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Communities, Niches and Habitats

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Title: Communities, Niches and Habitats


1
Communities, Niches and Habitats
2
Communities
  • An ecological unit composed of a group of
    populations of different species occupying a
    particular area, interacting with each other and
    their environment.
  • Each organism within the community has its own
    habitat and its own niche or very specific role
    to play in the community.

3
Ecosystem
  • An ecosystem is the interaction of the biotic
    factors in a community together with all of the
    abiotic factors of the environment that affect
    that community.

4
Habitat
  • A habitat is the place where living things live.
  • It is more than just a home it includes the whole
    surrounding area.
  • The habitat provides the animal or plant with
    food or shelter.

5
People and their habitats
  • People can live all over the world.

6
  • We can do this because we are able to build
    homes for different conditions.

7
Also we can change our clothes to best suit the
temperature around us.
Animal skin and fur act as insulators and keep
heat in.
White clothes reflect the heat
8
Animals and plants
  • Most plants and animals are specially adapted to
    survive in a particular habitat.
  • They have developed special features to suit the
    demands of their environment.
  • This is called adaptation.

9
  • All birds have similar characteristics.
  • But many water birds have features that are
    different from those birds that live on land.

10
  • Some animals are camouflaged to blend in with
    their surroundings.
  • This keeps them safe as it is more difficult
    for other animals to see them or catch them for
    food.

These zebra could easily be mistaken for
bushes from a distance.
11
  • Aquatic animals have streamlined bodies to
    move more easily in the water.

12
  • These animals have adapted to live in the hot
    climate of the desert.

13
  • These animals have adapted to be more suited to
    cold temperatures.

14
  • Even plants have adapted to their habitats.

15
Animals and plants help each other
  • Plants and animals depend on each other for a
    wide variety of things.

16
Niches
17
Niche
  • Each organism within a community has a niche.
  • An organisms niche is its functional role within
    the community, including its activities and
    relationships, its address, its job or
    function within the community, and how it
    interacts with other organisms.

18
What is a Niche
  • Fundamentally, your niche is how you get food
    every day.
  • Remember that food is simply the way organisms
    turn matter into energy so they can do work.
  • The primary work of organisms is to survive and
    reproduce.

19
What is a Niche
  • The simplest way to think of a niche is it is
    either who is eating who, usually from different
    species.
  • OR
  • Who is reproducing and who isnt from the same
    species.
  • OR
  • Who is causing someone else to get eaten from the
    same or similar species.

20
Niche Differences
  • The niche of each species is a little different
    to avoid competition.
  • Different species, even closely-related ones,
    will have different food preferences,
    seasonality, daily feeding rhythms, and location
    within the habitat.
  • Otherwise, Gauses principal (The Competitive
    Exclusion Principle) says that one species must
    go extinct.

21
Similar Species
  • For some species of katydids within the same
    genus, the difference may be as subtle as a
    preference for perching on the top vs the middle
    of a stem on a grass plant.

22
Types of Niches
  • There are many types of niches. The most
    fundamental are
  • Producers or Autotrophs
  • These are organisms that make their own food.
  • Consumers or Heterotrophs
  • These are organisms that cannot make their own
    food.
  • Scavengers
  • Consumers that eat the flesh of dead animals they
    did not kill.
  • Decomposers or Detritivores
  • These are consumers that break down the bodies of
    dead plants and animals.

23
Food Chains
  • A food chain is a pathway that tells us what eats
    what when two populations interact within a
    community.

24
Food Web
  • A food web is the connection of all of the food
    chains within the ecosystem.

25
Producers
  • An organism that can make its own food is a
    producer.
  • Autotroph
  • Source of all food in an ecosystem.
  • Capture light energy from sunlight and stores it
    as food (chemical) energy.

26
Consumers
  • Consumers are heterotrophs, or living things that
    cannot make food for themselves.
  • A food chain contains several kinds of consumers,
    each of which occupies a different trophic level.
  • Herbivores, carnivores, omnivores

27
Consumer Tropic Levels
  • Primary consumers eat producers (herbivores)
  • Secondary consumers eat primary consumers
    (carnivores)
  • Tertiary consumers eat secondary consumers
    (carnivores)
  • Scavengers are carnivores that feed on the bodies
    of dead organisms.

28
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29
Decomposers
  • Help break down wastes and dead organisms and
    return the raw materials to the environment
  • Bacteria and fungi

30
Food Chains
  • Series of events where one organism eats another
    and obtains energy.
  • First organism in chain is the producer.
  • The second organism is the consumer that eats the
    producer.

31
PlanktonCrabSealOrca This is only one possible
chain in a marine ecosystem.
32
Come up with an example to fill in the blocks of
a food chain in two different ecosytems.
33
Food Webs
  • Consists of many overlapping food chains in an
    ecosystem.
  • Some organisms may play more than one role by
    changing consumer levels.

34
What happens in a food web if one or more of the
organisms disappear?
35
Which animals are carnivores and herbivores?
36
Energy Pyramids
  • A diagram that shows the amount of energy that
    moves from one feeding level to another in a food
    web.
  • Represented in a triangle with the most energy at
    the producer level.

37
Energy Loss and Use
  • Only 10 of energy is transferred to next higher
    level.
  • 90 of energy is used by organisms life
    processes.
  • Due to energy loss, ecosystem cannot support many
    feeding levels.

38
Why are ecological interactions important?
Interactions can affect distribution and
abundance.
Interactions can influence evolution.
39
Competition two species share a requirement for
a limited resource ? reduces fitness of one or
both species
40
Ecological effects of competition
Intraspecific competition between individuals
of the SAME species
41
Ecological effects of competition
  • Interspecific competition between individuals
    of DIFFERENT species

42
Interspecific interactions
  • These are interactions among organisms of
    different species.
  • These interactions are Either
  • Beneficial to one or both of the species
    involved.
  • Or detrimental to one of the species involved.
  • What would we call interactions between organisms
    of the same species?

43
competitive exclusion principle
If two species have the same niche, the
stronger competitor will eliminate the other
competitor.
Complete competitors cannot coexist.
44
Complete competitors cannot coexist. Competitive
exclusion is reached more slowly with
higher resource abundances. Stable coexistence
requires niche differentiation, such that
members of each species compete more strongly
among themselves than with members of the
other species. ? (intraspecific gt
interspecific)
45
What is the niche?
  • set of conditions
  • within which an organism
  • can maintain a viable
  • population
  • multi-dimensional
  • with as many
  • dimensions as their
  • are limiting conditions

ecological niche
light intensity
okay
temperature
salinity
46
The niche of a species may contract in the
presence of a competitor species. This
phenomenon leads to resource (niche) partitioning
and coexistence among functionally similar
species. The narrower niche resulting from
competition is called the realized
niche. What happens if the competitor is
removed?
47
Types of Relationships
  • Symbiosis
  • Any relationship that involves two (or more)
    species living together and interacting.
  • This is a general term which includes predation,
    parasitism, commensalism, mutualism, etc., but
    often is used to mean mutualism.

48
Types of Relationships
  • Predation
  • When a larger animal eats other, smaller
    animals.

49
Types of Relationships
  • Commensalism
  • A relationship between two species that is
    beneficial to one but of neutral benefit to the
    other.

50
Types of Relationships
  • Mutualism
  • A relationship between two species where both
    benefit.

51
Types of Relationships
  • Parasitism
  • When a smaller organism feeds on a larger,
    weakening or killing it.
  • This is a relationship where one organism
    benefits and the other is harmed.
  • Often the host is not killed outright.
  • Because a parasite lives in/on the body of its
    host and needs the host to remain alive, it is
    usually advantageous for the parasite to not kill
    its host.
  • Humans and domestic animals are occasionally
    infected with or bothered by tapeworms,
    roundworms, mosquitoes and/or leeches.
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