Top Banner
Principles of Principles of Ecology Ecology Chapter 15 and 16 Chapter 15 and 16
19

Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Dec 30, 2015

Download

Documents

Derick Griffin
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Principles of Principles of EcologyEcology

Chapter 15 and 16Chapter 15 and 16

Page 2: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

What is Ecology?What is Ecology?

• Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their environments.– Reveals relationships among living and non-

living parts of the world– Observed both in the lab and the

environment

What would an ecologist study or look for in the environment?

Page 3: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Aspects of Ecological StudyAspects of Ecological Study

• Biosphere: portion of the earth that supports life.

– Includes:

• Atmosphere

• Hydrosphere: Oceans and Lakes

• Lithosphere:Terrestrial Earth

• Ecosphere:All living organisms

Page 4: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Non-Living EnvironmentNon-Living Environment• Abiotic Factors: non-living parts of an organism’s

environment

Examples:• Air & Water Temperatures• Moisture & Precipitation• Light• Soil• Wind

Why are abiotic factors important in ecology?

How do they effect living organisms?

Page 5: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Importance of Water!

• Why introduce water as something we should study?

• Because all living things need water!

• We will be studying how the properties of water effects what can live there.

Page 6: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Where’s all the water?

• Oceans: 97.2 %

• Icecaps and Glaciers: 2.0 %

• Groundwater: 0.62%

• Atmosphere: 0.001%

• Freshwater: 0.0009%

• Rivers: 0.0001%

Can’t Use!

Useable Freshwater

Page 7: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Living EnvironmentLiving Environment

• Biotic Factors: all the living things that inhabit an environment.

Examples: look familiar?• Animals• Plants• Fungi• Protists• Bacteria

Page 8: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Levels of Ecological OrganizationLevels of Ecological Organization

Biosphere (most diverse)

Ecosystem

Community

Population

Individual (single organism)

Page 9: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Levels of Ecological Levels of Ecological OrganizationOrganization

• Individual:– Made of cells– Uses energy (food)– Reproduces– Responds and adapts– Grows and develops

What do we know these as?

Page 10: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Levels of Ecological Levels of Ecological OrganizationOrganization

• Population: A group of organisms

that:

– Are all the same species– Interbreed– Live in the same area at the

same time

– Members of a population may compete with each other for:

• food, water, mates, or other resources

Page 11: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Levels of Ecological Levels of Ecological OrganizationOrganization

• Community:– Made of interacting populations in a certain area at

a certain time

– In a community a change in one population may cause changes in other populations

How can one population influence other populations?

Page 12: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Levels of Ecological Levels of Ecological OrganizationOrganization

• Ecosystem: – Is made up of interacting populations in a biological

community and the community’s abiotic factors

2 kinds:

• Terrestrial– Forest, desert, grassland, tundra, mountains

• Aquatic– Pond, lake, river, deep ocean, reef, estuary

Page 13: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

What level is this?What level is this?

Page 14: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Organisms in Ecosystems

• Habitat: the place where an organism lives out its life

– Examples: grasslands, trees, muddy banks

• Niche: the role and position a species has in its environment

– How it meets the needs for survival

– Includes all interactions with the biotic and abiotic parts of its habitat

Page 15: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

NicheNicheExamples:

– On forest floor there is competition for food and space:

• Millipedes – eat decaying leaves

• Centipedes – eat beetles and other animals

• Ants – eat dead insects

• Earthworms – take organic nutrients from the soil

• Fungi – take nutrients from decaying organic material

Page 16: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Living RelationshipsLiving Relationships

• Some species increase their chance of survival by developing relationships with other organisms

• Some interactions are harmful to one species, others are beneficial

Page 17: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Relationships cont.Relationships cont.• Predator – Prey relationship

– Predator: animals that consume other animals

– Prey: animals that are consumed

• Examples:

– Lions & wildebeests

• Symbiosis: “living together”

– relationship in which there is a close and permanent association between different species

Page 18: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Relationships cont.Relationships cont.

• Commensalism– relationship in which one species benefits, while

the other species is neither benefited nor harmed

• Examples:

– Sea anemone & clownfish

– Shark & remora fish

Page 19: Principles of Ecology Chapter 15 and 16. What is Ecology? Ecology: the study of interactions among organisms and living and nonliving components of their.

Relationships cont.Relationships cont.• Mutualism:

– Both species benefit from the relationship• Examples:

– Ants and acacia trees

– Hammerhead sharks & cleaner fish

• Parasitism:– One species benefits while the other is harmed

• Examples:

– Fleas and dogs

– Ticks and deer

– Tapeworms and humans