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Ecology

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Title: Ecology


1
Ecology
  • Biology

2
What you will learn
  • 1. Ecology general overview.
  • A. Definition
  • B. Levels of Organization
  • C. Abiotic vs. Biotic Factors
  • 2.Populations
  • 3.Communities
  • 4.Ecosystems

3
1 A. Definition
  • Ecology is the study of how organisms interact
    with their environment and each other.
  • This interaction of organisms is a two-way
    interaction. Organisms are affected by their
    environment, but by their activities they also
    change the environment.

4
1 B. Levels of Organization
  • Ecology is studied on several levels
  • Organism
  • Ecologists may examine how one kind of organism
    meets the challenges of its environment, either
    through its physiology or behavior.
  • Population
  • Group of individuals of the same species living
    in a particular geographic area.
  • Community
  • Consists of all the populations of different
    species that inhabit a particular area.
  • Ecosystem
  • Includes all forms of life in a certain area and
    all the nonliving factors as well.
  • Biosphere
  • The global ecosystem the sum of all the planets
    ecosystems.
  • Most complex level in ecology, including the
    atmosphere to an altitude of several kilometers,
    the land down to and including water-bearing
    rocks under 3,000 m under Earths surface, lakes
    and streams, caves, and the oceans to a depth of
    several kilometers.
  • It is self contained, or closed, except that its
    photosynthesizers derive energy from sunlight,
    and it loses heat to space.

5
1 B. Levels of Organization
6
1 C. Abiotic vs. Biotic Factors
  • Abiotic components
  • Physical and chemical factors (abiotic) affecting
    the organisms living in a particular ecosystem.
  • Biotic components
  • Organisms making up the community

7
1 C. Examples of Biotic Factors
Anything that has the characteristics of life!
Starfish
Even bacteria!
Polar bears
Trees and grass
8
1 C. Examples of Abiotic Factors
  • Solar energy
  • Water
  • Temperature
  • Wind
  • Soil composition
  • Unpredictable disturbances

9
2 . What is a population?
  • Population-
  • a group of individuals of a single species that
    occupy the same general area.
  • Rely on the same resources, are influenced by the
    same environmental factors, and have a high
    likelihood of interacting and breeding with one
    another.

10
3. Communities
  • A few terms you should know
  • Species
  • A group of organisms which can interbreed with
    each other and able to produce a fertile
    offspring.
  • Habitat
  • the environment in which a species normally lives
    or the location of a living organism.

11
3. Communities
  • A biological community is an assemblage of all
    the populations of organisms living close enough
    together for potential interaction.
  • Key characteristics of a community
  • a.Species diversity
  • b.Dominant species
  • c.Response to disturbances
  • d.Trophic structure
  • e. Community interactions

12
3. Response to Disturbances
  • Communities change drastically following a severe
    disturbance that strips away vegetation and even
    soil.
  • The disturbed area may be colonized by a variety
    of species, which are gradually replaced by a
    succession of other species, in a process called
    ecological succession.

13
3. Response to Disturbances
  • Primary succession
  • When ecological succession begins in a virtually
    lifeless area with no soil.
  • Usually takes hundreds or thousands of years.
  • For example, new volcanic islands or rubble left
    by a retreating glacier. Often the only
    life-forms initially present are autotrophic
    bacteria. Lichens and mosses are commonly the
    first large photosynthesizers to colonize the
    area. Soil develops gradually as rocks weather
    and organic matter accumulates from the
    decomposed remains of the early colonizers.
    Lichens and mosses are gradually overgrown by
    grasses and shrubs that sprout from seeds blow in
    from nearby areas or carried in by animals.
    Eventually, the area is colonized by plants that
    become the communitys prevalent form of
    vegetations.

14
3. Response to Distrurbances
  • Secondary succession
  • Occurs when a disturbance has destroyed an
    existing community but left the soil intact.
  • For example, forested areas that are cleared for
    farming, areas impacted by fire or floods.

15
3. Response to Disturbances
  • Primary Succession
  • Example autotrophic prokaryotes?lichens,
    mosses?grasses?shrubs?trees?climax communty
  • Secondary Succession
  • Example herbaceous plants? woody shrubs? trees
    ?climax community

16
3. Response to Disturbances
  • Early successional communities are characterized
    by a low species diversity, simple structure and
    broad niches
  • The succession proceeds in stages until the
    formation of a climax community.
  • The most stable community in the given
    environment until some disturbance occurs.

17
3. Response to Disturbances
  • Are disturbances always a bad thing? When can
    they be beneficial?

18
3. Response to Disturbances
  • Small-scale disturbance often have positive
    effects. ?
  • For example, when a large tree falls in a
    windstorm, it disturbs the immediate
    surroundings, but it also creates new habitats.
  • For instance, more light may now reach the forest
    floor, giving small seedlings the opportunity to
    grow or the depression left by its roots may
    fill with water and be used as egg-laying sites
    by frogs, salamanders, and numerous insects.
  • Small-scale disturbances may enhance
    environmental patchiness, which can contribute to
    species diversity in a community.

19
3. Trophic Structure
  • The feeding relationships among the various
    species making up the community.
  • A communitys trophic structure determines the
    passage of energy and nutrients from plants and
    other photosynthetic organisms to herbivores and
    then to carnivores.

20
3. Trophic Structure
  • The sequence of food transfer up the trophic
    levels is known as a food chain
  • Trophic levels are arranged vertically, and the
    names of the levels appear in colored boxes.
  • The arrows connecting the organisms point from
    the food to consumer. This transfer of food moves
    chemical nutrients and energy from the producers
    up though the trophic levels in a community.

21
3. Trophic Structure
  • At the bottom, the trophic level that supports
    all others consists of autotrophs, called
    producers.
  • Photosynthetic producers use light energy to
    power the synthesis of organic compounds.
  • Plants are the main producers on land.
  • In water, the producers are mainly photosynthetic
    protists and cyanobacteria, collectively called
    phytoplankton. Multicellular algae and aquatic
    plants are also important producers in shallow
    waters.

22
3. Trophic Structure
  • All organisms in trophic levels about the
    producers are heterotrophs, or consumers, and all
    consumers are directly or indirectly dependent on
    the output of producers

23
3. Trophic Structure
  • Trophic Levels
  • Primary producers
  • Mostly photosynthetic plants or algae
  • Primary consumers
  • Herbivores, which eat plants, algae, or
    phytoplankton.
  • On land include grasshoppers and many insects,
    snails, and certain vertebrates like grazing
    mammals and birds that eat seeds and fruits
  • aquatic environments include a variety of
    zooplankton (mainly protists and microscopic
    animals such as small shrimp) that eat
    phytoplankton.
  • Secondary consumers
  • Include many small mammals, such as a mouse, a
    great variety of small birds, frogs, and spiders,
    as well as lions and other large carnivores that
    eat grazers.
  • In aquatic ecosystems, mainly small fishes that
    eat zooplankton
  • Tertiary consumers
  • Snakes that eat mice and other secondary
    consumers.
  • Quaternary consumers
  • Include hawks in terrestrial environments and
    killer whales in marine environment.

24
3. Trophic Structure
  • Another trophic level of consumers are called
    detritivores which derive their energy from
    detritus, the dead material produced at all the
    trophic levels.
  • Detritus includes animal wastes, plant litter,
    and all sorts of dead organisms.
  • Most organic matter eventually becomes detritus
    and is consumed by detritivores.
  • A great variety of animals, often called
    scavengers, eat detritus. For instance,
    earthworms, many rodents, and insects eat fallen
    leaves and other detritus. Other scavengers
    include crayfish, catfish, crows, and vultures.

25
3. Trophic Structure
  • A communitys main detritivores are the
    prokaryotes and fungi, also called decomposers,
    or saprotrophs, which secrete enzymes that digest
    organic material and then absorb the breakdown
    products.
  • Enormous numbers of microscopic fungi and
    prokaryotes in the soil and in mud at the bottom
    of lakes and oceans convert (recycle) most of the
    communitys organic materials to inorganic
    compounds that plants or phytoplankton can use.
  • The breakdown of organic materials to inorganic
    ones is called decomposition.

26
3. Trophic Structure
27
3. Trophic Structure
  • A more realistic view of the trophic structure of
    a community is a food web, a network of
    interconnecting food chains.
  • Food webs, like food chains, do not typically
    show detrivores, which consume dead organic
    material from all trophic levels.

28
3. Community Interactions
  • Consider this
  • Youve planted a garden in your backyard. You see
    that a squirrel population and a chipmunk
    population has begun to inhabit the area. There
    reproductive patterns are similar, they eat the
    same food, and have similar sleeping patterns.
  • What do you expect to happen?
  • Is it possible for them to cohabit the area?

29
3. Community Interactions
  • Interspecific competition
  • If two different species are competing for the
    same resource.
  • Causes the growth of one or both populations may
    be inhibited.
  • May play a major role in structuring a community.
  • Examples
  • Weeds growing in a garden compete with garden
    plants for nutrients and water.
  • Lynx and foxes compete for prey such as snowshoe
    hares in northern forests.

30
3. Community Interactions
  • Intraspecific Competition
  • Intense competition that exists within
    individuals of the same population because they
    compete for the exact same habitat and resources

31
3. Community Interactions
  • The competitive exclusion principle applies to
    what is called a species niche.
  • In ecology, a niche is a species role in its
    community, or the sum total of its use of the
    biotic and abiotic resources of its habitat.

32
3. Community Interactions
  • A niche is the functional position of an organism
    in its environment, comprising its habitat,
    resources and the periods of time during which it
    is active.

33
3. Community Interactions
  • Predation is an interaction between species in
    which one species, the predator, kills and eats
    another, the prey.
  • Because eating and avoiding being eaten are
    prerequisites to reproductive success, the
    adaptations of both predators and prey tend to be
    refined through natural selection.

34
3. Community Interactions
  • What are some ways predators can catch prey?
  • What tools can they use?
  • What are some essential characteristics?

35
3. Community Interactions
  • Examples of prey capturing strategies
  • Most predators have acute senses enable them to
    locate prey.
  • In addition, adaptations such as claws, teeth,
    fangs, stingers, or poisons help catch and subdue
    prey.
  • Predators are generally fast and agile, whereas
    those that lie in ambush are often camouflaged in
    their environments.
  • Predators may also use mimicry some snapping
    turtles have a tongue that resembles a wriggling
    worm, thus luring small fish.

Chemical Defense
Camouflage
36
3. Community Interactions
  • What are some ways prey can avoid predators?
  • What tools can they use?
  • What are some essential characteristics?

37
3. Community Interactions
  • Predator defenses
  • Mechanical defenses such as the porcupines
    sharp quills or the hard shells of clams and
    oysters.
  • Chemical defenses animals are often bright
    colored, a warning to predators like a poison
    arrow-frog or a skunk.
  • Batesian mimicry a palatable or harmless species
    mimics an unpalatable or harmful one like the
    king snake mimics the poisonous coral snake
  • Mullerian mimicry two unpalatable species that
    inhabit the same community mimic each other like
    bees and wasps

Batesian Mimicry
Mullerian Mimicry
38
3. Community Interactions
  • Herbivory
  • Animals that eat plants or algae
  • Aquatic herbivores include sea urchins, snails,
    and some fishes.
  • Terrestrial herbivores include cattle, sheep, and
    deer, and small insects.
  • Herbivorous insects may locate food by using
    chemical sensors on their feet, and their
    mouthparts are adapted for shredding tough
    vegetation or sucking plant juices.
  • Herbivorous vertebrates may have specialized
    teeth or digestive systems adapted for processing
    vegetation. They may also use their sense of
    smell to identify food plants.
  • Because plants cannot run away from herbivores,
    chemical toxins, often in combination with
    various kinds of anti-predator spines and thorns,
    are their main weapons against being eaten.

39
3. Community Interactions
  • Herbivory
  • Some herbivore-plant interactions illustrate the
    concept of coevolution, a series of reciprocal
    evolutionary adaptations in two species.
  • Coevolution occurs when a change in one species
    acts as a new selective force on another species,
    and counteradaptation of the second species in
    turn affects the selection of individuals in the
    first species.

40
3. Community Interactions
  • Herbivory Coevolution Example
  • an herbivorous insect (the caterpillar of the
    butterfly Heliconius, top left) and a plant (the
    passionflower Passiflora, a tropical vine).

41
3. Community Interactions
  • Herbivory Coevolution Explanation
  • Passiflora produces toxic chemicals that protect
    its leaves from most insects, but Heliconius
    caterpillars have digestive enzymes that break
    down the toxins. As a result, Heliconius gains
    access to a food source that few other insects
    can eat.
  • The Passiflora plants have evolved defenses
    against the Heliconius insect. The leaves of the
    plant produce yellow sugar deposits that look
    like Heliconius eggs. Therefore, female
    butterflies avoid laying their eggs on the leaves
    to ensure that only a few caterpillars will hatch
    and feed on any one leaf. Because of this, the
    Passiflora species with the yellow deposits are
    less likely to be eaten.

42
3. Community Interactions
  • Symbiotic Relationships are interactions between
    two or more species that live together in direct
    contact.
  • Three main types
  • Parasitism
  • Commensalism
  • Mutualism
  • Parasitism and mutualism can be key factors in
    community structure.

43
3. Community Interactions
  • Parasitism
  • A parasite lives on or in its host and obtains
    its nourishment from the host.
  • For example A tapeworm is an internal parasite
    that lives inside the intestines of a larger
    animal and absorbs nutrients from its hosts.
  • Another example Ticks, which suck blood from
    animals, and aphids, which tap into the sap of
    plants, are examples of external parasites.
  • Natural selection favors the parasites that are
    best able to find and feed on hosts, and also
    favors the evolution of host defenses.

Tapeworm in Small Intestine
Tick on a dog
44
3. Community Interactions
  • Commensalism
  • One partner benefits without significantly
    affecting the other.
  • Few cases of absolute commensalism have been
    documented, because it is unlikely that one
    partner will be completely unaffected.
  • For example algae that grow on the shells of
    sea turtles, barnacles that attach to whales, and
    birds that feed on insects flushed out of the
    grass by grazing cattle.

Algae on Sea Turtle
Barnacles on Whale
45
3. Community Interactions
  • Mutualism
  • Benefits both partners in the relationship.
  • For example the association of legume plants and
    nitrogen-fixing bacteria.
  • Bacteria turn nitrogen in the air to nitrates
    that the plants can use
  • Another example Acacia trees and the predaceous
    ants they attract.
  • Tree provides room and board for ants
  • Ants benefit the tree by attacking virtually
    anything that touches it.

Acacia Trees and Ants
46
4. Ecosystems
  • An ecosystem consists of all the organisms in a
    community as well as the abiotic environment with
    which the organisms interact.
  • Ecosystems can range from a microcosm such as a
    terrarium to a large area such as a forest.

47
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
  • Regardless of an ecosystems size, its dynamics
    involve two processes- energy flow and chemical
    cycling.
  • Energy flow the passage of energy through the
    components of the ecosystem.
  • For most ecosystems, the sun is the energy
    source, but exceptions include several unusual
    kinds of ecosystems powered by chemical energy
    obtained from inorganic compounds.

48
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
49
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
  • For example, an a terrarium, energy enters in the
    form of sunlight.
  • Plants (producers) convert the light energy to
    chemical energy.
  • Animals (consumers) take in some of this chemical
    energy in the form of organic compounds when they
    eat the plants.
  • Detrivores, such as bacteria and fungi in the
    soil, obtain chemical energy when they decompose
    the dead remains of plants and animals.
  • Every use of chemical energy by organisms
    involves a loss of some energy to the
    surroundings in the form of heat.
  • Eventually, therefore, the ecosystem would run
    out of energy if it were not powered by a
    continuous inflow of energy from an outside
    source.

50
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
  • Ecological Pyramids
  • Pyramid of Biomass
  • Pyramid of Productivity
  • Pyramid of Numbers

51
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
  • Pyramid of Biomass
  • shows the relationship between biomass and
    trophic level by quantifying the amount of
    biomass present at each trophic level of a
    community at a particular moment in time.

52
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
  • Pyramid of Biomass
  • Typical units are grams per meter

53
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
  • Pyramid of Production
  • Illustrates the cumulative loss of energy with
    each transfer in a food chain.
  • Each tier of the pyramid represents one trophic
    level, and the width of each tier indicates how
    much of the chemical energy of the tier below is
    actually incorported into the organic matter of
    that trophic level.
  • Note that producers convert only about 1 of the
    energy in the sunlight available to them to
    primary production.
  • In this idealized pyramid, 10 of the energy
    available at each trophic level becomes
    incorporated into the next higher level.
  • The efficiencies of energy transfer usually range
    from 5 to 20.
  • In other words, 80 to 95 of the energy at one
    trophic level never transfers to the next.

54
4a. Ecosystems-Energy Flow
  • Pyramid of Production
  • Units can be Joules or calories

55
4a. Ecosystems- Energy Flow
  • Pyramid of Numbers
  • shows graphically the population of each level in
    a food chain.

56
4b. Ecosystems- Chemical Cycling
  • Chemical cycling involves the transfer of
    materials within the ecosystem.
  • An ecosystem is more or less self-contained in
    terms of matter.
  • Chemical elements such as carbon and nitrogen are
    cycled between abiotic components (air, water,
    and soil) and biotic components of the ecosystem.
  • The plants acquire these elements in inorganic
    form from the air and soil and fix them into
    organic molecules, some of which animals consume.
  • Detrivores return most of the elements in
    inorganic form to the soil and air.
  • Some elements are also returned as the
    by-products of plant and animal metabolism.

57
4b. Ecosystems- Chemical Cycling
58
4b. Ecosystems- Chemical Cycling
  • Biogeochemical cycles
  • Water cycle
  • Carbon cycle
  • Nitrogen cycle
  • Phosphorous cycle

59
4b. Ecosystems- Chemical Cycling
  • General Model of Nutrient Cycling
  • 1. Producers incorporate chemicals from the
    abiotic reservoir (where a chemical accumulates
    or is stockpiled outside of living organisms)
    into organic compounds.
  • 2.Consumers feed on the producers, incorporating
    some of the chemicals into their own bodies.
  • 3. Both producers and consumers release some
    chemicals back to the environment in waste
    products (CO2 and nitrogen wastes of animals)
  • 4. Detritivores play a central role by
    decomposing dead organisms and returning
    chemicals in inorganic form to the soil, water,
    and air.
  • 5. The producers gain a renewed supply of raw
    materials, and the cycle continues.

60
4b. Ecosystems- Chemical Cycling
General Model of Nutrient Cycling
61
Water Cycle
  • 1.Precipitation
  • 2.Condensation (conversion of gaseous water vapor
    into liquid water)
  • 3. Rain Clouds
  • 4. and 5. Evaporation (conversion of water to
    gaseous water vapor) from ocean
  • 6. and 7. precipitation over ocean
  • 8. evaporation from land
  • 9. Transpiration
  • 10. Transpiration
  • 11. evaporation from lakes, rivers
  • 12. surface runof
  • 13. infiltration (movement of water into soil)
  • 14. Water locked in snow
  • 15. Precipitation to land
  • refer to diagrams in handout

62
Water Cycle
63
Carbon Cycle
  • 1. Carbon in plant and animal tissues
  • 2. fossilization (preserved remains or traces of
    animals, plants, and other organisms)
  • 3. Death and excretion
  • 4. Decomposers (breakdown organic materials to
    inorganic ones)
  • 5. coal
  • 6. photosynthesis
  • 7. atmospheric CO2
  • 8. Dissolving
  • 9. combustion (burning of wood and fossil fuels)
  • 10. diatoms (major group of algae, and are one of
    the most common types of phytoplankton)
  • 11. drilling for oil and gas
  • 12. fossilization
  • 13. oil and gas
  • 14. limestone
  • refer to diagrams in handout

64
Carbon Cycle
65
Nitrogen Cycle
  • 1. Nitrogen in plant and animal tissue
  • 2. Excretion
  • 3. Ammonia (NH3)
  • 4.Dead organisms
  • 5. decomposers
  • 6. Nitrifying bacteria (convert ammonia to
    nitrate)
  • 7. nitrogen fixing bacteria (convert N2 to
    ammonia)
  • 8. nitrate (NO3-)
  • 9. nitrate (NO3-) available to plants
  • 10. swampy ground
  • 11. denitrifying bacteria (return fixed nitrogen
    to the atmosphere)
  • 12. lightning (atmospheric nitrogen fixation)
  • 13. atmospheric nitrogen (N2 gas)
  • refer to diagrams in handout

66
Nitrogen Cycle
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