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ECOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES

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Title: ECOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES


1
ECOLOGICAL
PRINCIPLES
2
Concept 1
  • Ecology

3
BIOSPHERE
  • a thin blanket of life surrounding the earth
    which arises when atmosphere, land and sea meet
  • most fragile layer of the earth
  • 10 miles thick (5 miles up into atmosphere, 5
    miles down into ocean)
  • ecosystems exist within the biosphere

4
Arrangement of the Biosphere
5
COMPONENTS OF A BIOME
  • Biomes are large geographic areas defined by
  • -climate (temp, rainfall)
  • -soil type
  • -type of plants
  • (plants determine animals)
  • Which division of the biosphere
  • contains all other divisions?

?
6
Question?
  • From looking at the diagram, formulate your own
    definition of community!
  • hintThink about what is included and what is
    not included

7
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8
This is not in your notes because it would not
copy well!!!
9
Biome terms
  • Diversity-number of different kinds of living and
    non-living things
  • Temperate-distinct seasons
  • Tropical-consistently warm
  • Deciduous-plants shed leaves
  • Coniferous-leaves are year round

10
Question?
  • What is the biome description here at Central
    Dauphin?

11
  • ECOSYSTEM a place where relationships between
    biotic and abiotic factors are affected by
    geology and climate
  • energy is processed through the biotic components
  • interrelationships create stability
  • populations are the basis of ecosystems

12
  • BIOTIC living organisms (plants and animals)
  • ABIOTIC non-living (water, minerals, soil)
  • POPULATION the number of organisms of the same
    species
  • SPECIES organisms that can interbreed and
    produce fertile offspring

13
Microclimates
?
14
HABITATS
  • small subdivisions of an ecosystem where biotic
    components live and acquire the basic
    requirements of life
  • must include essential abiotic components
  • BASIC REQIREMENTS food, shelter, water, space,
    air

15
Habitat is the ADDRESS
  • varies in size
  • habitats overlap between different species
  • varieties of habitats increase diversity
  • BIODIVERSITY number of different kinds of
    organisms within the ecosystem

16
DIVERSITY STABILITY
?
  • survival of the ecosystem is dependent on its
    diversity
  • the greater the diversity, the more likely an
    ecosystem could survive a cataclysmic event (like
    an extinction, volcano)

17
EDGES ARE VERY STABLE
  • the edge habitat (place where 2 habitats overlap)
    has the greatest diversity of plants and animals
  • edge is usually more stable than either of the 2
    habitats it divides
  • edge shares species from both habitats as well as
    supporting edge only species

18
This is not in your notes!
19
This is not in your notes!
20
Concept 2
  • Population Dynamics

21
POPULATION DYNAMICS
  • Explains how wild populations control and
    maintain themselves
  • Based on the idea that resources are limited
    (CARRYING CAPACITY)
  • All species (plants and animals) must have the
    BASIC REQUIREMENTS OF LIFE
  • -FOOD, SHELTER, WATER, SPACE, AIR
  • AND OF COURSE THE RIGHT CLIMATE

22
POPULATIONS
  • Members of the same species
  • Populations are limited in range by habitat,
    geology, climate and limiting factors within
    their habitat
  • Tends to be maintained within the carrying
    capacity and critical number

23
LIMITING FACTORS
  • something that maintains population size within
    the habitats carrying capacity
  • Food 7. Climate
  • Competition 8. Disease
  • Predation
  • Geology/geography/topography
  • Human influences
  • Lack of any requirement of life

24
Carrying Capacity
  • CARRYING CAPACITY the number of organisms of a
    species that a habitat can support (provide basic
    requirements)
  • Example The pond can support 25 frogs. What
    may limit the number of frogs?

25
Consequences
  • breaking the carrying capacity will cause
    collapse of the population
  • may lead to extinction
  • may reduce gene pool
  • may just reduce numbers long enough for the
    habitat to recover

26
Can Carrying Capacity Change?
  • Yes
  • Increases with habitat improvement
  • Decrease in abusive population
  • Better weather promoting good food
  • Decreases with habitat destruction
  • Increase in populations above carrying capacity
  • Cataclysmic event (volcano)
  • Changes in climate (global warming?)

27
Critical Number
  • The lowest number a species can drop to in an
    ecosystem and still recover
  • Set by nature to maintain genetic diversity
  • Prevents in-breeding and passing on bad genes

28
Populations may stabilize
  • Stable populations will fluctuate between the
    carrying capacity and the critical number.
  • Most species with proper limiting factors will
    function along these lines
  • This is called DYNAMIC
  • EQUILIBRIUM
  • These are called S-Curve populations

29
S-curve Populations
Draw your own in your notes!!!
Carrying Capacity
NUMBER
Critical Number
TIME
30
causes of stabilization
  • Emigration
  • Immigration These are
  • Death limiting factors!
  • birth
  • predator-prey
  • disease

31
J-curve Populations
  • Are not stable populations
  • Usually crash after they break carrying capacity
  • Due to lack of limiting factors or it has a
    special reproductive strategy
  • -many young with lack of parental care such as
    fish
  • May be an invasive species (gypsy moth)

32
J-curve Populations
Draw your own in your notes!!!
Carrying Capacity
NUMBER
Recovery
Critical Number
Extinction
TIME
33
Species Interact with each other to maintain
energy and population balances
  • Predator-Prey relationships

34
?
Predators and Prey regulate each others
populations
35
  • Competition

-attempt to use the same limited
resources -limits population size between
competitors
36
Categories of Competition
  • Interspecific
  • competition between 2 or more species for a
    single resource
  • Intraspecific
  • competition between members of the same species
  • -usually for mates or nesting habitat or
    territory

37
Interspecific competition shows how competition
can be avoided by sharing resources (RESOURCE
PARTITIONING). This guarantees that all species
survive and increase diversity
38
  • Parasitism

-lives on or in a host species -often host
specific -generally causes harm or death of host
in extreme situations
39
  • Mutualism

-both organisms will benefit from the
arrangement -symbiosis arises through coevolution
40
  • Commensalism
  • one member of the relationship benefits
  • one member of the relationship gains nothing, but
    is not harmed
  • example lichens growing on the tree benefit
    from the tree, but the tree is not harmed or
    helped by the lichen

41
Concept 3
  • Flow of Energy

42
FLOW OF ENERGY
  • Energy is processed
  • Feedback
  • input energy ecosystem output energy
  • -this allows the ecosystem to maintain an energy
    balance

43
NICHE JOB
  • the way an organism makes a living in their
    habitat
  • niche describes how the organism gets it energy
  • producer (autotrophs and herbivores)
  • consumer (carnivores, scavengers)
  • decomposers

44
NICHE WHAT THEY EAT TYPES OF ORGANISMS
Autotroph Sunshinethese organisms make their own food Plants (the green guys)
Herbivore Plants Bunnies, deer, bees
Carnivore other animals-general term Lions, anteaters, fox, bass
Predator Hunts, kills, eats other animals Lions, anteaters, fox, bass
Parasite Lives on or in living organisms, on their body materials Ticks, tapeworms, fleas
Omnivore Both plants and animals Bears, people, skunks
Scavenger Dead or dying animals Vultures, crows, crayfish
Detritivore Dead plants and leaves Beetles, fungus
Decomposer Small particles and dead portions of other organisms Bacteria, fungus
45
THE SUN IS THE SOURCE OF ENERGY FOR ALL LIVING
THINGS (almost)
  • photosynthesis in autotrophic organisms converts
    sunlight energy into carbohydrates (BIOMASS)
  • they use oxygen to accomplish this
  • organisms are called photosynthetic autotrophs
    (plants and algae)

46
  • BIOMASS the total weight of living matter in an
    ecosystem
  • It accumulates in the food chain as processed
    energy
  • Energy
  • can be
  • lost

?
47
exception to the rule
  • CHEMOSYNTHESIS
  • organisms make carbohydrates out of carbon
    dioxide, water and inorganic compounds (like
    sulfur and nitrates)
  • organisms are called chemosynthetic autotrophs
    (deep ocean bacteria)

48
Chemosynthetic organisms
49
Deep Ocean Ecosystems
50
FOOD CHAINS
  • a series of organisms which pass energy from one
    feeding level to the next
  • This process coverts one form of biomass to
    another
  • these levels are called TROPHIC LEVELS

51
TROPHIC LEVELS
  • Primary Producer
  • Primary Consumer
  • Secondary Consumer
  • After secondary you can call them higher
    consumers by referring to their trophic level
    (3rd consumer, 4th consumer..)

52
Food Chains
  • always contain sun, primary producer,
    decomposer
  • primary producer are autotrophs
  • the arrow points in the direction the energy is
    being transferred to
  • always flows in one direction
  • reads as is eaten by

53
examples
  • sun carrot rabbit
    bacteria
  • sun acorns squirrel hawk
    bacteria
  • sun grass deer bear human
    bacteria

Primary consumer
energy
Decomposer
Primary producer
54
some general rules
  • Large carnivores do not eat large carnivores
  • herbivores do not eat carnivores
  • organisms within an ecosystem may compete for
    food sources
  • interacting food chains are called FOOD WEBS

?
55
?
WHATS MISSING?
56
ENERGY PYRAMID or PYRAMID OF BIOMASS
57
Energy lost
10 to next level
90 used/lost at each level
-biomass decreases at each step in a food
chain -energy is lost at each step bones not
used, fur, energy expended in eating and
metabolism, feces.
58
  • larger organisms require more energy so there
    will be fewer at the upper levels
  • the shorter the food chain, the more organisms
    you can feed at the upper levels

59
1 human 300 trout 90, 000 frogs 27, 000,000
grasshoppers 1000 tons of grass
eat lower on the food chain
900 human 27, 000,000 grasshoppers 1000 tons of
grass
?
60
?
61
IV. MATERIALS CYCLE
  • MATERIALS CYCLE IN ECOSYSTEMS
  • water cycle
  • carbon cycle
  • nitrogen cycle
  • All elements will cycle because the earth will
    run out of material if it does not!

62
WATER CYCLE
63
Water Goes Up
  • Evaporation- heat causes the conversion of liquid
    water into gaseous water (water vapor)
  • Transpiration- the evaporation of water from the
    surfaces of leaves
  • -water is produced during photosynthesis

64
Water changes form
  • Condensation- due to cooling, gaseous water forms
    liquid water on the surface of a condensation
    nuclei
  • Condensation nuclei- a small solid particle of
    matter in the atmosphere on which water will
    condense

65
Water comes down
  • Precipitation-the falling of a condensed form of
    water from the atmosphere
  • -could be solid or liquid
  • -occurs because the amount of water on the
    condensation nuclei becomes heavy and gravity
    causes the drop to fall

66
3 places water goes
  • Runs off into rivers, lakes, streams, wetlands
  • Percolates into the soil and is absorbed into
    plants
  • Percolates into the aquifer
  • Percolate to move into an area occupied by air
    and fill the molecular space

67
The Aquifer
68
  • Aquifers are underground layers of porous rock or
    sand that allows the movement of water between
    layers of non-porous rock (sandstone, gravel, or
    fractured limestone or granite).
  • Water infiltrates into the soil through pores,
    cracks, and other spaces until it reaches the
    zone of saturation where all of the spaces are
    filled with water (rather than air).

69
  • The zone of saturation occurs because water
    infiltrating the soil reaches an impermeable
    layer of rocks which it can not penetrate any
    further into the earth
  • Water held in aquifers is know as

  • GROUNDWATER
  • The top of the zone of saturation is known as the
    WATER TABLE.
  • .

70
  • -The water table typically follows the form of
    the above ground topography.
  • The water table levels can change
  • Drier deeper wet areas at or near surface

71
  • Two main forces drive the movement of groundwater
  • First water moves from higher elevations to lower
    elevation due to the effect of gravity
  • Second, water moves from areas of higher pressure
    to areas of lower pressure
  • Third, water moves at a rate and amount related
    to the size and amount of spaces in the rock
    layer

72
Movement of ground water takes timehow much is
variable, depending on the material it moves
through and how deep you go.
73
CARBON CYCLE
74
Carbon Cycles through
  • Food chains and Food Webs as biomass
  • Decomposers release carbon as both a gas and an
    element
  • C. Respiration of plants and animals

75
  • Natural Sources of Carbon include plants and
    animals, soil, fossil fuel deposits, atmosphere,
    humus..
  • -any form of biomass will be a place of carbon
    storage
  • Man-made Sources of Carbon include burning of
    fossil fuels and other organic materials

76
Carbon Sinks
  • Carbon Sink -long term storage of carbon
  • 3 long term carbon sinks
  • -deep ocean waters
  • -deep ocean sediments
  • -fossil fuel deposits
  • Short term carbon sinks
  • -plants and animals
  • -atmosphere

77
NITROGEN CYCLE
78
Nitrogen cycles through
  • Food chains and food webs
  • Decomposition of biomass
  • Water
  • Natural Sources of nitrogen biomass,
    decomposition, lightning, volcanoes
  • Man-made Sources of nitrogen fertilizers,
    industry, combustion of fossil fuels

79
Nitrogen must be fixed
  • Nitrogen is made in nature in an elemental form
    N2
  • -most living things can not use this form
  • Nitrogen fixation -the process in which nitrogen
    fixing organisms convert N2 into useable forms
  • -Nitrogen fixing Bacteria and Legumes are
  • symbiotic organisms which fix N2
  • -fixed forms include Nitrates NO3-, Nitrites
    (NO2-) and Ammonia (NH4)

80
V. ECOSYSTEMS CHANGE
  • SUCCESSION CAUSES CHANGES IN ECOSYSTEMS
  • ecosystems are never static
  • ecosystems tend to move from less diverse to more
    diverse systems

81
  • low species high species
  • diversity diversity
  • more energy less energy
  • available available
  • less biomass more biomass

82
Primary Succession
  • occurs where no ecosystem has occurred before
  • uses pioneer species (lichens, moss) to form
    soils
  • begins on rock
  • often accompanies a cataclysmic event

83
Pioneer Species
  • small plant organisms like lichens and mosses
  • their roots will gradually break off small
    chips of rocks
  • as they grow and die, the organic material mixes
    with the chips of rocks
  • soils begin to form (200 years 1 inch of top
    soil)

84
Secondary Succession
  • occurs in areas of disturbance of existing
    ecosystems
  • species who are opportunistic will begin process
  • opportunistic species are generally fast growing
    and have a high reproductive rate

85
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86
There are natural patterns of succession. -fields
become forests -ponds become fields -forests will
change types of vegetation until maturity
87
Maturity
  • ecosystems will become more complex
  • complexity slows rates of change
  • the higher the maturity, the longer the ecosystem
    will stay in that state
  • in general--fields become shrub lands
  • -- shrub lands become forests
  • -- ponds will become grasslands
  • as the ecosystem changes, the species composition
    changes

88
Fire Maintained Ecosystems
  • tends to halt/slow succession
  • maintains a particular successional state
  • some species require fire for reproduction
  • fire is used as a management tool to maintain
    ecosystems

89
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90
Climax Communities
  • all ecosystems tend to move toward an idealistic
    end state called a climax community
  • arguments occur about its existence
  • climax allows for very little change

91
Concept 6
  • Invasive
  • Keystone
  • Native

92
Invasive, Endangered, and Keystone Species
  • Invasive a species that did not evolve in the
    habitat, it was released on purpose or by
    accident
  • Endangered a species which are so close to the
    critical number that it may become extinct in the
    near future
  • Keystone a species which is critical to the
    survival of an ecosystem-they are tied to many
    other species

93
Invasive Species
Gypsy Moths introduced into this country in 1869
have devastated much of the eastern oak forests.
Non-native species do not have limiting factors
to control their populations. This causes
elimination of native species.
94
Rabbits introduced into Australia have devastated
the native grasslands and endangered kangaroos
and other native wildlife.
95
Endangered California Condor
The largest bird of North America was brought to
the brink of extinction due to -over
hunting -habitat destruction -egg collecting -DDT
(pesticide)
96
  • In 1987, the last wild condors were removed and
    placed with the remaining population in
    captivity-there were 26
  • A captive breeding program is in effect and as of
    2012 there were 405 birds (226 in wild, rest in
    zoos)
  • Scientists question if they had reached the
    critical number as all 27 of the first breeding
    population had originated from 14 birds

97
KEYSTONE SPECIES- organisms which are important
in shaping the total ecology of an ecosystem
Cray fish and Beaver are both keystone species in
Pennsylvania. It is because they form habitats
(like beaver) or are a major food source for many
organisms. Either way they have major influence
over their ecosystems. Loss of these species
would result in ecosystem collapse.
98
The Endangered Species Act
  • The law requires federal agencies, to ensure that
    actions they authorize, fund, or carry out are
    not likely to jeopardize the continued existence
    of any listed species or result in the
    destruction or adverse modification of designated
    critical habitat of such species.
  • The law also prohibits any action that causes a
    "taking" of any listed species of endangered fish
    or wildlife. Likewise, import, export,
    interstate, and foreign commerce of listed
    species are all generally prohibited.

99
Trophic Cascadehttps//connect.usu.edu/p24408776/
  • Occur when an organism has a key role in the
    balance of the ecosystem
  • -removal causes changes throughout the entire
    ecosystem
  • -can be top down or bottom up
  • -often found after the removal of a top level
    predator

100
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101
  • In Minnesota wolves suppress coyote populations,
    which in turn releases foxes from top-down
    control by coyote
  • The fox then control the intermediate prey
    species (bunnies and squirrels)
  • This allows the competition between the
    herbivores to produce dynamic equilibrium in
    populations of herbivores

102
Remove the top predator
  • Removal of Wolves releases the coyote
  • Coyote control more fox
  • Less fox, more bunnies and squirrels
  • More bunnies and squirrels, greater competition
    between herbivores
  • Damage to autotrophic levels
  • Decline of herbivores and then their predators
  • Complete ecosystem collapse

http//forestry.usu.edu/htm/video/conferences/rtw-
2010/billripple/
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