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Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Jan 21, 2016

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Amberlynn Lamb
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Page 1: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Ecology

Page 2: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

What is ecology?

The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment

Page 3: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

The Environment

Levels of organization:Biosphere

Ecosystem

Community

Population

Organisms

Page 4: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Interconnectedness

All organisms interact with other organisms and their surroundings, living and nonliving

Page 5: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Models

Ecologists use models to study ecology

Create models to test hypothesis

Models are used to make predictions about the environment

Page 6: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Environmental Factors

Bioitc - living components of the environment

Plants, animals…

Abiotic - nonliving componentsPhysical and chemical characteristics

Temperature, pH, salinity…

Page 7: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Humans and the Environment

Exploding human populationOver 6 billion people

Habitat destruction

Thinning ozone layer

Climate changes

Page 8: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Ever Changing Environment

Organisms have a range of toleranceTolerance Curve

Able to withstand a wide range of environmental factors

Page 9: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Responses to Change

Acclimation

Conform

Regulate

EscapeMigrate

Dormancy

Page 10: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Niche

The role of a species in its environmentHabitat - address

Niche - profession

Fundamental niche

Realized niche

Page 11: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Biomes

Large ecosystems, terrestrial and aquatic, that contain a number of smaller but related ecosystems within

Page 12: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 13: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Tundra

Cold, and mostly treeless belt across northern North America, Europe, and Asia

Permafrost - permanently frozen later of soil under the surface

Little precipitation, short growing periods

Caribou, musk oxen, snowy owls, artic foxes, lemmings, and snow shoe hares.

Page 14: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 15: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Taiga

Forest dominated by cone bearing evergreensAcross Northern Europe, Asia, and AmericaSnow cover insulates the ground, protecting tree roots from freezingMoose, bears, wolves, and lynx.

Page 16: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 17: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Temperate Deciduous Forest

Characterized by tree that lose their leaves in the fall

Eastern North America, Europe, parts of Asia, and Southern Hemisphere

Pronounced seasons, precipitation

White tailed deer, foxes, raccoons, and squirrels.

Page 18: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 19: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Temperate Grasslands

Dominated by grasses, in the interior of continents, also known as a prairie.

Rich fertile soil

Grazzing mammals, bison, cows, sheep.

Used as farmland

Page 20: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 21: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Deserts

Low levels of rainfall, sparse vegetation.

Not always hot, can get very cold at night.

Plants adapted to reduce water loss.

Kit foxes, lizards, and snakes.

Page 22: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 23: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Savannas

Tropical or subtropical grasslands with scattered trees and shrubs. Found in Africa, South America, and Australia.

Wet and dry seasons.

Lions, Leopards, cheetahs, zebras, wildebeest, giraffes, and gazelles.

Page 24: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 25: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Tropical Rain Forests

Charaterized with tall trees, found near the equator.

Stable year round growing season with abundant rainfall.

Very diverse animal and plant lifeSloth, monkeys, snakes, lizards.

Page 26: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 27: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Ocean Zones

Intertidal Zone

Neritic Zone

Photic Zone

Aphotic zone

Pelagic Zone

Benthic Zone

Page 28: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 29: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Estuaries

Occur where freshwater rivers and streams flow out into the sea.

Bays, mud flats, salt marshes.

Page 30: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 31: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Freshwater Zones

Low levels of dissolved salts

Lakes and PondsEutrophic -rich in organic matter, murky.

Oligotrophic - little organic matter, clear.

Rivers and StreamsRun down a gradient or slope toward its mouth.

Page 32: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 33: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Measuring Populations

A population is all the members of a species that live in a given area at one time.

How do we measure a population?

Page 34: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Growth Rate

Affected byBirth rate

Death rate

Immigration

Emigration

Growth rate = birth rate - death rate

Page 35: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Exponential

Page 36: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Logistic

Accounts for influence of limiting factors

Carrying capacity - K

Page 37: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Cycles

Page 38: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Human Growth

Page 39: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Changes in Population Size

Human Activity

Natural Causes

Invasive and Non-native Species

Page 40: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Communities

Group of populations living close together that have potential for interaction

Page 41: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Symbioses

Relationship between different species living in close association with one another.

Page 42: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Predator - Prey

Predator - captures, kills, and consumes other individuals.

Prey - indiviual that is captured, killed, and consumed by another individual

Page 43: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Natural Selection

Mechanism of evolution

Organisms adapt to improve efficiency

Mimicry - a harmless organism resembles an organism that maybe poisonous or distasteful

Page 44: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Plant - Herbivore Interaction

Plants can form secondary compounds to avoid predation

chemicals that are poisonous, irritating, or bad-tasting

Page 45: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Parasitism

Species interation with another where one benefits and one is harmed

ParasiteEcoparasite

Endoparasite

Host

Page 46: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Competition

Occurs when fundamental niches overlap.

Niche - role the species plays in its environment

Compete for Resources

Page 47: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 48: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Types of competition

Competitive exclusion

Resource partitioning

Invasive species

Non-native species

Page 49: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Mutualism and Commensalisms

Mutualism - cooperative relationshipBoth species benefit

Commensalisms -One species benefits, the other is unaffected

Page 50: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.
Page 51: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Richness and Diversity

Species richness – the number of species in a community

Species diversity – number of species in a community relative to the abundance of each species

Page 52: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Patterns of Richness

Page 53: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Changes in Communities

Succession – series of predictable changes that occur over time

Primary

Secondary

Page 54: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Succession after a volcanic eruption

Page 55: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Energy

Essential to carry out functions such as growth, movement, maintenance, and reproduction.

Energy flows through ecosystems through organisms

Page 56: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Producers - Autotrophs

Capture energy to make their own organic molecules

Primary productivity - rate at which producers capture energy

Biomass - the organic material

Page 57: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Consumers - Heterotrophs

Carnivores

Herbivores

Omnivores

Detrivores

Decomposers

Page 58: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Food Chain

Single pathway of feeding relationships

Page 59: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Food Web

Interrelated food chains in an ecosystem

Page 60: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Energy Flow

Trophic level - position of an organism in the sequence of energy flow

Page 61: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Energy Transfer

Page 62: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Ecosystem Recycling

Biogeochemical cyclesWater and minerals such as carbon, nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorous are recycled and reused

Page 63: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Water Cycle

Page 64: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Carbon Cycle

Page 65: Ecology. What is ecology? The study of interactions between organisms with living and nonliving components of the environment.

Nitrogen Cycle