Title: Ecology
1Ecology
- Ecology is the study of interactions among
organisms and between organisms and their
environment.
2Ecology Levels of Organization
Individual Population
Community Ecosystem
Biome Biosphere
3Ecological Methods
- Observing simple or complex first step in
asking ecological questions - Experimenting test hypotheses in a lab or in the
field - Modeling gain insight into complex phenomena
(global warming)
4Ecological Niche
- Niche defines an animals
- lifestyle
- habitat
- nutrition
- foraging
- territory
- Niche includes everything
- an animal does or uses in
- order to survive.
5Ecology Energy Flow
- Every organism needs energy.
- Sunlight is the main
- energy source for life.
- Less than 1 of sunlight is used by organisms.
- Where does the rest of the sunlight go?
Photograph courtesy philip.greenspun.com
6Ecology Energy Flow
- photosynthesis use of light energy to produce
- carbohydrates
- autotrophs make their own food.
- autotrophs are producers
- Why?
7Ecology Energy Flow
- sunlight is not available to all organisms
- chemosynthesis use of chemical energy to produce
carbohydrates - most chemotrophs are bacteria and algae
- are they autotrophs?
Deep sea hydrothermal vent worms
8Ecology Energy Flow
- autotroph produces its own food
- heterotroph acquires energy from other organisms
- What is a producer?
- What is a consumer?
- Are heterotrophs producers or consumers?
- consumers
- primary
- secondary
- tertiary
- quaternary
9Ecology Energy Flow
- heterotrophs are consumers
- herbivores eat plants
- carnivores eat meat
- omnivores eat plants and meat
- insectivores eat _____________
- detritivores feed on remains
- decomposers break down organic matter
- Where are decomposers in a food chain?
10Ecology Feeding Relationships
- Energy flows through an ecosystem in one
direction (arrows) from the sun or inorganic
compounds to producers to consumers. - Food chain diagram that shows simple feeding
relationships. - Trophic level each step in a food chain
- All food chains start with a producer.
11Feeding Relationships
Food Chain
- squid (tertiary consumer)
- small fish (secondary consumer)
- zooplankton (primary consumer)
- algae (producer)
12Students be careful!
- Remember the arrow
- shows the direction
- energy flows in an
- ecosystem.
- In this example, the
- Leopard seal eats the
- penguin and as a result,
- gets the energy.
13Ecology Feeding Relationships
- A food web is a network of complex feeding
relationships that connects multiple food chains. - If one species is lost from a food web, all other
species are affected.
14Terrestrial Food Web
15Aquatic Food Web
16My Favorite Food Web
Matt Pendley, Buford High School, Buford, GA
17Ecology Community Interactions
- Competition when organisms try to use a resource
in short supply at the same time and same place.
18Ecology Community Interaction
- Predation when one organism captures and eats
another organism.
19Ecology Community Interaction
- Symbiosis any relationship in which two species
live closely together.
20Ecology Symbiosis
- Mutualism when both
- species benefit from the
- interaction.
- In this example, the sea
- anemone is cleaned by
- the clown fish, who in
- turn is protected by the
- anemones stinging
- tentacles.
21Ecology Symbiosis
- Commensalism when
- one species benefits
- from the interaction
- and the host species is
- unaffected.
- The leafy plant is an
- epiphyte, growing on
- another plant only for
- support.
22Ecology Symbiosis
- Parasitism interaction
- in which one organism
- benefits and the other
- organism (host) is
- harmed.
- Does the host die as a
- result?
Asian tiger mosquito
23Ecological Pyramids Energy Pyramid(energy flow
in a community)
- each trophic level represents a different group
of organisms in a food chain - about 10 of the energy available at each trophic
level is transferred to organisms at the next
trophic level - energy is lost as heat and in life processes
24Ecological Pyramids Biomass Pyramid
- biomass is the total amount of living tissue
- expressed as grams of organic matter per unit
area - biomass pyramid represents the potential amount
of food available at each trophic level - normally the greatest biomass is at the base
25Ecological Pyramids Numbers Pyramid
- based on the numbers of individuals at each
trophic level - some number pyramids look like biomass energy
pyramids, some do not - in this example, the oak tree has a large amount
of energy and biomass, but it is only one organism
26Laws of Ecology
- All things are interconnected.
- Everything goes somewhere.
- Theres no such thing as a free lunch.
- Nature bats last.
- Ecology A Pocket Guide by Ernest Callenbach