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Title: Principles of ecology


1
Principles of ecology
U N I T 2
  • Chapter 13

2
AKS Standards 11 Evaluate the dependence of all
organisms on one another and the flow of energy
and matter within their ecosystems. 11a
Investigate the relationships among organisms,
populations, communities, ecosystems and biomes.
3
Understanding ecology
  • Ecology is the study of the interactions among
    living things, and between living things and
    their environment.
  • The word ecology comes from the Greek word oikos,
    which means house. It was coined by German
    biologist Ernst Haeckel in 1866 to encourage
    biologists to consider the ways organisms
    interact.
  • Until this time, most scientists studied a plant
    or an animal as though it existed in isolation
    as if it did not affect its surroundings, and its
    surroundings did not affect it.
  • Organisms and their surroundings are
    interdependentwhat do you think this means?

4
Levels of ecological organization
5
Components of ecological research methods
  • Ecological research methods include observation,
    experimentation, and modeling.
  • Observation the act of carefully watching
    something over time.
  • Experimentation may be performed in the lab or
    in the field with benefits and drawbacks to
    each type. All experiments must be controlled,
    that is, they must test only ONE variable at a
    time.
  • Modeling scientists use computer and
    mathematical models to describe and model nature
    when their questions cannot be easily answered
    through observation or experimentation.

6
AKS Standards 11 Evaluate the dependence of all
organisms on one another and the flow of energy
and matter within their ecosystems. 11a
Investigate the relationships among organisms,
populations, communities, ecosystems and biomes.
7
Biotic and abiotic factors
  • All ecosystems are made up of living and
    nonliving components. These are referred to as
    biotic and abiotic factors.
  • Biotic Factors living things, such as plants,
    animals, protists, fungi and bacteria. These
    organisms play a key role within their ecosystem.
  • Abiotic Factors nonliving things such as
    moisture, temperature, wind, sunlight and soil.
    The balance of these factors can determine which
    living things can survive in a particular
    environment.
  • An ecosystem is a complex web of connected biotic
    and abiotic factors, and all species are affected
    by changes to the biotic and abiotic factors in
    an ecosystem.

8
biodiversity
  • Biodiversity is the assortment, or variety, of
    living things in an ecosystem.

9
Keystone species
  • The complex relationships in ecosystems mean that
    a change in a single biotic or abiotic factor can
    have a variety of effects.
  • In some cases, the loss of a single species may
    cause a ripple effect across an entire ecosystem.
    Such an organism is called a keystone species.
  • A keystone species is a species that has an
    unusually large effect on its ecosystem.
  • It is not generally the most abundant organisms,
    but its role in controlling the balance of other
    organisms is paramount to ecosystem stability.

10
100
80
Otter number ( max. count)
60
40
20
0
(a) Sea otter abundance
400
300
Grams per 0.25 m2
200
100
0
(b) Sea urchin biomass
10
8
Number per 0.25 m2
6
4
2
0
1972
1985
1997
1989
1993
Year
(c) Total kelp density
Food chain
11
Keystone species
INQUIRY CHALLENGE Explain why the beaver is
considered a keystone species in its environment.
12
Critical thinking ACTIVITYINTERPRETING DATA
  • Review the graph below.
  • What would be an appropriate title for this
    graph?
  • What do the data indicate about the role of the
    starfish in its environment?
  • When Pisaster was removed from the intertidal
    zone, mussels eventually took over the rock face
    and eliminated most other invertebrates and
    algae. In a controlled area where it was not
    removed, there was little change in species
    biodiversity.

13
Critical thinking ACTIVITYANALYZING
  • Humans are sometimes described as being a
    keystone species. Does this label fit? Why or
    why not?
  • No keystone species are those that help to
    establish and maintain a complex web of life.
    Humans do not fit this label because human
    activities often decrease, rather than increase,
    biodiversity.

14
AKS Standards 11b1 Explain the flow of energy
through an ecosystem by arranging the components
of a food chain , energy pyramid, and biomass
pyramid.
15
Visual overview energy flow
16
ENERGY in ecosystems
  • All organisms must have a source of energy in
    order to survive. However, all organisms DO NOT
    obtain energy in the same way
  • Producers get their energy from nonliving
    resources (make their own food). Also called
    autotrophs.
  • Consumers get their energy by eating other
    living or once-living resources. Also called
    heterotrophs.
  • Energy flows through an ecosystem IN ONE
    DIRECTION ONLY from producers to consumers.
  • All ecosystems depend on producers, because they
    provide the basis for the ecosystems energy.
  • Ecosystems with few producers generally have low
    levels of biodiversitycan you explain why?

17
The Fate of solar energy
The flow of energy through an ecosystem is one of
the most important factors that determines the
systems capacity to sustain life. Without a
constant input of energy, living systems cannot
function.
18
How producers make food
  • Most producers use sunlight as their energy
    source. Photosynthesis is the process whereby
    solar energy is converted to the chemical energy
    stored in the bonds of sugar molecules.
  • What types of organisms use photosynthesis to
    make food?
  • Other producers use chemosynthesis, the process
    by which an organism forms carbohydrates using
    chemicals, rather than light, as an energy
    source.
  • What types of organisms use chemosynthesis to
    make food?
  • Inquiry Challenge Compare and contrast these
    two equations, considering both reactants and
    products. What are the similarities? What are
    the differences? In what type of environment
    would each reaction occur?
  • Photosynthesis 6CO2 6H2O ?light? C6H12O6
    6O2
  • Chemosynthesis 6CO2 6H2O 3H2S ? C6H12O6 3
    H2SO4

19
Critical thinking ACTIVITYINFERRING
  • How does the stability of an ecosystem depend on
    its producers?
  • Could producers survive without consumers?
    Explain why or why not.
  • Producers bring energy into an ecosystem
    without them, energy would cease to flow between
    trophic levels.
  • Producers do not require consumers to fill
    material needs as a food source. So in that
    sense, producers do not need consumers to survive.

20
ECOSYSTEM DYNAMICS
21
ENERGY FLOW Food chains
  • The simplest way to look at energy flow in an
    ecosystem is through a food chain this is a
    sequence that links species by their feeding
    relationships.

22
TYPES OF CONSUMERS
  • All consumers are not alike
  • Herbivores organisms that eat only plants.
  • Carnivores organisms that eat only animals.
  • Omnivores organisms that eat both plants and
    animals.
  • Detritivores organisms that eat detritus, or
    dead organic matter.
  • Decomposers organisms that break down organic
    matter into simpler compounds these organisms
    are vital to the stability of an ecosystem
    because they recycle vital nutrients back into
    the environment.

23
Trophic levels
  • Trophic levels are the levels of nourishment in a
    food chain.
  • For example, the producer-herbivore-carnivore
    chain has three trophic levels.
  • Producers are at the first trophic level.
  • Herbivores are at the second trophic level.
  • Carnivores are at the highest trophic level.

24
Food webs
  • A food web is a model that shows the complex
    network of feeding relationships and the flow of
    energy within an ecosystem.
  • At each link in a food web, some energy is stored
    within an organism and used for growth and
    metabolism, and some energy is dissipated into
    the environment as heat.
  • The stability of any food web depends on the
    presence of producers, because they form the base
    of the food chain.
  • An organism may have multiple feeding
    relationships within a food web.

25
food web
Animated Biology Build a Food Web
http//www.classzone.com/cz/books/bio_07/resources
/htmls/animated_biology/unit5/bio_ch13_0421_ab_foo
dweb.html
26
Interactive reviewEcosystem energy flow
  • http//www.classzone.com/cz/books/bio_07/resources
    /htmls/interactive_review/bio_intrev.html

Complete this interactive review using your
virtual textbook at home. Concept maps are an
excellent way to organize your thoughts and
review material!
27
Critical thinking ACTIVITYPREDICTING
  • How might the stability of an ecosystem be
    affected if all of the decomposers were suddenly
    removed? Explain.
  • How might an oil spill in the ocean affect an
    aquatic food web? What might happen to the food
    web on land located near the spill? Explain.
  • The stability would be negatively affected
    because without decomposers, vital nutrients
    would not be returned to the environment.
  • The entire food web would be affected because the
    oil will likely kill off phytoplankton, the
    producers of the food web. This would lead to
    loss of consumer levels. Plants and animals
    along the shore may also be affected as the oil
    seeps onto the shore.

28
AKS Standards 11b Explain the need for cycling
of major nutrients (C, H, O, N, P) and
identifying and illustrating the conservation of
matter.
29
Cycling of matter
  • Since life in most ecosystems requires a constant
    inflow of energy, Earth is an open system in
    terms of energy.
  • However, in terms of matter, Earth is a closed
    system.
  • Unlike energy, which flows in ONE DIRECTION ONLY
    through an ecosystem, matter is RECYCLED within
    and between ecosystems.
  • This is because, while matter can change in form,
    it cannot be created nor destroyed.

30
Lifes essential elements
  • Many elements are essential to the structure and
    function of organisms.
  • Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus,
    and sulfur, in addition to water, are important
    to life.
  • All of these elements cycle through ecosystems.
  • A biogeochemical cycle is the movement of a
    particular chemical through the biological and
    geological (living and nonliving) parts of an
    ecosystem.
  • Many substances change state as they move through
    their cycles.

31
The hydrologic (water) cycle
32
The carbon cycle
33
The nitrogen cycle
34
The phosphorus cycle
35
Interactive reviewCycling of matter
  • http//www.classzone.com/cz/books/bio_07/resources
    /htmls/interactive_review/bio_intrev.html

Complete this interactive review using your
virtual textbook at home. Concept maps are an
excellent way to organize your thoughts and
review material!
36
Critical thinking ACTIVITYAPPLYING
  • Why might farmers plant legumes such as peas to
    improve the nitrogen levels in their soil?
  • Legumes have root nodules, which contain
    nitrogen-fixing bacteria. Increased nitrogen
    levels increase the fertility of the soil.

37
AKS Standards 11 Evaluate the dependence of all
organisms on one another and the flow of energy
and matter within their ecosystems. 11a
Investigate the relationships among organisms,
populations, communities, ecosystems and biomes.
38
Pyramid models
  • Ecologists often model the structure of an
    ecosystem, including both matter and energy,
    using a pyramid.
  • The pyramids can represent the general flow of
    energy through an ecosystem, or they can
    represent the mass or numbers of organisms at
    each trophic level.
  • Important pyramid models include
  • Energy Pyramids
  • Biomass Pyramids
  • Pyramids of Numbers

39
The energy pyramid
  • Because energy is lost at each stage of a food
    chain, the longer the chain is, the more energy
    is lost overall.
  • The total energy used by producers far exceeds
    the energy used by the consumers they support.
  • An energy pyramid is a diagram that compares
    energy used by producers, primary consumers, and
    other trophic levels.
  • It illustrates how available energy is
    distributed among trophic levels in an ecosystem,
    and also the inefficiency of energy transfer
    through ecosystems.

40
Energy pyramid
A typical energy pyramid has a very large section
at the base for the producers, and sections that
become progressively smaller above. At each
trophic level, some energy is used for growth and
metabolism or expelled as waste. The remaining
energy is dissipated as heat this may be up to
90 of the original energy gained by the producer
level.
41
The Biomass pyramid
  • Biomass is a measure of the total dry mass of
    organisms in a given area.
  • When a consumer incorporates the biomass of a
    producer into its own biomass, a great deal of
    energy is lost in the process as heat and waste.
  • A biomass pyramid is a diagram that compares the
    biomass of different trophic levels within an
    ecosystem.
  • Unlike the energy pyramid, which represents
    energy use, a biomass pyramid provides a picture
    of the mass of producers needed to support
    primary consumers, and so on.

42
Biomass pyramid
We would expect more biomass to be available at
the bottom of the pyramid in comparison to the
topwhy?
43
The pyramid of numbers
  • A pyramid of numbers shows the numbers of
    individual organisms at each trophic level in an
    ecosystem.
  • This type of pyramid is particularly effective in
    showing the vast number of producers required to
    support even a few top level consumers.

44
CRITICAL THINKING ACTIVITYCALCULATING
  • Determine how quickly energy flows from an
    ecosystem by calculating the loss of energy in a
    sample system
  • Begin by drawing a pyramid that has 15,000 energy
    units.
  • Calculate the number of trophic levels that can
    be supported by this energy source stop when
    you reach a value less than one.
  • Then, do a calculation for a system twice the
    size of the first determine whether or not
    there is an appreciable difference.
  • Why is an herbivorous diet more energy efficient
    than a carnivorous diet? Explain your answer.
  • It is more efficient because it is the closest
    trophic level to the producers, meaning there is
    more available energy to use.
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