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Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities

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Page 1: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities

Page 2: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities

Vocabulary• Weather• Climate• Greenhouse• Niche • Habitat• Symbiosis• Succession• Biomes

Key Concepts• What factors

determine climate?• How does competition

shape communities?• How do communities

change over time?• What biotic and

abiotic factors characterize biomes?

Page 3: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

4.1 Climate• Both weather and climate involve variation in environmental changes such as temperature and precipitation

So what’s the difference??• Weather includes day to day changes and conditions

•Climate refers to averages over long periods of time

Page 4: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •
Page 5: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

•Climate tends not to be uniform within a region and microclimates can be created•Northern Hemisphere, the south side facing trees receive more sunlight creating warmer, drier area

Page 6: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Factors that Affect Climate

1) Greenhouse Effect – gases (CO2, methane, water vapor) in atmosphere allow light energy in but trap heat

• we need this to keep Earth at livable temperature

• If concentration of greenhouse gas increases, temperature rises

• If concentration decreases, temperatures lower

Page 7: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •
Page 8: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Factors that Affect Climate

2) Latitude• Sun hits the earth more directly at the equator than at the poles

- Causes more tropical environment at equator

•Due to the curvature of the sun, the energy is spread over a much larger area

Page 9: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •
Page 10: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Factors that Affect Climate

3) Heat Transport in Biosphere

•Unequal distribution of heatcreates currents and wind

- Transports moisture and heat- Warm air less dense and rises,

cold air more dense and sinks

Page 11: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Winds

• Up and down movements of the air masses create winds

Page 12: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Currents

• Similar heating and cooling patterns also create ocean currents

Page 13: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

4.2 Niches and Community Interactions

• Organisms occupy different places due to varying conditions that allow them to grow and reproduce• Varying conditions help define where organisms can live

Page 14: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• 2 factors that shape where and how organisms live are biotic and abiotic factors

• Any of these biotic or abiotic factors that restricts the number of organisms, their distribution, existence, or ability to reproduce is called a limiting factor

Page 15: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• An example of limiting factor is the timberline– Elevation, winds,

shallow soil, etc..• Factors that limit one

population may have an indirect affect on other populations within that community– Lack of water,

decreases seed production, affects mice that are dependent on those seeds

Page 16: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• Range of Tolerance– The ability of an

organism to withstand fluctuations in biotic and abiotic factors

– Catfish can withstand warmer water than trout or bass

Page 17: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Organisms in Ecosystems• Habitat

(address) = area where an organism lives– Includes biotic

and abiotic factors

Page 18: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Organisms in Ecosystems• Niche (job)=full range of physical and

biological conditions in which the organism lives and the way the organism uses those conditions– Ex: place in the food web, range of

temperatures the organism needs to survive, food the organism eats

Page 19: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• If two species try to occupy the same niche, it creates competition– Result: one species will not survive

extinction

• No two species can share the same niche in the same habitat

• Different species can occupy different niches that are very similar

Page 20: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Interactions• Organisms in an ecosystem interact constantly

– Shapes the ecosystem• Ways of interaction

– Competition– Predation– Symbiosis

• Mutualism• Commensalism• Parasitism

Page 21: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Resource=necessity of life• Competition= when

organism try to use a resource at the same place/time– Two lizards want to eat

the same type of insect

• Predation= one organism captures and feed on another– Bald Eagle (predator)

eating fish (prey)

Page 22: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• Keystone species = change in a single species within a population can cause dramatic changes in community– Examples: wolves of Yellowstone, sea otters,

black-footed ferrets

Page 23: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •
Page 24: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Symbiosis= two species live closely

Mutualism= both species benefit from the relationship

Flowers and insects

Commensalism= one species benefits, the other is not helped or harmed

Whales and barnacles

Parasitism= One organism lives on/inside the other and harms it

Tapeworm , trichinella

Page 25: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

4.3 Succession• Ecosystems change—human intervention, natural

disaster

• Series of predictable changes that occur in a community over time = ecological succession

• Primary succession= occurs on surfaces where there is no soil– Volcanoes build up an island– Pioneer species= 1st organisms to populate

• Once a community becomes stable, mature, and little change in species, it is known as a climax community

Page 26: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •
Page 27: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• Secondary succession = some kind of change happens, but soil remains– Fire– Land cleared/plowed

• Change in species is also slow, as in primary succession, but…

– Seeds in the soil from previous vegetation takes over

Page 28: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •
Page 29: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

4.4 Biomes• Biome = large group of ecosystems that

share similar climax community

• Biomes are located on land (terrestrial) and in water (aquatic)

Page 30: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• Aquatic Biomes1. Marine

- Refers to salt waters (oceans, seas)- Contains the largest amount of biomass (living

material)- Photic zone: shallow, sunlit

- Rocky shores, sandy beaches, mudflats

- Aphotic Zone: deeper, no sun light

Page 31: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •
Page 32: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• Areas where salt water and fresh water meet are called estuaries– Salinity (amount of salt) ranges between very

salty to fresh water– Changes with the tides

Page 33: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

• Tides– Rise and fall of ocean tides are caused by the

sun and moons gravitational pull.– Intertidal zone: portion of shoreline that is

between high and low tides• Size varies depending on slope of land and height

of tide

Page 34: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

2. Freshwater biomes- streams, lakes, ponds- limiting factors: light and temperature

Page 35: Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities - West Linn · Chapter 4: Ecosystems and Communities Vocabulary • Weather • Climate • Greenhouse • Niche • Habitat • Symbiosis •

Terrestrial Biomes

• Two abiotic factors that affect terrestrial biomes are temperature and precipitation

• 6 different types of biomes– Tundra, taiga, grassland, deciduous forests,

rain forests, and deserts