Title: Midterm Final Review
1Midterm Final Review
2Ecology the scientific study of the interactions
between organisms and the environment
- The ecological study of species involves biotic
and abiotic influences. - Biotic living (organisms)
- Abiotic nonliving (temp, water, salinity,
sunlight, soil)
3Heirarchy
- Organisms
- Population group of individuals of same species
living in a particular geographic area - Community all the organisms of all the species
that inhabit a particular area - Ecosystem all the abiotic factors community of
species in a certain area - Biosphere global ecosystem
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5Learning is experience-based modification of
behavior
- Learning ranges from simple behavioral changes to
complex problem solving - Learning a change in behavior resulting from
experience - Social learning involves changes in behavior that
result from the observation and imitation of
others
Vervet alarm call
6Innate behavior is developmentally fixed
- Unlearned behavior
- Environmental indifference - performed the same
way by all members of a species - Fixed action patterns (FAPs) innate behaviors
that exhibit unchangeable sequences carried to
completion - Triggered by sign stimulus
- Ensures that activities essential to survival are
performed correctly without practice
7Directed Movements
- Kinesis simple change in activity or turning
rate in response to a stimulus - Taxis automatic movement, oriented movement /-
from stimulus i.e. Phototaxis, chemotaxis, and
geotaxis.
Kinesis increases the chance that a sow bug will
encounter and stay in a moist environment.
Positive rheotaxis keeps trout facing into the
current, the direction from which most food comes.
8Types of Learning
- Habituation loss of responsiveness to stimuli
that convey little or no information - Simple form of learning
- Imprinting learning innate components
- Limited to sensitive period in life, generally
irreversible - ie. Lorenz imprinting in greylag geese
9Types of Learning
- Associative learning ability to associate one
stimulus with another - Also called classical conditioning
- Fruit fly (drosophila) trained to respond to
odor shock
10Types of Learning
- Operant conditioning another type of associative
learning - Trial-and-error learning
- Associate its own behavior with reward or
punishment
11Types of Learning
- Cognition the ability of an animals nervous
system to - Perceive, store, process, and use information
gathered by sensory receptors - Problem-solving behavior relies on cognition
12Territorial Behavior
- Territorial behavior parcels space and resources
- Animals exhibiting this behavior mark and defend
their territories
13Patterns of Dispersal
- Clumped most common near required resource
- Uniform usually antagonistic interactions
- Random not common in nature
14Demography the study of vital statistics that
affect population size
- Additions occur through birth, and subtractions
occur through death. - A life table is an age-specific summary of the
survival pattern of a population. - A graphical way of representing the data is a
survivorship curve. - This is a plot of the number of individuals in a
cohort still alive at each age.
15- Survivorship Curves
- Type I curve low death rate early in life
(humans) - Type II curve constant death rate over lifespan
(squirrels) - Type III curve high death rate early in life
(oysters)
16- Zero population growth B D
- Exponential population growth ideal conditions,
population grows rapidly
17- Unlimited resources are rare
- Logistic model incorporates carrying capacity
(K) - K maximum stable population which can be
sustained by environment - dN/dt rmax((K-N)/K)
- S-shaped curve
18- K-selection pop. close to carrying capacity
- r-selection maximize reproductive success
K-selection r-selection
Live around K Exponential growth
High prenatal care Little or no care
Low birth numbers High birth numbers
Good survival of young Poor survival of young
Density-dependent Density independent
ie. Humans ie. cockroaches
19Factors that limit population growth
- Density-Dependent factors population matters
- i.e. Predation, disease, competition,
territoriality, waste accumulation - Density-Independent factors population not a
factor - i.e. Natural disasters fire, flood, weather
20Age-Structure Diagrams
21Interspecific interactions
- Can be positive (), negative (-) or neutral (0)
- Includes competition, predation, and symbiosis
22- Interspecific competition for resources can occur
when resources are in short supply - Species interaction is -/-
- Competitive exclusion principle Two species
which cannot coexist in a community if their
niches are identical. - The one with the slight reproductive advantage
will eliminate the other
23Ecological niche the sum total of an organisms
use of abiotic/biotic resources in the environment
- Fundamental niche niche potentially occupied by
the species - Realized niche portion of fundamental niche the
species actually occupies
24Predation (/-)
- Defensive adaptations include
- Cryptic coloration camouflaged by coloring
- Aposematic or warning coloration bright color
of poisonous animals - Batesian mimicry harmless species mimic color
of harmful species - Mullerian mimicry 2 bad-tasting species
resemble each other both to be avoided - Herbivory plants avoid this by chemical toxins,
spines, thorns
25Community Structure
- Species diversity species richness (the number
of different species they contain), and the
relative abundance of each species. - Dominant species has the highest biomass or is
the most abundant in the community - Keystone species exert control on community
structure by their important ecological niches - Ex loss of sea otter ? increase sea urchins,
destruction of kelp forests
26Disturbances influences species diversity and
composition
- A disturbance changes a community by removing
organisms or changing resource availability
(fire, drought, flood, storm, human activity) - Ecological succession transitions in species
composition in a certain area over ecological
time
27Primary Succession
- Plants animals invade where soil has not yet
formed - Ex. colonization of volcanic island or glacier
28Secondary Succession
- Occurs when existing community is cleared by a
disturbance that leaves soil intact - Ex. abandoned farm, forest fire
29Invasive Species
- Organisms that become established outside native
range - Kudzu vine plant from Japan, noxious weed that
kills trees shrubs
30Ecosystems
- Ecosystem sum of all the organisms living
within its boundaries (biotic community)
abiotic factors with which they interact - Involves two unique processes
- Energy flow
- Chemical cycling
31Tertiary consumers
Microorganisms and other detritivores
Secondary consumers
Primary consumers
Detritus
Primary producers
Heat
Key
Chemical cycling
Sun
Energy flow
32Trophic Structures
- The trophic structure of a community is
determined by the feeding relationships between
organisms. - Trophic levels links in the trophic structure
- The transfer of food energy from plants ?
herbivores ? carnivores ? decomposers is called
the food chain.
33- Two or more food chains linked together are
called food webs. - A given species may weave into the web at more
than one trophic level.
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35Primary Production
- Total primary production is known as gross
primary production (GPP). - This is the amount of light energy that is
converted into chemical energy. - The net primary production (NPP) is equal to
gross primary production minus the energy used by
the primary producers for respiration (R) - NPP GPP R
- NPP storage of chemical energy available to
consumers in an ecosystem
36Net primary production of different ecosystems
Open ocean Continental shelf
125
65.0
24.4
360
5.2
5.6
Estuary Algal beds and reefs
1,500
0.3 0.1 0.1
1.2
2,500
0.9
Upwelling zones Extreme desert, rock, sand, ice
0.1
500
4.7
3.0
0.04
Desert and semidesert scrub Tropical rain forest
3.5
90
0.9
22
3.3
2,200
Savanna Cultivated land
2.9
7.9
900
2.7
600
9.1
Boreal forest (taiga) Temperate grassland
2.4
800
9.6
1.8
600
5.4
Woodland and shrubland Tundra
1.7
700
3.5
1.6
140
0.6
Tropical seasonal forest
1.5
1,600
7.1
Temperate deciduous forest Temperate evergreen
forest
1.3
1,200
4.9
1.0
1,300
3.8
Swamp and marsh Lake and stream
0.4 0.4
2,000
2.3
250
0.3
60
50
40
20
0
20
15
0
30
10
2,500
2,000
1,500
1,000
500
0
25
10
5
Key
Percentage of Earths surface area
Average net primary production (g/m2/yr)
Percentage of Earths net primary production
Marine
Terrestrial
Freshwater (on continents)
37- Primary production affected by
- Light availability (? depth, ? photosynthesis)
- Nutrient availability (N, P in marine env.)
- Key factors controlling primary production
- Temperature moisture
- A nutrient-rich lake that supports algae growth
is eutrophic.
38Energy transfer between trophic levels is
typically only 10 efficient
- Production efficiency only fraction of E stored
in food - Energy used in respiration is lost as heat
- Energy flows (not cycle!) within ecosystems
3910 transfer of energy from one level to next
Tertiary consumers
10 J
Secondary consumers
100 J
Primary consumers
1,000 J
Primary producers
10,000 J
1,000,000 J of sunlight
40Pyramids of energy or biomass or numbers gives
insight to food chains
- Loss of energy limits of top-level carnivores
- Most food webs only have 4 or 5 trophic levels
Pyramid of Numbers
Pyramid of Biomass
41Matter Cycles in Ecosystem
- Biogeochemical cycles nutrient cycles that
contain both biotic and abiotic components - organic ?? inorganic parts of an ecosystem
- Nutrient Cycles water, carbon, nitrogen,
phosphprus
42Carbon Cycle
- CO2 removed by photosynthesis, added by burning
fossil fuels
43Nitrogen Cycle
- Nitrogen fixation
- N2 ? plants by bacteria
- Nitrification
- ammonium ? nitrite ? nitrate
- Absorbed by plants
- Denitrification
- Release N to atmosphere
44Acid Precipitation
- Acid precipitation rain, snow, or fog with a pH
less than 5.6 - Caused by burning of wood fossil fuels
- Sulfur oxides and nitrogen oxides released
- React with water in the atmosphere to produce
sulfuric and nitric acids - These acids fall back to earth as acid
precipitation, and can damage ecosystems greatly. - The acids can kill plants, and can kill aquatic
organisms by changing the pH of the soil and
water.
45Biological Magnification
- Toxins become more concentrated in successive
trophic levels of a food web - Toxins cant be broken down magnify in
concentration up the food chain - Problem mercury in fish
46Greenhouse Effect
- Greenhouse Effect absorption of heat the Earth
experiences due to certain greenhouse gases - CO2 and water vapor causes the Earth to retain
some of the infrared radiation from the sun that
would ordinarily escape the atmosphere - The Earth needs this heat, but too much could be
disastrous.
47Rising atmospheric CO2
- Since the Industrial Revolution, the
concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere has
increased greatly as a result of burning fossil
fuels.
48Global Warming
- Scientists continue to construct models to
predict how increasing levels of CO2 in the
atmosphere will affect Earth. - Several studies predict a doubling of CO2 in the
atmosphere will cause a 2º C increase in the
average temperature of Earth. - Rising temperatures could cause polar ice cap
melting, which could flood coastal areas. - It is important that humans attempt to stabilize
their use of fossil fuels.
49Human activities are depleting the atmospheric
ozone
- Life on earth is protected from the damaging
affects of ultraviolet radiation (UV) by a layer
of O3,or ozone. - Chlorine-containing compounds erode the ozone
layer
50The four major threats to biodiversity
- Habitat destruction
- Human alteration of habitat is the single
greatest cause of habitat destruction. - Introduced species invasive/nonnative/exotic
species - Overexploitation harvest wild plants/animals
- Food chain disruption extinction of keystone
species
51Elements of Life
- 25 elements
- 96 C, O, H, N
- 4 P, S, Ca, K trace elements (ex Fe, I)
- Hint Remember CHNOPS
52II. Atomic Structure
- Atom smallest unit of matter that retains
properties of an element - Subatomic particles
Mass (dalton or AMU) Location Charge
neutron 1 nucleus 0
proton 1 nucleus 1
electron negligible shell -1
53Bonds
Covalent Ionic Hydrogen
All important to life All important to life All important to life
Form cells molecules Quick reactions/ responses H bonds to other electronegative atoms
Strong bond Weaker bond (esp. in H2O) Even weaker
Made and broken by chemical reactions Made and broken by chemical reactions Made and broken by chemical reactions
54- Weaker Bonds
- Van der Waals Interactions slight, fleeting
attractions between atoms and molecules close
together - Weakest bond
- Eg. gecko toe hairs wall surface
551. Polarity of H2O
- O- will bond with H on a different molecule of
H2O hydrogen bond - H2O can form up to 4 bonds
56H2O Property Chemical Explanation Examples of Benefits to Life
Cohesion polar H-bond like-like ?gravity plants, trees transpiration
Adhesion H-bond unlike-unlike plants? xylem blood?veins
Surface Tension diff. in stretch break surface H-bond bugs?water
Specific Heat Absorbs retains E H-bond ocean?moderates temps ?protect marine life (under ice)
Evaporation liquid?gas KE Cooling Homeostasis
Universal Substance Polarity?ionic H-bond Good dissolver solvent
574. Solvent of life
Hydrophilic Hydrophobic
Affinity for H2O Appears to repel
Polar, ions Nonpolar
Cellulose, sugar, salt Oils, lipids
Blood Cell membrane
58Acids and Bases
- Acid adds H (protons) pHlt7
- Bases removes protons, adds OH- pHgt7
- Buffers substances which minimize changes in
concentration of H and OH- in a solution (weak
acids and bases) - Buffers keep blood at pH 7.4
- Good buffer bicarbonate
59Figure 3.9 The pH of some aqueous solutions
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61Functional Groups
Functional Group Molecular Formula Names Characteristics Draw an Example
Hydroxyl -OH Alcohols Ethanol
Carbonyl gtCO Ketones (inside skeleton) Aldehydes (at end) Acetone Propanol
Carboxyl -COOH Carboxylic acids (organic acids) Acetic acid
Amino -NH2 Amines Glycine
Sulfhydryl -SH Thiols Ethanethiol
Phosphate -OPO32- / -OPO3H2 Organic phosphates Glycerol phosphate
62Monomers Polymers Macromolecules
Small organic Used for building blocks of polymers Connects with condensation reaction (dehydration synthesis) Long molecules of monomers With many identical or similar blocks linked by covalent bonds Giant molecules 2 or more polymers bonded together
ie. amino acid ? peptide ? polypeptide ? protein
larger
smaller
63Dehydration Synthesis (Condensation Reaction) Hydrolysis
Make polymers Breakdown polymers
Monomers ? Polymers Polymers ? Monomers
A B ? AB AB ? A B
64I. Carbohydrates
- Fuel and building
- Sugars are the smallest carbs
- Provide fuel and carbon
- monosaccharide ? disaccharide ? polysaccharide
- Monosaccharides simple sugars (ie. glucose)
- Polysaccharides
- Storage (plants-starch, animals-glycogen)
- Structure (plant-cellulose, arthropod-chitin)
Differ in position orientation of glycosidic
linkage
65II. Lipids
- Fats store large amounts of energy
- saturated, unsaturated, polyunsaturated
- Steroids cholesterol and hormones
- Phospholipids cell membrane
- hydrophilic head, hydrophobic tail
- creates bilayer between cell and external
environment
66- Four Levels of Protein Structure
- Primary
- Amino acid sequence
- 20 different amino acids
- peptide bonds
- Secondary
- Gains 3-D shape (folds, coils) by H-bonding
- a helix, ß pleated sheet
- Tertiary
- Bonding between side chains (R groups) of amino
acids - H ionic bonds, disulfide bridges
- Quaternary
- 2 polypeptides bond together
67amino acids ? polypeptides ? protein
68- Protein structure and function are sensitive to
chemical and physical conditions - Unfolds or denatures if pH and temperature are
not optimal
69IV. Nucleic Acids
- Nucleic Acids Information
- Monomer nucleotide
DNA RNA
Double helix Thymine Carries genetic code Longer/larger Sugar deoxyribose Single strand Uracil Messenger (copies), translator tRNA, rRNA, mRNA, RNAi Work to make protein Sugar ribose
70Comparisons of Scopes
- Visible light passes through specimen
- Light refracts light so specimen is magnified
- Magnify up to 1000X
- Specimen can be alive/moving
- color
- Focuses a beam of electrons through specimen
- Magnify up to 1,000,000 times
- Specimen non-living and in vacuum
- Black and white
71Prokaryote Vs. Eukaryote
- before kernel
- No nucleus
- DNA in a nucleoid
- Cytosol
- No organelles other than ribosomes
- Small size
- Primitive
- i.e. bacteria
- true kernel
- Has nucleus and nuclear membrane
- Cytosol
- Has organelles with specialized structure and
function - Much larger in size
- More complex
- i.e. plant/animal cell
72Parts of plant animal cell p 108-109
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74- Cells must remain small to maintain a large
surface area to volume ratio - Large S.A. allows increased rates of chemical
exchange between cell and environment
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78- Animal cells have intercellular junctions
- Tight junction prevent leakage
- Desomosome anchor cells together
- Gap junction allow passage of material
79Cell Membrane
806 types of membrane proteins
81Passive vs. Active Transport
- Little or no Energy
- Moves from high to low concentrations
- Moves down the concentration gradient
- i.e. diffusion, osmosis, facilitated diffusion
(with a transport protein)
- Requires Energy (ATP)
- Moves from a low concentration to high
- Moves against the concentration gradient
- i.e. pumps, exo/endocytosis
82hypotonic / isotonic / hypertonic
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84Exocytosis and Endocytosis transport large
molecules
- 3 Types of Endocytosis
- Phagocytosis (cell eating - solids)
- Pinocytosis (cell drinking - fluids)
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis
- Very specific
- Substances bind to receptors on cell surface
85- Catabolic pathways release energy by breaking
down complex molecules into simpler compounds - C6H12O6 6O2 6H2O 6CO2 E
- Anabolic pathways consume energy to build complex
molecules from simpler ones - 6H206CO2 E C6H12O6 6O2
86Concept 8.3 ATP powers cellular work by coupling
exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions
- A cell does three main kinds of work
- Mechanical
- Transport
- Chemical
- To do work, cells manage energy resources by
energy coupling, the use of an - exergonic (energy releasing) process to drive
an endergonic (energy absorbing) one
87Concept 8.4 Enzymes speed up metabolic reactions
by lowering energy barriers
- A catalyst is a chemical agent that speeds up a
reaction without being consumed by the reaction - An enzyme is a catalytic protein
- Hydrolysis of sucrose by the enzyme sucrase is an
example of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction
88Substrate Specificity of Enzymes
- The reactant that an enzyme acts on is called the
enzymes substrate - The enzyme binds to its substrate, forming an
enzyme-substrate complex - The active site is the region on the enzyme where
the substrate binds
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91Cofactors
- Cofactors are nonprotein enzyme helpers such as
minerals - Coenzymes are organic cofactors such as vitamins
- Enzyme Inhibitors
92Allosteric Regulation
- a proteins function at one site is affected by
binding of a regulatory molecule at another site - Allosteric regulation may either inhibit or
stimulate an enzymes activity
93Feedback Inhibition
- In feedback inhibition, the end product of a
metabolic pathway shuts down the pathway
94Energy Harvest
- Energy is released as electrons fall from
organic molecules to O2 - Broken down into steps
- Food ? NADH ? ETC ? O2
- Coenzyme NAD electron acceptor
- NAD picks up 2e- and 2H ? NADH (stores E)
- NADH carries electrons to the electron transport
chain (ETC) - ETC transfers e- to O2 to make H2O releases
energy
95Cellular Respiration
96Mitochondrion Structure
Citric Acid Cycle (matrix)
ETC (inner membrane)
97Glycolysis
O2 present
Without O2
- Occurs in plants and animals
- Occurs in cytosol
- Keep glycolysis going
- No oxygen needed
- Creates alcohol CO2 or lactic acid
- Release E from breakdown of food with O2
- Occurs in mitochondria
- O2 required (final electron acceptor)
- Produces CO2, H2O and up to 38 ATP (NADH, FADH2)
98Types of Fermentation
- Pyruvate ? Ethanol CO2
- Ex. bacteria, yeast
- Used in brewing, winemaking, baking
- Pyruvate ? Lactate
- Ex. fungi, bacteria, human muscle cells
- Used to make cheese, yogurt, acetone, methanol
- Note Lactate build-up does NOT causes muscle
fatigue and pain (old idea)
PURPOSE NAD recycled for glycolysis
99Various sources of fuel
- Carbohydrates, fats and proteins can ALL be used
as fuel for cellular respiration - Monomers enter glycolysis or citric acid cycle at
different points
100ENERGY
aerobic (with O2)
anaerobic (without O2)
glycolysis (cytosol)
Respiration (mitochondria)
substrate-level phosphorylation
Krebs cycle (citric acid cycle)
fermentation
electron transport chain
Oxidative Phosphorylation
ethanol CO2 (yeast, some bacteria)
lactic acid (animals)
chemiosmosis
101Sites of Photosynthesis
- mesophyll chloroplasts mainly found in these
cells of leaf - stomata pores in leaf (CO2 enter/O2 exits)
- chlorophyll green pigment in thylakoid membranes
of chloroplasts
102Photosynthesis Light Reactions Calvin Cycle
photo
synthesis
103Light Reactions
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105Both respiration and photosynthesis use
chemiosmosis to generate ATP
106Calvin Cycle produce 3C sugar (G3P)
107Photorespiration low carbon-fixation when
stomata closed in hot, dry climate
C3 C4 CAM
C fixation Calvin together C fixation Calvin in different cells C fixation Calvin at different TIMES
Rubisco (normally fixes CO2) PEP carboxylase fixes CO2 Organic acid
Mesophyll cells Mesophyll fix CO2 Bundle Sheath Calvin Cycle Night fix CO2 in 4C acids Day Calvin Cycle
Ex. rice, wheat, soybeans Ex. sugarcane, grass Ex. cacti, pineapple, succulent
108Comparison
- Plants Animals
- Needs O2 and food
- Produces CO2, H2O and ATP, NADH
- Occurs in mitochondria membrane matrix
- Oxidative phosphorylation
- Proton gradient across membrane
- Plants
- Needs CO2, H2O, sunlight
- Produces glucose, O2 and ATP, NADPH
- Occurs in chloroplast thylakoid membrane stroma
- Photorespiration
- Proton gradient across membrane