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Ecology

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Ecology Ecosystems and Communities – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ecology


1
Ecology
  • Ecosystems and Communities

2
Weather vs. Climate
  • Weather is the condition of the Earths
    atmosphere at a particular time and place.
  • Atmosphere is the Earths insulating blanket
  • Climate is the average yearly condition of
    temperature and precipitation in a region.

3
  • Climate is caused by
  • Latitude
  • Winds and ocean currents which transport heat
    through the biosphere (unequal heating)
  • Shape and height
  • of landmasses

4
Greenhouse Effect
  • The temperature on Earth stays suitable for life
    due to the trapping of heat by gases in the
    atmosphere causing a natural phenomenon called
    the Greenhouse Effect.

Phenomenon an occurrence or fact that can be
perceived by the senses.
5
Climate Zones
  • Three main climate zones
  • Polar very low angle
  • Temperate
  • Tropical near the equator
  • Caused by differences in heating of the Earths
    surface.
  • Latitude
  • Unequal heating of the surface results in currents

6
  • Wind currents occur because warm air rises and
    cool air sinks.
  • Where would you expect to find warm air rising?
    Cold air sinking?
  • The same pattern occurs in the oceans.
  • Wind over the waters surface also creates
    currents.
  • Landmasses also have affect on currents.
  • Example Rain shadow

7
Latitude determines the angle of the sunlight
striking the earth
8
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9
What Shapes Ecosystems
10
  • Biotic Biological or living factors that
    influence organisms in an ecosystem
  • Ex. Plants and animals
  • Abiotic Physical or non-living factors that
    influence organisms in an ecosystem
  • Ex. Temperature, soil type, sunlight, etc.

11
Habitat
  • The area where an organism lives
  • Contains both biotic and abiotic factors

12
Niche
  • Full range of physical and biological conditions
    in which an organism lives and the way in which
    the organism uses those conditions
  • An organisms habitat is its address its niche
    is its occupation.
  • Example Lion lives in the savannah but it
    survives in that habitat by being a top level
    consumer.

13
Example of Niche for Anoles Lizard
14
Community Interactions
  • Competition
  • Predation
  • Symbiosis
  • Mutualism
  • Commensalism
  • Parasitism

15
Competition
  • This occurs when organisms try to use the same
    resources (necessities of life).
  • Often results in one organism dying out
  • Competitive Exclusion Principle No two species
    can occupy the same niche in the same habitat at
    the same time

16
Predation
One organism (predator) captures and feeds on the
other (prey)
17
Symbiosis
  • Occurs when two species live closely together
  • Three types
  • Mutualism
  • Commensalism
  • Parasitism

18
MutualismBoth species benefit from the
relationship
19
CommensalismOne species benefits while the other
is neither helped nor harmed
20
ParasitismOne species benefits by living in or
on the other and the other is harmed
21
Ecological Succession
  • The series of predictable changes over time is
    succession.

Ecosystems constantly change due to natural and
human influences. Ex Further disturbances,
long term climate changes, introduction of
non-native species
22
Primary Succession occurs on bare rock surfaces
where no soil exists.Ex Lava flow or glacier
melt
23
  • Pioneer species are the first species to
    populate an area following a disturbance that
    causes primary succession.
  • Ex Lichens

24
Secondary Succession occurs when a disturbance
changes a community without removing the soil
25
  • Climax communities are those that seem to be
    stable and undergoing no more change.
  • Changes may occur very slowly due to climate
    changes or introduction of non-native species

26
Biomes
  • Biomes are groups of communities that cover large
    areas and are characterized by certain soil and
    climate conditions and particular assemblages of
    plants and animals.
  • Each biome is identified by its particular set of
    abiotic factors and characteristic ecological
    community and organisms.

27
  • Tolerance - plants and animals ability to survive
    under conditions that differ from their optimal
    (most desirable or favorable) conditions
  • Microclimate climate conditions in a small area
    that differ significantly from the climate of the
    surrounding area

28
Aquatic Ecosystems
  • Determined by depth, flow, temperature, and
    chemistry of the water (salts, nutrients and
    oxygen).
  • Grouped by the abiotic factors that affect them
    (different than land biomes which are determined
    by biotic factors)
  • Three main categories of Aquatic Ecosystems
  • Freshwater
  • Estuaries
  • Marine

29
Freshwater Ecosystems
  • Flowing water Rivers, streams, creeks, and
    brooks
  • Standing-water Lakes and ponds
  • Plankton- tiny organisms that live in fresh or
    saltwater environments
  • Phytoplankton - single-celled algae are producers
    in aquatic food webs
  • Zooplankton tiny animals that feed on
    phytoplankton

30
  • Freshwater wetlands an ecosystem that has water
    covering the soil or is present at or near the
    surface for a portion of the year
  • Very productive ecosystems important breeding
    grounds for organisms (birds and insects)
  • Bogs, marshes and swamps
  • Water can be flowing or standing and fresh, salty
    or brackish(mixture of fresh and salty)

31
Estuaries
  • Wetlands formed where rivers meet the sea
  • Contain a mixture of fresh water and salt water
  • Affected by tides
  • A lot of detritus (organic material that provide
    food for organisms at base of food web) from
    primary producers
  • Examples Salt marsh-Chesapeake Bay and Mangrove
    swamp-Florida Everglades

32
Marine Ecosystems
  • Photic Zone - well-lit upper layer producers can
    photosynthesize here (0 to 200 meters)
  • Aphotic Zone Sunlight can not penetrate due to
    depth (200 meters and deeper)
  • Other zones based on depth and distance from
    shore intertidal zone(close to shore), coastal
    zone, open ocean, benthic zone(ocean floor)
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