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Biological Communities

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Title: Biological Communities


1
Biological Communities
  • Chapter 18

2
18-1 How Organisms Interact in Communities
  • Objectives
  • Identify the distinguishing features of symbiotic
    relationships
  • SCS B-6.1

3
Species Evolve in Response to each other
  • Interactions among species
  • Insects/flowers
  • Coevolution
  • Predator/Prey relationships
  • Predation is when one organism feeds on another

4
  • Symbiosis
  • When two or more species live together in a
    close, long-term association.

5
  • Parasitism when one organism feeds on and
    usually live on or in another
  • Example Ticks and dogs
  • Ticks benefit, but dogs do not

6
  • Mutualism a symbiotic relationship in which
    both benefit from the relationship
  • Example flowers and bees
  • Flowers are pollinated and bees have food

7
  • Commensalism a relationship in which one
    organism benefits and the other neither is
    benefits or is harmed
  • Example Spanish moss and trees
  • Trees are not hurt nor benefit, but the moss
    benefits from additional sunlight

8
18-2 How Competition Shapes Communities
  • Objectives
  • Describe the role of competition in shaping the
    nature of communities
  • Distinguish between fundamental and realized
    niches
  • Describe how competition affects an ecosystem
  • Summarize the importance of biodiversity
  • SCS B-6.1, 6.2

9
  • Common Use of Scarce Resources leads to
    competition
  • Organisms compete for food, space, light,
    minerals, and water
  • Resources must be in short supply if competition
    occurs
  • Competition can limit how species use resources
  • Competition can lead to extinction or elimination
    of a species

10
  • Niche the role of a species in a ecosystem
  • How does the organism affect the environment
  • If niches overlap it may cause competition
  • Niches can vary in size

11
  • Predation can lesson competition
  • Eliminates those species less adaptive
  • Promotes biodiversity

12
18-3 Major Biological Communities
  • Objectives
  • Recognize the role of climate in determining the
    nature of biological communities
  • Describe how elevation and latitude affect the
    distribution of biomes
  • Summarize the key features of the Earths major
    biomes
  • SCS B-6.1, 6.2

13
  • Climate determines where species lives
  • Climate is the prevailing weather conditions of
    an area
  • Temperature and moisture
  • Temperature and moisture determine biological
    communities

14
Types of Terrestrial Biomes
  • Tundra
  • Taiga
  • Desert
  • Grassland
  • Temperate Forests
  • Tropical Rain Forests

15
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16
Tundra
  • extremely short growing season (6 to 10 weeks)
  • long, cold, dark winters (6 to 10 months with
    mean monthly temperatures below 32 F or 0 C.)
  • low precipitation (less than five inches/year)
  • Animals and animals Musk ox, artic hare and
    fox, permafrost (permanently frozen ground)

17
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18
Taiga
  • Long, severe winters and short summers (50 to 100
    frost-free days) are characteristic, as is a wide
    range of temperatures between the lows of winter
    and highs of summer.
  • Mean annual precipitation is 15 to 20 inches,
    but low evaporation rates make this a humid
    climate.
  • Vegetation and Animals Conifers, beaver, lynx,
    deer, sparrows..

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20
Deserts
  • Temperature Average of 38C (day), average of
    -3.9C (night)
  •  Precipitation About 250 mm of rain per year
  •  Vegetation Cacti, small bushes, short grasses
  •  Animals in the desert coyotes, lizards and
    snakes, insects, and even some birds) are adapted
    for burrowing to escape the scorching heat of the
    desert sun

21
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22
Grasslands
  • Temperature Dependent on latitude, yearly range
    can be between -20C to 30C  
  • Precipitation About 500 to 900 mm of rain per
    year  
  • Vegetation Grasses (prairie clover, salvia,
    oats, wheat, barley, coneflowers)
  • Animals bison and antelope

23
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24
Temperate Forests
  • Temperature -30C to 30C, yearly average is
    10C, hot summers, cold winters  
  • Precipitation 750 to 1,500 mm of rain per year
     
  • Vegetation Broadleaf trees (oaks, maples,
    beeches), shrubs, perennial herbs, and mosses
  • Animals Deer, raccoons, and salamanders are
    characteristic inhabitants.

25
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26
Tropical Rain Forest
  • Temperature 20C to 25C, must remain warm and
    frost-free
  •  Precipitation 2,000 to 10,000 millimeters of
    rain per year
  •  Vegetation Vines, palm trees, orchids, ferns
  • Animals and plants monkeys, cat like mammals,
    reptiles, insects, diverse flowers, hard wood
    trees, and medicinal plants

27
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