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Unit 2 -- Principles of Ecology

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Title: Nerve activates contraction Author: Karl Miyajima Last modified by: Perry, Pam Created Date: 12/11/2000 1:39:32 AM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Unit 2 -- Principles of Ecology


1
Unit 2 -- Principles of Ecology
  • Ecology Scientific study of how organisms and
    their surrounding environments interact

2
Abiotic vs. biotic factors presence/absence of
these define levels of organization
  • Abiotic nonliving parts of an orgs surrounding
    environment
  • Ex. Soil, moisture, light, temperature
  • (though nonliving, abiotic factors are an
    important part of an organisms life)
  • Biotic all of the living organisms that live in
    a particular area under consideration.
  • Ex. Goldfish in a bowl, other goldfish,
    plants, algae

3
Levels of Organization
  • Individual organism Ex. One frog
  • Species Ex. Bullfrogs
  • group of organisms so similar to one another
    that they can breed and produce FERTILE
    offspring.
  • Population Ex. Bullfrogs in a pond
  • group of organisms of ONE species that
    interbreed and live in the same area at the
    same time.
  • Community Ex. Bullfrogs, fish, insects, algae in
    that pond
  • made up of several populations that interact in
    the same area
  • Ecosystem Ex. Pond ecosystem
  • collection of ALL the living things that live in
    a particular place together with their physical
    environment
  • Biome Ex. Tropical rainforest
  • group of ecosystems with the same climate and
    similar dominant communities
  • Biosphere Ex. Earth and atmosphere above it
  • Consists of the portion of Earth that supports
    life. (includes land, water, atmosphere)

4
Organisms in Ecosystems
  • Habitat place where an org lives its
    day- to-day life.
  • (habitats can change dramatically due to
    natural or man-made effects
  • Ex. fire because of lightning or careless
    campers...
  • Niche the role and position a species occupies
    in its habitat or location. HOW it lives in the
    habitatThis includes all of the orgs
    interactions with the living and nonliving parts
    of the habitat.
  • Ex. Earthworms act as decomposers

5
Chapter 14 --
  • Interactions in Ecosystems section 14.1,
  • pages 426-434

6
Resource Availability and competitive exclusion
  • Gives structure to a community
  • Many species can share similar habitats and use
    some of the same resources
  • BUT, when two species use the same resources in
    the same ways, Competitive exclusion comes in to
    play
  • DEF when 2 species are competing for the same
    resources, one species will be better suited to
    the niche and the other species will be pushed
    into another niche or become extinct
  • Ex. NA Gray squirrel vs. Red squirrel in Great
    Britain
  • Gray is larger, more
    aggressive

7
Other outcomes of competitive exclusion.
  • Niche partitioning
  • Natural division of resources based on
    competitive advantages
  • Ex. One squirrel eats nuts from top of tree, one
    squirrel eats nuts from the ground
  • Evolutionary response
  • Divergent evolution (body forms change over time)
  • Ex. Large teeth for large nuts, small teeth for
    small nuts

8
What happens in different communities
  • Ecological equivalents
  • Species that occupy similar niches but live in
    different geographical regions
  • Ex. Poison dart frog of SA
  • and
  • Mantella frog of Madagascar

9
Community Interactions
  • Competition
  • Predation
  • Symbiosis
  • for tomorrows lab, we will deal with the
    symbiosis considerations.

10
Living Together species interactions
  • Symbiosis relationship where there are close
    and long-lasting associations between orgs of
    different species
  • Types of symbiotic relationships
  • a. parasitism
  • b. commensalism
  • c. mutualism

11
Parasitism
  • Symbiotic relationship where one organism
    benefits and another organism is harmed.
  • Ex. Ticks on a dog
  • -- tick gets food source, dog gets hole in
    protective skin layer and possible infection
  • Ex. Tapeworms in intestine
  • -- tapeworm absorbs nutrients in pre-digested
    form, host loses weight, and host never gets the
    nutrition that it needs (malnutrition)

12
Each section of a tapeworms body is called a
PROGLOTTID and contains a full set of
reproductive organs
13
Commensalism
  • Symbiotic relationship where one species benefits
    and another is neither harmed nor helped
  • Ex. Barnacles attached to a whale
  • -barnacles get a free ride to areas where
    food is available

14
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15
Mutualism
  • Symbiotic relationship where both species
    involved benefit from the association.
  • Ex. Ants and acacia trees
  • ants get shelter and nectar from plant as
    food, plants get protection from predators
  • Ex. sponges attached to crab shell
  • -- sponges get moved to new area to filter
    food from water, crab gets portable
    camouflage

16
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