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Ecosystems and Communities

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Title: Ecosystems and Communities


1
Ecosystems and Communities
  • Chapter 4

2
  • The Role of Climate - Sec. 4.1
  • Organisms vary in their adaptations to
    temperature, rainfall, and other environmental
    conditions.
  • Species also vary in their tolerances for
    conditions outside their normal ranges.
  • Weather day to day conditions of the Earths
    atmosphere at a particular place and time.
  • Climate average, year to year conditions of
    temperature and precipitation in a particular
    region.

3
  • The Greenhouse Effect
  • The atmosphere traps heat energy and maintains
    Earths temperature range.
  • Top three gases carbon dioxide, methane, water
    vapor.
  • Sunlight enters the atmosphere as short
    wavelength radiation and is converted to long
    wavelength heat which can not escape back out
    into space.
  • Without the greenhouse effect the Earth would be
    too cold to sustain life.

4
  • The Effect of Latitude on Climate
  • Because Earth is a sphere that is tilted on its
    axis, solar radiation strikes the surface at an
    angle that varies throughout the year.
  • The further you move away from the equator the
    more solar radiation varies during the seasons.
  • This divides the Earth into three main climate
    zones
  • 1. Polar cold areas where light hits at low
    angle

5
  • 2. Temperate affected by tilt of Earth so
    seasonal change is great
  • 3. Tropical near equator from 23.5 degrees
    north to 23.5 degrees south.

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  • Because the sun is directly overhead year round
    at the equator climatic conditions vary very
    little.
  • Heat Transport in the Biosphere
  • Unequal heating of the atmosphere drives winds
    and ocean currents.
  • Warm air rises and cold air sinks.
  • As warm air rises it is replaced by heavier cold
    air creates prevailing winds.
  • Cold water at the poles sinks and flows toward
    the equator where it warms and rises.
  • These air and water movements transfer heat
    throughout the world.

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9
  • Continents and other land masses can also affect
    winds and ocean currents.
  • Winds over the oceans influence currents.
  • As air rises over mountains, it cools and often
    loses its moisture as precipitation.
  • This causes a dry area on the leeward side of the
    mountains Rain Shadow Effect

10
  • Rain Shadow Effect

11
  • What Shapes an Ecosystem? Sec. 4.2
  • Biotic Factors
  • - biological influences affecting an organism
    in its environment
  • - all of the living organisms in an ecosystem
  • Abiotic Factors
  • - physical, or nonliving, factors that affect
    an organism in an ecosystem
  • - climate, nutrient availability, soil type,
    sunlight, rainfall, etc.

12
  • Habitat
  • where an organism lives
  • Together, biotic and abiotic factors determine
    the survival and growth of an organism and the
    productivity of the ecosystem in which the
    organism lives.
  • Niche
  • - an organisms habitat and its role in the
    habitat
  • - includes biotic and abiotic factors, its role
    in the food web, its physical tolerances, its
    reproductive methods, etc.

13
  • - no two species can share the same niche in
    the same habitat. Fig. 4-5
  • - Many species have similar, but slightly
    different niches
  • - Fundamental niche the complete niche
    that a species could occupy
  • - Realized niche the niche that a species
    occupies when in competition with other
    species.

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15
  • Community Interactions
  • - refers to interactions between organisms
  • A. Competition
  • - occurs when organisms of the same or different
    species try to use the same resource in the same
    place at the same time.
  • - Competitive Exclusion Principle
  • - no two species can occupy the same niche
    in the same habitat at the same time

16
  • Resource partitioning in Anolis lizards.

A. distichus
A. insolitus
17
  • B. Predation
  • - where one organism eats another
  • - predator vs. prey

18
  • C. Symbiosis
  • - relationships in which two species live
    closely together.
  • A) Mutualism
  • - both species benefit

19
  • B) Commensalism
  • - one organism benefits and the other has
    no positive or negative effect
  • - oxpeckers on grazers
  • - barnacles on whales

20
  • C) Parasitism
  • - one organism lives on or in another
    organism and harms it.
  • - host vs. parasite

21
  • Ecological Succession
  • - ecosystems constantly change in response to
    natural and human disturbances.
  • - results in a replacement of one community of
    species by another community
  • - as organisms live in an area they make the area
    better suited to other species
  • - Primary Succession
  • - when succession occurs where no soil
    previously exists
  • - lava flows, sand dunes, bare rock, etc.
  • - pioneer species first species to populate

22
  • - lichen are often pioneer species
  • - composed of a fungus and algae
  • - begin breaking down rock and forming soil
  • - prepare the area for small grasses or
    herbs, which further prepare the area for
    other species
  • Secondary Succession
  • - when disturbance changes an existing
    community but does not remove the soil
  • - after fires, cutting forests, abandoned
    farmland

23
  • Secondary Succession

24
  • Primary
  • Succession

25
  • Alders to cottonwood

26
  • Spruce into Forest

27
  • Mount Saint Helens

28
  • Biomes Sec. 4.3
  • complex of terrestrial ecosystems that cover a
    large area and is characterized by certain soil
    and climate conditions and particular communities
    of plants and animals.
  • - organisms are adapted to certain biomes
  • - an adaptation is an inherited characteristic
    that increases an organisms ability to survive
    and reproduce.
  • - each species has a range of tolerance for every
    environmental factor
  • - microclimate is often very important
  • (insert graph of Law of Tolerances)

29
  • Terrestrial Biomes

30
  • Climatograph

31
  • 1. Tropical Rain Forest (pg. 100)
  • 2. Tropical Dry Forest (pg. 100)
  • 3. Tropical Savanna (pg. 101)
  • 4. Desert (pg. 101)
  • 5. Temperate Grassland (pg. 102)
  • 6. Temperate Woodland and Shrubland
  • 7. Temperate Deciduous Forest (pg. 103)
  • 8. Northwestern Coniferous Forest (pg. 103)
  • 9. Boreal Forest (Taiga) (pg. 104)
  • 10. Tundra (pg. 104)

32
  • Aquatic Ecosystems Sec. 4.4
  • - are grouped according to abiotic factors which
    affect them.
  • - determined primarily by depth, flow,
    temperature, and chemistry of the water
  • - depth determines light penetration
  • - water chemistry refers mostly to the amount of
    dissolved chemicals in the water salts,
    nutrients, and oxygen
  • - water covers approximately 75 of Earths
    surface
  • -about 3 of Earth covered by fresh water

33
  • Aquatic Ecosystems

34
  • Freshwater Ecosystems
  • - divided based on if water is flowing or still
  • 1. Flowing-water ecosystems
  • - rivers and creeks
  • - change along their length
  • - headwaters often cold and turbulent with
    lots of dissolved oxygen but little plant
    life (trout)
  • - further down soil builds up, water slows,
    more plants grow (catfish)
  • - organisms are well adapted for speed of water

35
  • 2. Standing-water ecosystems
  • - lakes and ponds
  • - still water is good habitat for plankton
  • tiny, free-floating or weakly swimming
    organisms in both freshwater and saltwater
    environments
  • phytoplankton single-celled algae base of
    most aquatic ecosystem food chains
  • zooplankton planktonic animals which feed
    on the phytoplankton

36
  • Freshwater Pond

37
  • 3. Freshwater Wetlands
  • - ecosystems in which water either covers the
    soil or is present at or near the surface of the
    soil for at least part of the year
  • - often very productive
  • a. bogs dominated by sphagnum moss
  • - form in depressions where water
    gathers often acidic soils/water
  • b. marshes shallow wetlands along rivers
  • - often contain cattails, reeds, rushes

38
  • c. swamps water slowly flows through
  • - often look like flooded forests
  • Estuaries
  • wetlands where rivers meet the sea
  • - mixed fresh and salt water
  • - affected by rise and fall of tides
  • - often shallow, so they support many producers
    and are extremely productive
  • - detritus feeds many of the lower levels of
    the food chains
  • - important spawning and nursery areas

39
  • a. Salt marshes
  • - temperate zone estuaries dominated by
    salt-tolerant grasses above the low-tide
    line and seagrasses below
  • much of Texas Coast
  • b. Mangrove swamps
  • - tropical wetlands dominated by salt-
    tolerant trees called mangroves
  • - seagrasses below low-tide line
  • - valuable nurseries for fish and
    shellfish
  • coast of Everglades N.P.

40
  • Estuaries

41
  • Marine Ecosystems pg. 109

42
  • Marine Ecosystems
  • Photic Zone area where light penetrates
  • - photosynthetic producers
  • Aphotic Zone below light penetration
  • - chemosynthetic producers and detritus
  • 1. Intertidal zone
  • - area between high and low tide
  • - organisms adapted to being exposed for part
    of the day
  • - clear zonation of organisms

43
  • Marine Ecosystems

44
  • 2. Coastal Ocean
  • - extends from low-tide mark to outer edge of
    continental shelf
  • - often all in the photic zone
  • - kelp forests
  • 3. Coral Reefs
  • - warm, shallow tropical waters
  • - coral animals hard calcium carbonate
    skeletons make up the reef base
  • 4. Open Ocean
  • - low productivity, but huge area makes it
    important for worldwide photosynthesis

45
  • 5. Benthic Zone
  • - ocean floor ecosystem
  • - usually depends on detritus raining down
  • - benthos organisms which live on the ocean
    floor

46
  • Characteristics of Populations
  • 1. Population Density
  • - number of individuals per unit of area
  • 2. Geographic Distribution
  • - range
  • - the area inhabited by a population
  • 3. Growth Rate
  • - depends on birth rates, death rates, and the
    number of individuals moving into or out of a
    population

47
  • Populations in nature grow in two ways
  • 1. Exponential Growth
  • - occurs in populations with abundant space,
    resources, and few predators or disease
  • - individuals in a population reproduce at a
    constant rate.
  • - at first population grows slowly, but
    steadily increases at an accelerating speed.

48
  • Exponential Growth Whooping Cranes

49
  • 2. Logistic Growth
  • - after a period of exponential growth,
    resources become limited and population growth
    slows or stops.
  • - slows due to decrease in birthrate, increase
    in death rate, or both
  • - eventually the population reaches a maximum
    size that the environment can support Carrying
    Capacity

50
  • Logistic Population Growth

51
  • Limiting factors cause population growth to
    decrease.
  • Density-Dependent Factors
  • - limiting factors that depend on population size
  • - become limiting only when the population
    density reaches a certain level and as population
    grows the factor becomes more limiting.
  • competition, predation, parasitism, disease
  • Density-Independent Factors
  • - affect all populations in similar ways,
    regardless of population size
  • weather, natural disasters, seasonal cycles,
    and human activities

52
Human Population growth has historically been
exponential.
Age-structure diagrams give a view of what a
population is like now and what might
happen in it in the future.
53
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