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Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an organisms habitat and its niche.
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Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Jan 24, 2016

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Cordelia Price
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Page 1: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Objectives:1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors.2. Describe the levels of biological organization3. Differentiate between an organisms habitat and its niche.

Page 2: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Vocabulary

EcologyBiosphere

Biotic factorAbiotic factor

PopulationBiological CommunityEcosystem

BiomeHabitatNiche

PredationSymbiosisMutualism

CommensalismParasitism

Page 3: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Ecology

• Ecology: the study of relationships between living organism, and their interaction with their environments.

• Biosphere: The portion of the earth that supports life.

Page 4: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Biotic and Abiotic Factors

• Biotic Factors: The living factors in an organism’s environment.

• Abiotic Factors: The non-living factors in an organism’s environment.

Page 5: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.
Page 6: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Levels of Organization in ecology

OrganismsPopulation

Biological communityEc osystem

BiomeBioshpere

Page 7: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

organism

• The lowest level of ecological classification is the single organism.

• (Example: one single fish)

Page 8: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Population

• A population is all the individuals of a single species that share the same geographic location at the same time.

• (example: a school of fish)

Page 9: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Biological Community

• Community: A group of interacting populations that occupy the same geographic area at the same time.

Page 10: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Ecosystem

• Ecosystem: includes a community and all the abiotic factors that effect it.

Page 11: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Biome

• Biome: a large group of ecosystems that share the same climate and have similar types of communities.

• (Example: a marine biome)

Page 12: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Habitat and Niche

• Habitat: the area where an organism lives.• Niche: the role or position that an organism

has in it’s environment. (it’s job).

Page 13: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Community Interactions

Page 14: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Community Interactions

• Competition: occurs when more than one organism uses a resource at the same time.

• Competition for food, water, space, light, and mates.

• Predation: The act of one organism consuming another organism for food.

Page 15: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Community Relationships Continued

• Symbiotic relationship: A close relationship that exists when two or more species live together.

Page 16: Objectives: 1. Explain the difference between abiotic and biotic factors. 2. Describe the levels of biological organization 3. Differentiate between an.

Three types of Symbiotic Relationships

• Mutualism: when the two or more organisms both benefit from the relationship.

• Commensalism: a relationship when one organism benefits and the other organisms is neither helped nor harmed.

• Parasitism: a relationship when one organism benefits at the expense of another organism.