ecology interactions between organisms and their environments
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Ecology Interactions Between Organisms and their Environments. Mr. Broderick NC SCOS Goal 5. The organization of our world!. The earth is a biosphere. Ecosystems are the living and nonliving things in an area. Populations are a group of one type of organism living in an area. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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EcologyInteractions Between Organisms and
their Environments
Mr. BroderickNC SCOS Goal 5
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The organization of our world!
The earth is a biosphere
Ecosystems are the living and nonliving things in an area
Populations are a group of one type of organism living in an area
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Hierarchy of Biology
• Molecules• Organelles
• Cells• Tissues• Organs• Organ systems• Organisms• Populations• Communities• Ecosystems
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What is ecology?
• Ecology: The study of the relationship between organisms and their environment
• Example problems that ecology handles: – How do humans affect the atmosphere and
contribute to global warming? – How does the population of wolves in an area
affect the population of rabbits?– Do clownfish (Nemo!) and anemone benefit each
other?
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Why does ecology matter?
• Ecology: The study of the relationship between organisms and their environment
Scenario: Imagine that there is an insect that lives on peanut plants growing on farms in Northampton County. Is there a way that we can limit insect damage to the peanut crops in order to decrease the price of peanuts at the store by 20 cents per pound?
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Ecosystems
• Ecosystem: An area containing an interaction of living and non-living factors in an area/region
• Example ecosystems: – North Carolina forests (pine forests)– Coastal Plains of NC– Outer banks coastal water ecosystem– Lake Gaston ecosystem
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What is in an Ecosystem?
• Abiotic Factors: The non-living parts of an ecosystem– Rocks, soil, temperature, gases in the air, light
• Biotic Factors: The living parts of an ecosystem– Plants, animals, bacteria, fungus• Producers: use light to make their own energy• Consumers: eat other organisms to obtain energy• Decomposers: break down dead organisms for energy
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Biotic• Humans• Bacteria• Fungus• Plants• Insects• Amphibians• Reptiles• Mammals• Birds
Abiotic• Water• Soil• Wind or Air• Gases
– oxygen, carbon dioxide, nitrogen
• Temperature• Sunlight• pH
– Acid or base
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Abiotic or Biotic?
Biotic (plant)
Abiotic (rainwater)
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Abiotic or Biotic?
• The air temperature is 45 degrees F = • The soil is made of rocks and minerals =• A bird lays eggs =• Bacteria break down dead organisms = • The pH or the water is 2 (acidic) =
abioticabiotic
abiotic
bioticbiotic
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Abiotic or Biotic?Biotic Biotic BioticAbiotic
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Which of the following is a relationship between abiotic and biotic factors?
A) The rain on an open field washes away soilB) A hawk hunts a mouse and swoops down into
the forest for the killC) A lake has very acidic water which causes
many fish populations to dieD) A deer grazes in a field of grasses
Abiotic
Biotic
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A scientist performs an experiment to see if acids have an effect on the health of a particular type of plant. Three sets of plants were treated with acidic solutions of known pH while the control set was treated with a solution of neutral pH 7.
What is the best conclusion for this experiment?
A. Acid has no effect on the health of this type of plant
B. High acidity is helpful to this type of plant
C. Low acidity is harmful to this type of plant
D. High acidity is harmful to this type of plant
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Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem
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Food Chains
• A food chain shows the flow of energy between the organisms in an environment
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Food Chains
• Notice that the arrow points from the organism being eaten to the organism that eats it.– Like the burger you eat goes into you
Plants Cow (burger) Human
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What do the arrows in the food chain below indicate?
A. SunlightB. Energy flowC. Heat transferD. Toxins
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What is energy?
• The energy that is transferred in an ecosystem is stored in carbon-compounds, or organic compounds.– Organic compounds: molecules that contain a
carbon atom• Carbohydrates: glucose, starch, cellulose (mostly plants)• Proteins: the muscles of animals (steak!)• Fats: in muscle of animal tissues (fatty steak!)
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Food Webs• When we put many food chains together in
one ecosystem, it is called a food web• Food webs show the direction that energy flows
in an ecosystem.
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Energy Moves in a Food Web
Plants make glucose from light
Some animals get glucose from plants
Other animals get energy from the fat and protein in other animals
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Parts of a Food WebProducers: organisms that use light to store energy in organic compounds. (examples: plants, algae, phytoplankton)
Consumers: organisms that eat other organisms to get organic compounds that
they use for energy (examples: humans, cows, insects, birds…)
3 ͦconsumers: organisms that eat 2 ͦconsumers for energy2 ͦ consumers: organisms that eat 1 ͦconsumers for energy1 ͦconsumers: eat producers to obtain energy compounds
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Parts of a Food Web
• Where are the producers in the food web below?
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Parts of a Food Web
• Where are the consumers in the food web below?
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Producer
Primary Consumer
Secondary Consumer
Tertiary Consumer
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Which of the following organisms is a primary consumer in the ecosystem shown?
A. HawkB. RabbitC. Mountain lionD. Frog
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Population Impacts in a Food Web
• If the population of organisms at any level of the food web changes, it will affect the population at other levels
• If the population of producers decreases, then the population of primary consumers will decrease if they don’t have enough food.
• If the population of primary consumers decreases, then…-The producers will increase because there are less consumers eating them-The secondary consumers will decrease because there is less food for them
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Which organism would be most affected if the cricket population decreased?
A. SnakeB. DeerC. FrogD. Hawk
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Energy Pyramids
• Energy Pyramids show the amount of energy at each level of a food web– Trophic Level: the total amount of energy in all
organisms at one level in the food web.
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Energy Pyramids
• More energy at the bottom, decreases as the pyramid moves up the food web
More Energy
Less Energy
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Energy Pyramid Labels
Producers
Tertiary Consumers
Primary Consumers
Secondary Consumers
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Energy Transfer in Energy Pyramids
• Each trophic level of the energy pyramid supplies energy to the level above it.
• Each transfer loses 90% of the energy• Only 10% of the energy at a level is passed to
the next level up!
100%
10%
1%
0.1%
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Energy Transfer (calories)
1,000 calories
1 calorie
100 calories
10 calories
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Energy Transfer in Energy Pyramids
• We can say that the energy transfer from level to level is inefficient– (not a lot of the energy at each level makes it up)
• This means that there can’t be many levels ina food web or pyramid– The amount of energy decreases, and it cannot
typically support organisms at higher levels than tertiary consumer
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Energy Transfer and Flow
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How does energy enter the food web?
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Better question… where does the weight of a producer come from?
How does this... become this?
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Carbon Dioxide
Water Glucose OxygenSunlight
Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis: a toxin process that occurs in producers and converts light, carbon dioxide, and water into glucose (sugar) and oxygen
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Light CO2 H2O
Glucose O2
Starch
Fat(nuts)
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How do consumers get energy?
• Digestion of organic molecules– Consumers eat other organisms to obtain organic
molecules, which are forms of stored energy.– Energy is stored in the bonds of the molecules.
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The Carbon Cycle
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Carbon Cycle
• Carbon is found throughout the environment– Carbon is found in the atmosphere and in water as
carbon dioxide (CO2)– Carbon is found in organisms as organic
molecules, like glucose (sugars) and fats– Carbon is found buried in the ground as fossil fuels
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CO2
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C6H12O6
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CO2
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Greenhouse Effect and Global Warming
Greenhouse Effect• Heat is trapped near the Earth’s surface
because once light gets in, it warms the surface but cannot escape out of the atmosphere.– It is trapped by the gases in the atmosphere, like
CO2
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Excess CO2 Enhanced Greenhouse Effect Global Warming
GLOBAL WARMING•The Earth has been warming on average.•Could be due to increased CO2 emissions into the atmosphere, which enhances the greenhouse effect and traps extra heat.
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