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Ecology

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Ecology Introduced Species Starlings and house sparrows are introduced species from Europe. They competed with the bluebird population drastically reducing its ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ecology


1
Ecology
2
Ecology
  • Ecology is the scientific study of the
    interactions among organisms and between
    organisms and their environments.

3
Habitats
  • The place where an organism lives and that
    provides the things the organism needs is called
    its habitat!
  • Food, water, and shelter.
  • Biotic Factors The living parts of an
    ecosystem.
  • Animals, plants, fungi, bacteria.
  • Abiotic Factors The nonliving parts of an
    ecosystem.
  • Water, Sunlight, Oxygen, Temperature, and soil.

4
Organism
  • The smallest unit of ecological study.
  • Wildebeest

5
Populations
  • A population is a group of individual organisms
    of the same species living in a particular area.
  • Herd of Wildebeest

6
Exponential Growth
  • Occurs when the population multiplies by a
    constant factor at constant time intervals.

7
Limiting Factors
  • A factor that restricts the growth of a
    population.
  • Space
  • Food availability
  • Disease

8
Community
  • All of the organisms inhabiting a particular area
    make up a community.

9
Ecosystem and Biosphere
  • An ecosystem includes the abiotic and biotic
    factors in an area.
  • The biosphere is the sum of all Earths
    ecosystems.

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11
How do organisms get energy?
  • Every organism requires energy to carry out life
    processes such as growing, moving, and
    reproducing.
  • Producers (autotroph) synthesize their own food
    through the process of photosynthesis.
  • Consumers (heterotrophs) obtain their energy by
    eating other organisms.
  • Decomposers -

12
Types of Consumers
  • Herbivore eats plants.
  • Omnivore eats plants and animals.
  • Carnivore eats animals.

13
Food Chains
  • The pathway of energy transfer form one organism
    to another is called a food chain.
  • What would happen if one organism is overhunted
    and removed from the food chain?
  • What is the source of all energy?

14
Food Web
  • A pattern of feeding represented by
    interconnected and branching food
  • chains is called a food web.

15
Energy Pyramid
  • Emphasizes the energy loss from one organism to
    the next in a food chain. Only 10 is passed on
    to the next level, the rest is lost to the
    ecosystem in the form of heat.

16
Types of Relationships among species!
  • Predation an interaction in which one organism
    eats another. There are two individuals that
    participate.
  • Predator and Prey
  • Fox is a predator and the rabbit is the prey.

17
Symbiotic Relationships
  • A symbiotic relationship is a close interaction
    between species in which one of the species lives
    in or on the other.
  • Parasitism one benefits and the other is
    harmed.
  • Mutualism both species benefit
  • Commensalism one benefits and the other is
    neither helped or harmed

18
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19
Ecological Succession
  • The process of community change is called
    ecological succession.
  • What would happen if you left the field behind
    Heritage uncut for a couple of years?

20
Primary Succession
  • When a community arises in a lifeless area that
    has no soil.
  • Pioneer species are the first to colonize barren
    rock.
  • Climax community takes hold several hundred or
    thousand years later. The forest has grown to
    its full capacity.

21
Secondary Succession
  • When a disturbance damages an existing community
    but leaves the soil intact, the change that
    follows is called secondary succession.
  • Fires
  • Land cleared for farming, then abandoned.

22
The Carbon and Oxygen Cycle
  • Carbon starts its cycle in the atmosphere as
    Carbon Dioxide.
  • Plants take in the carbon dioxide and make
    organic compounds known as glucose.
  • That glucose gets passed on to consumers through
    the food chain.
  • They then release carbon dioxide back into the
    atmosphere through the process of cellular
    respiration.

23
Human Activities can alter ecosystems!
24
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25
Population Growth
  • As the human population continues to grow, the
    environment will be negatively impacted by the
    following.
  • Habitat destruction
  • Deforestation
  • Air Pollution
  • Acid Rain
  • Water pollution
  • Global Warming
  • Introduced Species
  • Reduced Biodiversity
  • Overexploitation

26
Deforestation
  • The clearing of forest for agriculture, lumber,
    and other uses also affects the carbon cycle by
    eliminating plants that absorb CO2 for
    photosynthesis.

27
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28
Alternatives to Clear cutting
  • Dont cut down every single tree!!!!!!
  • Selective Cutting

29
Greenhouse Effect
  • They process by which atmospheric gases trap
    heat.
  • Greenhouses trap heat.

30
Global Warming
  • Effects of Global warming
  • Rising sea levels
  • Large effects on weather
  • Loss of Species
  • The overall rise in Earths average temperature.
  • Caused by increasing carbon levels in the
    atmosphere.
  • What causes increased carbon levels in the
    atmosphere?
  • Deforestation
  • Burning of Fossil Fuels

31
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32
Acid Rain
  • Precipitation that carries acid to the Earths
    surface.
  • Smokestacks and automobile exhaust pipes release
    nitrogen and sulfur compounds into the
    atmosphere. They then combine with water and
    form acid rain.
  • Can lower pH of soil and aquatic ecosystems
    causing species to become extinct.
  • Acid Rain

33
Water and Air Pollution
  • Burning Fossil Fuels Releases chemicals into
    the atmosphere.
  • Fertilizers end up in water supplies.

34
Introduced Species
  • Starlings and house sparrows are introduced
    species from Europe. They competed with the
    bluebird population drastically reducing its
    population.

35
Snakeheads
  • Snakeheads are very aggressive and are
    outcompeting all native fish populations.
    Examples include Bass, Pickerel,

36
Overexploitation
  • The practice of overhunting.
  • Elephants were hunted for their tusks

37
What can Humans do to reduce our negative impact
on the environment?
  • Selective cutting
  • Make our homes more energy efficient
  • Use cars get higher gas mileage
  • Tougher regulations
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