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Ecological Relationships

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Title: PowerPoint Presentation Author: GCPS Last modified by: Gina Doney Created Date: 8/19/2003 4:42:24 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ecological Relationships


1
Ecological Relationships
  • Marine Biology

2
What is Ecology? The
3
  • Ecology-
  • the study of interactions between
  • organisms and organisms
  • organisms and their environment

4
Factors that effect us
1. Abiotic Factors
Moisture
Wind/Air currents
Light
Temperature
Soil
5
  • A- stands for non
  • Bio- stands for living
  • Abiotic Factors- nonliving factors

6
2. Biotic Factors
7
  • Biotic- Living factors

8
Levels of Organization
  • Individual- one organism (living)
  • Ex a moose

9
Levels of Organization
  • Community- groups of different populations (more
    than one population or different groups of
    species)
  • Ex many groups of moose beavers, trees, grass
    (all living)

10
Levels of Organization
  • Biome- group of ecosystems that have the same
    climate and similar dominant communities
  • Biomes tropical rain forest, tropical dry
    forest, tropical savannah, temperate grassland,
    desert, temperate woodland and shrubland,
    temperate forest, northwestern coniferous forest,
    boreal forest (taiga), tundra, mountains and ice
    caps

11
IN AN ECOSYSTEM
Organisms live in a Habitat
Organisms fit into a Niche of the environment
12
New Material!Habitat vs. Niche
  • Habitat- an area where an organism lives
  • Niche- an organisms role in its environment
  • The Long Version ? full range of physical and
    biological conditions in which an organism lives
    and the way in which the organism uses those
    conditions. Includes where in the food chain it
    is, where an organism feeds
  • Habitat is like an address in an ecosystem and a
    niche is like an occupation in an ecosystem.

13
Community Interactions
  • when organisms live together in an ecological
    community they interact constantly.
  • Three types of interactions
  • Competition
  • Predation
  • Symbiosis

14
Competition- competing for resources
  • occurs due to a limited number of resources
  • Resource- any necessity of life. water,
    nutrients, light, food.
  • Competitive exclusion principle- no two species
    can occupy the same niche in the same habitat at
    the same time

15
Predation
  • Predation- when an organism captures and feeds on
    another organism.
  • Predator- hunter
  • Prey- hunted

16
Symbiosis
  • Symbiosis- any relationship where two species
    live closely together. (3 types)
  • Mutualism
  • Commensalism
  • Parasitism

17
Symbiosis
  • Mutualism- both species benefit from a
    relationship.
  • Lichens (fungus and Algae)

One example is the lichens, little non-descript
patches of stuff you see growing on rocks and
tree bark. This is a symbiosis, consisting of a
fungus and an alga. The fungus provides a
protective home for the algae, and gathers
mineral nutrients from rainwater and from
dissolving the rock underneath. The alga gathers
energy from the sun. There are thousands of
species of lichen in the world actually
thousands of species of fungi with just a few
species of algae which can form a partnership
with almost any of them.
18
Symbiosis
  • Commensalism One member of a symbiotic
    relationship benefits and the other is neither
    helped or harmed
  • Ex. Holes used by bluebirds in a tree were
    chiseled out by woodpeckers after it has been
    abandoned .

19
Symbiosis
  • Parasitism- One creature benefits and one
    creature is harmed
  • Ex tapeworm. Feeds in a humans intestines
    absorbing his/her nutrients.

20
Relationships
Symbiosis Living Together
a) commensalism
b) mutualism
c) parasitism
21
Identify these relationships
22
Graphic Organizer
  • Use the text as needed to provide marine
    organisms interactions as examples of ecological
    relationships.

23
Test Yourself!
  • Answer 1-3 on page 531

24
Ecology Review Slides Below
  • Use as needed to mastery ecology content.
  • Cycles and Succession Included

25
ENERGY FLOW
Autotrophs vs. Heterotrophs
26
Energy Flow (Trophic Levels)
  • Producers- make their own food
  • Consumers- get energy from consuming producers

27
Producers
  • Producers- capture energy from sunlight or
    chemicals and use the energy to produce food.
  • Producers are autotrophs- they make food from
    their environment

28
2 main types of autotrophs
  • Another type gets energy without light- by
    chemosynthesis
  • One type gets energy from the sun-by
    photosynthesis

29
Consumers
  • Consumers are heterotrophs- get energy from other
    organisms

30
Types of Consumers
  • Herbivores- eat only plants
  • Carnivores- eat animals
  • Omnivores- eat both plants and animals
  • Detritivores- eat dead matter (plants and animals)

31
Feeding Relationships
  • Energy flows through an ecosystem in one
    direction from
  • 1. the sun or inorganic compounds
  • 2. To autotrophs (producers)
  • 3. To heterotrophs (consumers)
  • Decomposers get energy from decomposing dead
    organisms

32
Food Chain- a series of steps in which organisms
transfer energy by eating or being eaten.
  • Food Web- A network of feeding relationships.
  • (More realistic that a food chain)

33
Food Web
34
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35
They can become very complex!
36
Trophic levels
  • Each step in a food chain or a food web is called
    a trophic level.
  • Producers are the first trophic level
  • Consumers are the second, third, or higher
    trophic level
  • Each trophic level depends on the one below for
    energy

37
Energy Pyramid
  • Only part of the energy stored in one level can
    be passed to the next- most energy is consumed
    for life processes (respiration, movement, etc.,
    and heat is given off)
  • Only 10 of the energy available within one
    trophic level is transferred to organisms in the
    next trophic level

38
Biomass Pyramid
  • Biomass- the total amount of living tissue within
    a given trophic level.
  • A biomass pyramid represents the amount of
    potential food available for each trophic level
    in an ecosystem.

39
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40
Energy Losses
  • Energy transfers are never 100 percent efficient
  • Some energy is lost at each step
  • Limits the number of trophic levels in an
    ecosystem
  • Energy flow is a one way path! (not a cycle)

41
All Heat in the End
  • At each trophic level, the bulk of the energy
    received from the previous level is used in
    metabolism
  • This energy is released as heat energy and lost
    to the ecosystem
  • Eventually, all energy is released as heat

42
Biogeochemical Cycles(Matter moving through the
environment)
  • All living organisms need certain
    elements/compounds for life processes
  • Ex your cells need C,H,O,P,N S in order to
    live and reproduce (make more cell)
  • Cycles in nature keep these elements moving
    from organisms to organism (and sometimes into
    the atmosphere)

43
Biogeochemical Cycles(Matter moving through the
environment)
  • The flow of a nutrient from the environment to
    living organisms and back to the environment
  • Main reservoir for the nutrient is in the
    environment
  • Transfer rates to and from reservoir are usually
    lower than the rates of exchange between and
    among organisms.
  • Matter is recycled through an ecosystem not one
    way flow

44
Three Categories
  • Hydrologic cycle
  • Water
  • Atmospheric cycles
  • Nitrogen and carbon
  • Sedimentary cycles
  • Phosphorus and sulfur

45
CYCLES IN NATURE
46
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47
Carbon Cycle
  • Carbon moves through the atmosphere and food webs
    on its way to and from the ocean, sediments, and
    rocks
  • Sediments and rocks are the main reservoir

48
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49
Carbon Cycle
diffusion
Atmosphere
Bicarbonate, carbonate
Terrestrial Rocks
Land Food Webs
Marine food webs
Soil Water
Peat, Fossil Fuels
Marine Sediments
50
Carbon in the Oceans
  • Most carbon in the ocean is dissolved carbonate
    and bicarbonate
  • Ocean currents carry dissolved carbon

51
Carbon in Atmosphere
  • Atmospheric carbon is mainly carbon dioxide
  • Carbon dioxide is added to atmosphere
  • Aerobic respiration, volcanic action, burning
    fossil fuels, decomposition of organic materials
  • Removed by photosynthesis

52
Nitrogen Cycle
  • Nitrogen is used in amino acids and nucleic acids
    (all living organism need nitrogen to make
    proteins)
  • Main reservoir is nitrogen gas in the atmosphere
  • Decomposers are vital to convert ammonia into
  • usable nitrites nitrates for plants (nitrogen
    fixation)
  • nitrogen gas (denitrification puts it back
    into the atmosphere)

53
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55
Phosphorus Cycle
  • Phosphorus is part of phospholipids and all
    nucleotides
  • What are these?
  • It is the most prevalent limiting factor in
    ecosystems
  • Main reservoir is Earths crust no gaseous phase
    (it never enters the atmosphere like carbon and
    nitrogen)

56
Phosphorus Cycle
mining
FERTILIZER
excretion
GUANO
agriculture
weathering
uptake by autotrophs
uptake by autotrophs
weathering
LAND FOOD WEBS
DISSOLVED IN OCEAN WATER
MARINE FOOD WEBS
DISSOLVED IN SOILWATER, LAKES, RIVERS
death, decomposition
death, decomposition
leaching, runoff
sedimentation
setting out
uplifting over geolgic time
ROCKS
MARINE SEDIMENTS
57
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58
Chapter 3 Communities Biomes
  • Vocabulary to Know
  • Limiting Factor
  • Succession
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Climax Community

59
Community
  • All the populations that live together in a
    habitat
  • Habitat is the type of place where individuals of
    a species typically live
  • Type of habitat shapes a communitys structure

60
Limiting Factors
  • Definition?

61
What factors would limit these communities?
62
What is Succession what causes it?
  • Changes to a community
  • Biotic Factor
  • Abiotic Factors

63
2 Types of succession
  • Primary
  • From nothing
  • Even the soil must be created
  • Secondary
  • From soil
  • Disaster can strike and make it start over

64
Primary Succession
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