Title: Ecology
1Ecology
The study of the interactions that take place
among organisms and their environment
2Aspects of Ecological Study
3Biosphere
- The part of Earth that supports life
- Top portion of Earth's crust
- All the waters that cover Earth's surface
- Atmosphere that surrounds Earth.
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5Abiotic Factors
- Are nonliving factors of an environment.
- Abiotoic Factors include amount of water and
oxygen, temperature, light, and soil.
6Biotic Factors
- Are the living factors of an environment.
7Levels of Organization in Ecology
8Ecosystem
- All the organisms living in an area and the
nonliving features of their environment - Types
- Terrestrial land (forest, meadow, desert)
- Aquatic water (pond, lake, stream, ocean)
9However..
- An ecosystem can be as large as the Sahara
Desert, or as small as a puddle, or one tree in
the rainforest!!!
10Ex. Pond Ecosystem
11Population
- All the organisms in an ecosystem that belong to
the same species
12Community
- All the interacting populations in an ecosystem
13Habitat
- The place in which an organism lives
- provides the kinds of food and shelter, the
temperature, and the amount of moisture the
organism needs to survive
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15Niche
- Is the role and position a species has in its
environment (how it meets its needs for survival) - Example see the soil ecosystem on pages 44-45 in
textnote each organisms role and how it uses the
resources in its own way to survive
16Living Relationships
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
17Symbiosis
- Relationship in which there is a close and
permanent association among organisms of
different species - Examples Commensalism, Mutualism, Parasitism
18Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
19Commensalism
- Symbiotic Relationship in which one species
benefits and the other species is neither harmed
nor benefited
20Ex. Clownfish protected by anemoneanemone not
harmed or helped
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
21Ex. Spider Crab hitches a ride from jellyfish
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
22Mutualism
- A symbiotic relationship in which both species
benefit
23- Ex. Ants protect acacia tree by attacking any
animal that tries to feed on ittree provides
nectar and home for ants
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
24Parasitism
- A type of interspecific interaction where one
species (the host) is harmed at least in some way
by the other (the parasite).
25Tapeworm
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
26Dog hookworm
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
27Filariasis (Elephantiasis) caused by parasitic
worm
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
28Fleas
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
29Lice
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
30Ticks
Photo from Dr. Todd Huspeni Animal
Parasitology UW-Stevens Point
31Learning Targets
- Students will be able to demonstrate how energy
transfers through food webs - Students will be able to define and give examples
of producers and consumers
32Box Jellyfish
- Live off of Northern Australia in Great Barrier
Reef and in Indo-Pacific - Very powerful venom among most deadly in world
- Can be fatal to humans and survivors will have
pain for months and permanent scars from
tentacles - Up to 15 tentacles grow from each corner, and
tentacles can be up to 3 meters in length! - Stinging not activated by touch, but by chemical
contained on prey - Have eye clusters, but lack a central nervous
system, so scientists dont yet understand how
they see - Sea turtles are unaffected by the sting of the
jellyfish and regularly eat them - Average lifespan less than 1 year
33How Organisms Obtain Energy
34The Producers Autotrophs
- Organisms that use energy from the sun or
chemical compounds to make their own nutrients
(photosynthesis)
35 Water carbon dioxide ? glucose
oxygen 6H2O 6CO2 ?
C6H12O6 6O2
36The Consumers Heterotrophs
- Organisms that cannot make their own food and
must feed on other organisms
37Consumers- 5 Types
- Herbivores - primary consumer eat plants only
- Carnivores - higher level consumers eat other
animals
38Consumers 5 Types
- Omnivores - can fit in at any consumer level
eat both plants and animals - Decomposers - break down dead organisms
- Scavengers - eat dead animals
39Food Chain
- A food chain is a simple model of the feeding
relationship in an ecosystem.
40Food Chain
- For example, shrubs are food for deer, and deer
are food for mountain lions.
The mountain lion is the second organism of the
food chain. It eats the deer. It is the
secondary consumer.
Because shrubs make their own food through
photosynthesis, they are called producers.
The deer is the first organism of the food chain
to eat the shrub. It is the primary consumer.
Shrubs are the beginning of the food chain. They
receive their energy from sunlight.
41Food Chain
Algae make their own food from sunlight. They
are the basis for the food chain in this example.
42Generalized Food Web of the Antarctic
Note Arrows Go in direction Of energy flow
43http//www.youtube.com/watch?vsbWyrcY5i3s
Food Webs
- Food Webs are Food Chains that intersect each
other. Food webs are what really happens in
nature. - Nowlets do an activity!!
- Grab a textbook and turn to page 53 (1 book per
table)a little background music for you while
you get books
44Food Web Activity
- Each group gets a deck of food web cards,
whiteboard, and marker - Lay out the cards on the whiteboard, arrange them
into a potential food web - Add 5 organisms of your own to the web
- Connect the webs with the arrows
- Label the autotrophs and heterotrophs
- For each heterotroph ID carnivore, herbivore,
omnivore, decomposer, scavenger
45Where do decomposers fit in food chains?
46Trophic Level
- Each Organism in a food chain represents a
feeding step in the passage of energy and
materials
47How does energy transfer in a food chain?
- 10 rule
- Each organism at a trophic level loses energy
from its food through waste and metabolic
processes. Only 10 of the energy is used for
growth and passed on to the next level of the
food chain
48Max Number of Trophic Levels
- 3 4
- Why?
- Only 10 of energy gets passed on, so energy
dwindles away quickly - Mouse eats grass gets 10 energy
- Snake eats mouse gets 10 of 10 1
- Hawk eats snake gets 10 of 1 0.1
49Energy Pyramid
50Energy Pyramid
- The bars are drawn in proportion to the total
energy utilized at each trophic
51Pyramid of Numbers
52Pyramid of Numbers
- A bar diagram that indicates the relative numbers
of organisms at each trophic level in a food
chain. - The length of each bar gives a measure of the
relative numbers.
53Pyramid of Biomass
54Pyramid of Biomass
- As pyramids of number but uses dry mass of all
organisms at each trophic level. - http//www.youtube.com/watch?vTE6wqG4nb3M
- Music review
-
55Does anything else transfer in a food chain?
- Toxins (heavy metals, DDT, PCBs) stored in the
fat of organisms - Bioaccumulation accumulation of toxic chemicals
in the tissue of an organism
56- Biomagnification increase in concentration of a
pollutant from the environment to the first
organism and subsequent organisms in a food chain - The higher the animal is on the food chain, the
higher the concentration of toxins
57DDT Problem
- Background of DDT
- DDT is a pesticide used for mosquito control and
pest control in agricultural crops. - DDT accumulation in some bird species resulted in
death, nervous system damage, and reproductive
failure. - As a result DDT was banned in the United States
in 1972.
58DDT is broken down by organism and stored in fat
Damage decrease population
- Reproductive failure (in birds/eagles- eggshell
thinning) - Immune system problems
- Nervous system damage
- Death
59Bioaccumulation Factor
- The concentration of a chemical/toxin in tissue
divided by its concentration in the diet