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Ecology – Honors Biology 2010
37

Ecology – Honors Biology

Jan 24, 2016

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光宇 張

Ecology – Honors Biology. 2010. Hierarchy of Organization. Biosphere : combined portions of the planet in which all life exists – land, water & atmosphere Biome: group of ecosystems with same climate and similar dominant communities - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Ecology – Honors Biology

Ecology – Honors Biology

2010

Page 2: Ecology – Honors Biology

Hierarchy of Organization

• Biosphere: combined portions of the planet in which all life exists – land, water & atmosphere

• Biome: group of ecosystems with same climate and similar dominant communities

• Ecosystem: collection of all organisms in a particular place together with physical environment

• Community: Assemblages of different populations living in same area

• Population: group of individuals belonging to same species living in the same area: (Species) Group of organisms that can breed together.

Page 3: Ecology – Honors Biology
Page 4: Ecology – Honors Biology

Energy flow

• Energy power’s life processes

• Ultimate source

Nuclear fusion from sun

Page 5: Ecology – Honors Biology

Flow of Energy – Food Chain

Producers/Autotrophps

Primary consumer,

Heterotroph/Herbivore

Secondary consumer

Carnivore/Omnivore

Page 6: Ecology – Honors Biology
Page 7: Ecology – Honors Biology

Nutrients Recycle

Page 8: Ecology – Honors Biology
Page 9: Ecology – Honors Biology

10% transfer from one trophic level to next

Energy Pyramid

Page 10: Ecology – Honors Biology

Biomass Pyramid

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Numbers pyramid

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What is a species niche?

• Place on the food web

• Types of food an organism eats, how it obtains the food

• Abiotic factors needed to survive: sunlight, water, temperature

• When and how it reproduces

• No two species can share the same exact niche – “competitive exclusion principle”

Page 13: Ecology – Honors Biology

What is a species niche?

• Place on the food web

• Types of food an organism eats, how it obtains the food

• Abiotic factors needed to survive: sunlight, water, temperature

• When and how it reproduces

• No two species can share the same exact niche – “competitive exclusion principle”

Page 14: Ecology – Honors Biology

What is happening to the population of one species of beetles when forced to share the same niche as another species?

Two closely related species of flour beetles grown together and forced to use same exact resources:

Page 15: Ecology – Honors Biology
Page 16: Ecology – Honors Biology
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Define the following terms:

• Symbiosis

• Mutualism

• Commensalism

• Parasitism

• Predation

• Competition

Page 18: Ecology – Honors Biology

Common dog tick: What relationship?

Page 19: Ecology – Honors Biology

Barnacles on whale tail: What relationship?

Page 20: Ecology – Honors Biology

What relationship?

Page 21: Ecology – Honors Biology

What relationship?

Page 22: Ecology – Honors Biology

Carbon Cycle

1. How does Photosynthesis cycle carbon into living biomass?

2. How does Respiration cycle carbon into the atmosphere?

3. What are geological sources of carbon?

4. How does burning of some of #3 add carbon to the atmosphere?

Page 23: Ecology – Honors Biology

Nitrogen cycle

1. What three processes are bacteria involved in getting nitrogen from the atmosphere into a form usable by plants?

2. What form must nitrogen be in to be usable by plants?

3. How is nitrogen cycled from the soil back into the atmosphere?

Page 24: Ecology – Honors Biology

Water Cycle

1. What role do plants play in the cycling of water?

2. How does water that enters the soil return to atmospheric water cycling?

3. How would increasing air temperatures affect the water cycle?

Page 25: Ecology – Honors Biology

Ecological Succession

1. What is the difference between primary and secondary succession?

2. How are new plants/animals able to colonize the area?

3. What are “pioneer species”?

4. What adaptations do shade plants have in a forest ecosystem?

Page 26: Ecology – Honors Biology

Environmental Concerns

• Biomagnification of pollutants

• Global warming

• Ozone depletion

• Habitat destruction

• Invasive Species

Page 27: Ecology – Honors Biology

Biomagnification

Persistant toxins –

Mercury, TCDD

Pesticides -DDTs

Complete Biomagnification WS

Page 28: Ecology – Honors Biology

High mercury levels in sushi

Page 29: Ecology – Honors Biology

Global Warming

Rise in global temperature due to human activity

Page 30: Ecology – Honors Biology
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Causes of Global Warming:• Greenhouse gases: carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide

• Absorbs heat, prevents sunlight from radiating back into space

Page 33: Ecology – Honors Biology

Ozone Depletion

Thinning of ozone layer (O3) at poles – “holes in ozone layer”

Ozone layer absorbs harmful UVB rays

Increase in skin cancer?

Cause: Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) – chemically reacts with ozone

Page 34: Ecology – Honors Biology

Habitat Destruction

Main cause of loss in species diversity/ Main cause of extinction

Page 36: Ecology – Honors Biology
Page 37: Ecology – Honors Biology