Title: Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
1Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
1. What an ecologist does. 2. Some important
aspects of an
organisms environment. 3.Trace the flow of
energy and nutrients in the living and nonliving
worlds
2Why its important To understand life.
- Know how organisms meet their needs.
- Reduce the impact of the human population.
- Understand how living things depend on
their environment.
32.1 ORGANISMS AND THEIR ENVIRONMENT
A. What is Ecology? The Scientific study
of interactions among organisms and their
environment
- 1. Ecological study reveals relationships among
living and nonliving parts of the world
Techniques include the fields of
mathematics, chemistry, physics, geology
and many more. - 2. Scientific research includes both
descriptive and quantitative methods. - Descriptive - fur, Carnivora long, canines
teeth, fur, warm blooded, feed young milk. - Quantitative - how many (International
System of measuring commonly known as SI
43. What are some of the things we can
learn from scientific research?
- Think about what it would be like without water
treatment plants, vaccinations, microwaves etc.. - Technology has caused problems as well. For
example over irrigation, toxic waste etc..
5II. Aspects of Ecological Study
- A. Living things can be found in the air, on
land and both fresh and salt water. - B. The Biosphere is the portion of Earth
that supports life. - C. Nonliving Environment.
- Abiotic factors - nonliving part of an
organisms - environment.
- (Name some)
- 1. What are some of the effects of
Abiotic factors.?
6- D. The living Environment
- 1. Biotic factors - All the living organisms
that inhabit an environment. (Name some) - 2. How do living plants affect you?
- How do dogs affect you?
7III. Levels of Organization in Ecology
All organisms depend on others for food, shelter,
protection and reproduction.
- Biosphere
- Ecosystem
- Communities
- Populations
- Organisms
8A. Interactions within populations
- 1. Populations - a group of organisms of
one species that interbreed and live in
the same place at the same time. - 2. Members compete - only if
resources are in short supply. - Members share.
9- B. Individuals interact within
Communities - No species lives independently of other species.
- 1. Community - a collection of
interacting populations - 2. A change in one population in a
community will cause changes in other
populations.
10- C. Interactions among living
things and abiotic factors from ecosystems - Ecosystems - The interaction among the
populations in a community and the communitys
abiotic factors. - Three kinds of Ecosystems
- A. Terrestrial land
- B. Aquatic - lakes and rivers
- C. Marine -oceans and seas
11IV. Organisms in Ecosystems
A habitat is the place where an organism lives.
Habitats can both change and even disappear
- A. Niche - the role and position a species
has in its environment. Each species is
unique in satisfying all its needs. - B. Living relationships
- Some species enhance their chances of survival
by forming relationships with other species
12Types of Living Relationships
- 1. Symbiosis - living together
- 2. Predator/prey - one species gets
food the other is eaten. - 3. Commensalism - one species
benefits. The other is neither
harmed nor benefitted. - 4. Mutualism - two species living
together both are beneficed. - 5. Parasitism - One species is
benefitted the other is harmed but is
not usually killed .
132.2 Nutrition and Energy Flow
I. How Organisms obtain energy Energy
drives all events walking, flowering and
reproducing. The ultimate source of energy on
Earth is the Sun.
14- A. The producers Autotrophs.
- Organisms that use energy from the sun or energy
stored in chemical compounds to make their own
nutrients. - Plants, some unicellular organisms are the most
common.
15- B. the Consumers Heterotrophs
- Organisms that obtain nutrients by eating other
organisms. - 1. Herbivores - eat plants
- 2. Carnivores - eat animals
- A. Scavengers - feed on carrion and refuse
- Why are scavengers important?
- 3. Omnivores - eat both plant and animal
material. - 4. Decomposers - fungi breakdown dead and
decaying material
16II. Matter and Energy flow in Ecosystems
- A. Food Chains Pathways for matter and energy
- Nutrients and energy proceed from Autotrophs
to Heterotrophs and then to decomposes. - Chains consist of 3 steps but most --no more
than five. Why? - B. Trophic Levels represent links in the
chain.
17- Each step in a chain represents a Trophic
level. - C. Food Webs - all the possible feeding
relationships at each Trophic level
in a community. - D. Energy and Trophic levels Ecological
pyramids.
18- D. Energy and Trophic levels
- Ecological Pyramids
- 1. Shows how energy flows through an
ecosystem - 2. Each Pyramid summarizes interactions of
matter and energy at each Trophic Level. -
19- 3. The total energy transfer from one
Trophic Level to the next is only
about 10 - 4. The energy lost enters the environment as
heat. - 5. A pyramid of numbers is based on
population size.
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21Pyramid of Numbers
22Pyramid of Energy
23III. Cycles in Nature
The elements that make up the bodies of organisms
alive today are the same atoms that have been on
Earth since life began.
24B. Carbon Cycle
25C. Nitrogen Cycle
26D. Phosphorus Cycle