in scale

Interactions Among Organisms

• Sunlight is the main energy source for life on Earth

• Producers – autotrophs (make their own energy (using the sun)–Photosynthesis – using light to

produce energy / food–Chemosynthesis – using inorganic

molecules to produce energy / food

Interactions (continued)

• Consumers – heterotrophs (cannot make their own energy)–Herbivores – consume plants–Carnivores - consume meat–Omnivores – consume both–Detritovores – dead or decaying matter

(earthworms, mites, crabs (animals)–Decomposers – dead or decaying

matter (bacteria & fungus)

Energy Transfer / Feeding Relationships

• Food Chain / Food Web – series of steps of energy transfer (web = connected food chains)

• Trophic Levels – each step in a food chain

Ecological Pyramids

• Diagram that shows relative amounts of energy or matter contained within each trophic level in a food chain or food web.

• Energy Pyramid – energy available at each trophic level (10% rule)

• Biomass Pyramid – amount of living tissue

• Pyramid of Numbers - # of individuals

Examples of Pyramids

Biogeochemical Cycles

• Water Cycle– Evaporation, precipitation, condensation,

transpiration, run-off, ground water

Biogeochemical Cycles• Carbon Cycle –

carbon fixation, CO2• Photosynthesis,

respiration• Fossil fuels• Human Activites

– Mining, cutting forests, burning fossil fuels

Biogeochemical Cycles• Nitrogen cycle – nitrogen fixation

(bacteria), denitrification

Nutrient Limitation

• Primary Productivity – rate of production of organic matter by producers

• Limiting Nutrients – nutrient that limits productivity

• Aquatic ecosystems – large input of limiting nutrient can cause an increase of algae or producers = algal bloom

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