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PASS TAKS Tutorial Week IV

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Title: PASS TAKS Tutorial Week IV


1
PASS TAKS Tutorial Week IV
  • Objective 3
  • Interactions in the Living World

2
All living things have a life cycle, and interact
with the non-living world in cycles...
  • We are born, develop and grow into adults and
    have children and then die. This is our life
    cycle.
  • We interact with the world as do all animals.

3
Water Cycle
  • Precipitation (rain and snow) fall on plants and
    ground.
  • Plants respire and water evaporates back into
    clouds.
  • It condenses in the clouds back into a liquid.
  • The ground filters the water run-off into the
    lakes where it evaporates again.

4
Carbon Cycle
  • Photosynthesis Glucose C6H12O6 and oxygen are
    produced by plants, taken in by animals.
  • Cellular Respiration Animals exhale CO2 which is
    taken in by plants to make glucose

5
Nitrogen Cycle
6
Nitrogen Cycle
7
Rock Cycle
8
Mans Effects on the Environment
  • Ozone O3 is a protective layer at the top of the
    atmosphere.
  • However, when it occurs near the ground, it is
    very harmful to all living things, it is SMOG

9
Mans Effects on the Environment
  • More than 90 of fresh water is locked in ice at
    the polar caps and in glaciers.
  • Much of the fresh water is polluted by land
    run-off, dumping of wastes and excess heat pumped
    directly into lakes, oceans and rivers.

10
Mans Effects on the Environment
  • Global warming, also called the Greenhouse
    Effect is caused by excess burning of fossil
    fuels, destruction of our oxygen producing
    protista in the oceans, and deforestation on
    land. Less plants means less oxygen and more
    CO2.

11
Biological Organization begins with cells . . .
  • Cells which work together form tissues
  • Tissues that are layered form organs

12
And .. . . .
  • Organs that work together form an ORGAN SYSTEM
  • Organ systems work together to maintain
    homeostasis for the organism

13
Homeostasis
  • This is the maintenance of the normal operating
    conditions of an organism.
  • Control of body temperature, pulse rate, blood
    pressure, blood sugar, urine output, digestive
    absorption, metabolism rate, growth rate and
    hormone levels all need to be maintained.

14
What are they referring to?
  • Biosphere The entire area of the planet that
    supports life.
  • Biome An area defined by specific abiotic and
    biotic factors.
  • Community The groups of living things in an
    area and how they relate.

15
What is extinction and what causes it?
  • A population is extinct when the last of that
    species is dead.
  • Example There are no more dinosaurs.
  • What happened? Their habitat was destroyed.
    When they no longer have what they need to live,
    they die.

16
Ecology The study of the relationships among
living things
  • Symbiosis is a close relationship between two
    living things.
  • When both are helped it is called mutualism
  • When one is helped and there is no effect on the
    other it is called commensulism
  • When one is helped and the other is harmed it is
    called parasitism

17
Mutualism . . .
  • Sharks are cleaned by a little fish known as a
    Remora. The shark never eats them since they
    clean bacteria off the shark. Since both
    species are helped, this is mutualism.

18
Commensulism . . .
  • Orchids live high in tree-tops on the branches of
    large trees. They do not harm the tree, but they
    are helped by being raised up into the sunshine
    and receiving water.

19
Parasites . . .
  • Parasites harm or kill the host. A good example
    is a tape worm. It intercepts all of the hosts
    food, causing the host to starve to death.

20
All energy on the earth comes from the sun.
21
Energy Diagrams
  • At one end of the diagram are plants. They are
    called producers since they are capable of
    turning sunlight into food by photosynthesis.
    They pass 10 of the energy they absorb to
    animals that eat them.

22
Consumers
  • 1st Order Consumers eat only plants and are also
    called herbivores.
  • 2nd Order Consumers eat only animals and are
    called carnivores.
  • 3rd Order Consumers eat both plants and animals,
    they are known as omnivores

23
10 Energy Rule Only 10 of the energy moves up
to the next trophic level.
24
Food Chain One of many feeding relationships in
a community
  • Arrows in a food chain show the direction of
    energy flow.
  • This is not the only feeding relationship for
    these organisms.
  • When several or all of the food relationships are
    shown its a . . .

25
Food Web
26
Food Webs
  • Food webs attempt to show all the feeding
    relationships in a community.
  • The direction of the arrows shows the direction
    of energy flow.
  • At the bottom of every web and every chain is a
    plant. These are the only things that can turn
    sunshine into food.

27
Predator and Prey
  • Prey are the animals that are eaten as a food
    source for the . . .
  • Predator This is the hunter animal. The
    population of the predator must be less than the
    prey or they do not have enough food.

28
Carrying Capacity
  • This is the maximum number of a specific
    population that an area can support with enough
    food and living requirements. It is shown by a
    line on population graphs for a specific species.

29
Also remember to review
  • Human Body Systems
  • Virus and Bacteria
  • Illnesses,
  • Transmission methods
  • Organization of the Biological Taxonomy
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