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Ecosystems and Living Organisms

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Title: Ecosystems and Living Organisms


1
Ecosystems and Living Organisms
  • Chapter 5
  • APES

2
1 Warm-up Question
  • Quietly read the introduction to Chapter 5 and
    Summarize what happened to Lake Victoria
  • What are cichlid? How many species?
  • Why did they die out?
  • Was it intentional result?

3
Lake Victoria
4
Evolution and Adaptation
  • Evolution-
  • Adaptation-

5
Darwins 4 premises of evolution by natural
selection
  • Overproduction-
  • Variation-
  • Limits
  • Differential reproductive success-
  • Natural Selection-

6
Types of Adaptations
  • Structural adaptation
  • Functional adaptation
  • Behavioral adaptations
  • New Genes enter gene pool thru mutations

7
3 Ways Natural Selection Operates
  • Stabilizing selection
  • Directional selection
  • Disruptive selection

8
Modes of Selection
9
Wrap-Up Question
  • What are the 4 premises of natural selection?

10
2 Warm-Up Question
  • What are the 3 types of adaptations that occur
    based on evolution?

11
6 kingdoms of living things
  • Prokaryotic cell structure
  • Eubacteria
  • Archeabacteria
  • Eukaryotic cell structure
  • Plants
  • Fungi
  • Animals

12
6 kingdoms of living things Eubacteria
  • A.K.A.
  • Tiny, single-celled
  • Need
  • Examples

13
6 kingdoms of living things Archeabacteria
  • They differ from other bacteria because
  • they
  • the RNA
  • They include _______________, the salt loving and
    the ____________________.
  • Examples

14
6 kingdoms of living things Animal
  • Almost all of the animals we commonly think of --
    _________________________-- belong to a single
    subgroup within one of the _____________comprising
    the Animal Kingdom.
  • Examples

15
6 kingdoms of living things Fungi
  • fungi recycle _________________________
    nutrients.
  • If it doesn't wait for the bio-matter to die, it
    is called a _________________
  • Fungi digest food _______________________
  • Fungi reproduce by ___________________from a
    fruiting body
  • Examples

16
6 kingdoms of living things Plants
  • provide the __________________
  • Provide food that sustains us
  • provide ____________________and
    _______________________ while surrounding us
    _____________________and marking the change of
    seasons.
  • Examples

17
6 kingdoms of living things Protist
  • Heterogeneous _______________________
  • Do not have much in common besides a
    ______________________________(unicellular, or
    multicellular without highly specialized
    tissues).
  • Some call it the _____________ from the other
    eukaryotic kingdoms.
  • Examples

18
Taxonomy of Living things
  • K
  • P
  • C
  • O
  • F
  • G
  • S

19
Wrap-up Question
  • Name something unique about each of the kingdoms
  • Can you name our classification?

20
3 Warm-Up Question
  • Name the 6 kingdoms of biological classification

21
Biological Communities
  • Community
  • Communities are extremely
  • There is competition for-

22
Little Acorn lyme disease
  • Study in oak forests NE US
  • Abundant acorns
  • Tick feed on the
  • giving the mice
  • Transferred to humans

23
Succession
  • How communities
  • Climax community
  • Change in species composition and abundance over
    time
  • Stages

24
Primary Succession
  • Change in species composition over time in an
  • No ______________exists
  • Pioneer community-
  • Example

25
Primary Succession examples
  • Indonesian island of Krakatoa
  • Sand dunes around the shores of Lake Michigan
  • Glacier Bay, Alaska

26
Secondary Succession
  • change in species composition that takes place
    after some
  • Examples
  • After a ____________or __________________
  • Yellowstone National Park 1988
  • 1/3 park burned
  • 1989- pioneer community Trout lily (herb)
  • 1998- lodgepole pines ( 4-5 feet height)
    Douglas fir seedling appeared

27
Secondary Succession
  • Example Abandoned farmlands
  • Crabgrass- pioneer community
  • Horseweed
  • Broomsedge and other weeds
  • pine trees
  • hardwood trees

28
Sequence of secondary succession in an abandoned
field
29
Wrap-Up Question
  • What is the difference between primary succession
    and secondary succession?

30
4 Warm-up Question
  • What is a pioneer community?
  • Name the pioneer community of a primary
    succession
  • Walk to see secondary succession on this
  • campus

31
Keystone Species
  • Species
  • They _______________be the most numerous
    organisms in the ecosystem
  • Examples

32
Sea otter(listen dont write)
  • Sea otters are marine mammals that live in kelp
    beds along the western coast of North America
    from Baja Mexico to Alaska. Once hunted to near
    extinction, their protection has been one of the
    success stories of conservation.
  • In the 1970's, sea otter populations were healthy
    and expanding throughout their range.

33
A Mystery?
  • Scientists noted that by the 1990's some
    populations of sea otters were declining
  • One possibility was that the animals had moved
    rather than died.
  • In 1993, an 800 km long section of the Aleutian
    Islands was surveyed and the results were
    alarming.
  • The sea otter population had declined by 50.

34
Saga continues
  • In 1997 the Aleutian survey was repeated and the
    results were worse. Sea otter populations had
    declined by 90.
  • In 1970, some 53,000 sea otters lived in the
    study area.
  • By 1997, that population was down to about 6,000
    animals.

35
possible causes
  • Reproductive failure
  • Starvation
  • Pollution
  • Disease
  • The problem with these hypotheses was that there
    was no evidence of dead otters that might support
    the idea of some epidemic or source of mortality
    that would kill many over a wide range.

36
Cause of the Decline
  • In 1991, one scientist noticed an orca (killer
    whale) eating a sea otter. This was unusual
    because sea lions and seals are the normal prey
    for orcas and a small animal such as a sea otter
    wouldn't provide much nutrition.
  • At one site called Clam Lagoon, populations of
    otters remained healthy. Interestingly, that site
    was inaccessible to orcas.
  • It turned out that orcas had indeed been
    responsible for the decline in otters.

37
Cause of the decline continued
  • A decline in the abundance of their usual prey
    forced them to switch to otters.
  • Not all the orcas needed to switch to generate
    the mortality observed along the Aleutians.
  • As few as 4 orcas feeding solely on otters could
    have produced an impact of the magnitude
    observed.
  • A single orca could consume about 1,825 otters
    per year.

38
Over fishing and Climate changes
  • led to a reduction in food for sea lions and
    seals. This forced the orcas to enter into the
    coastal waters where they consumed sea otters.
    Sea otters normally feed on sea urchins. Without
    this control, the urchins increased in abundance.
    Urchins graze on kelp, particularly on the
    holdfast and large numbers of urchins damaged
    kelp forests. The decline in the kelp forests has
    had an impact on many others species ranging from
    sea ducks to sea stars.

39
North Pacific Food Web
40
Wrap-Up Question
  • What is a keystone species?

41
5 Warm-up Question
  • Where on this campus is there an example of
    secondary secession?

42
Interactions among Organisms
  • No organism
  • Symbiosis-
  • Result of co-evolution
  • Example

43
Mutualism
  • Relationship
  • Examples
  • Flowering plants animal pollinators
  • Rhizobium (bacteria) and legumes
  • Bacteria live in nodules on roots of legume
    plants
  • Coral and zooxanthellae (algae)
  • Zooxanthellae are algae that live inside cells of
    coral
  • Mycorrhizae (fungi) and plant roots
  • Mycorrhizae is a fungus that grows around and
    into roots and absorbs essential minerals from
    soil

44
Commensalism
  • Relationship
  • Examples
  • Silverfish and army ants
  • Tropical tree and epiphytes
  • Epiphyte anchors itself to a tree but does not
    obtain nutrients or water directly from the tree
  • Epiphytes are smaller plants like
  • Mosses, Orchids, Ferns

45
Parasitism
  • Relationship
  • Parasite obtains nourishment from host
  • Examples
  • Bees and mites
  • Tapeworms/roundworms
  • Pathogen and host

46
Competition
  • Relationship
  •  Intraspecific competition
  • Interspecific competition

47
Neutralism
  • An interspecific interaction
  • Example Grizzly Bear and Butterfly

48
Amensalism
  • The interaction
  • Alleopathy-
  • Examples Sagebrush, mint, black walnut

49
Predation
  • Consumption
  • Predation
  • Strategic plans
  • Coyote vs. Mice

50
Pursuit and Ambush
  • Advantage predators have evolved
  • Because carnivores must be able to process
    information quickly during the pursuit of prey,
    their brains are generally larger, relative to
    body size, than those of the prey they pursue

51
Plant Defenses Against Herbivores
  • Presence of
  • Produce chemical

52
Defensive Adaptations of Animals
  • Underground
  • Quills,
  • Live
  • Chemical defense
  • Warning coloration
  • Camouflage

53
Saprophytism
  • Species
  • Examples fungus, bacteria, some insects, grubs,
    snails, slugs, beetles, and ants
  • They are

54
SummaryTypes of Relationships
  • Partners (symbionts) of a symbiotic relationship
    may be
  • Mutualism-
  • Commensalism-
  • Parasitism-
  • Competition-
  • Neutralism-
  • Amensalism
  • Predation-
  • Saprophytism -

55
Examples of Symbiotic Relationships in Insects
  • Nutritional
  • Ambrosia beetles
  • Termite fungus gardens
  • Parasol ants
  • Cockroach endosymbionts
  • Shelter
  • Ant mimics (inquilines)
  • Slavemaker ants
  • Gall Insects
  • Transport
  • Human bot flies
  • Scelionid wasps
  • Pollination
  • Dung beetles and skunk cabbage
  • Yucca moths
  • Bumblebees and scotch broom
  • Defensive
  • Ants and acacias
  • Aphid farmers

56
Wrap-Up Question
  • What is Symbiosis and name the three types?

57
6 Warm-Up Question
  • What are the types of Symbiosis

58
Ecological Niche
  • __________________________________of an organism
    within an ecosystem
  • Where a living thing is
  • Ecological description of a species typically
    includes

59
Types of Niches
  • Fundamental niche-
  • Various factors such as competition with other
    species usually exclude it from part of its
  • Realized niche-

60
Niches Limiting Factor
  • Any environmental resource that,

61
Competitive Exclusion
  • One species is
  • Two organisms with absolutely identical niches
  • See G.F. Gauses 1934 studies with paramecium

62
Resource Partitioning
  • Difference
  • May also

63
Resource Partitioning Example
The red-winged blackbird and yellow-headed
blackbird partition resources in their marshy
habitat.
64
Species Richness
  • The _____________________ present in a community
  • Related to __________________ ecological niches
  • Greatest at ___________________ communities

65
Factors that effect Species Richness- 1
  • Geographical isolation

66
Factors that effect Species Richness- 2
Habitat stress
67
Factors that effect Species Richness- 3
Dominance of one species over others
68
Factors that effect Species Richness- 4
Geological history
69
Wrap-Up Question
  • What did you learn about ecological niches?

70
7 Warm-Up Question
  • What are the main factors that effect species
    richness?

71
Ecosystem Services
  •     recreation
  •     moderate water
  • flow
  •     dilute and remove
  • pollutants
  •    provide drinking
  • and irrigation
  • water
  •     food and fiber
  • crops
  •   clean air
  •   clean water
  •   fertile soil
  •   absorb CO2
  •   provide wildlife
  • habitat
  •   provide humans
  • with wood

72
Ecosystem Services
  • Transportation corridors, harbors
  • Electricity
  • Provide humans with livestock
  •  Buffer against storms
  • NOTE A very diverse community is more capable of
    supplying ecosystem services and there are
    environmental benefits for all.

Conversationalists maintain that ecosystems with
73
Forest Ecosystem Services
74
Coast Ecosystem Sevices
75
Freshwater Ecosystem Services
76
Agricultural Ecosystem Services
77
Grassland Ecosystem Services
78
Wrap-up Question
  • What is an example of ecosystem service?
  • What type of ecosystem proves the most services?
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