Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will: Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment...

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ORGANISMS AND WHERE THEY LIVE Chapter 1 Lesson 4

Transcript of Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will: Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment...

Page 1: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

ORGANISMS ANDWHERE THEY LIVE

Chapter 1Lesson 4

Page 2: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

OBJECTIVES

Students will: Explore how all the living and

nonliving parts of an environment interact.

Describe how the living organisms interact with each other and with non-living parts of an environment.

Page 3: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

DEFINITIONS Ecology:

The study of how living and non-living things interact.

Page 4: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

DEFINITIONS

Ecosystem: The living and non-living things in an

environment and all their interactions.

Page 5: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

COMMUNITY

Each ecosystem has its own community.

The community is the living parts of the ecosystem.

A terrarium’s community can have small plants and animals.

A desert community includes beautiful cacti and deadly scorpions.

Page 6: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

COMMUNITY

Page 8: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

HABITAT

Each organism’s home is called a habitat. A whale’s habitat is the ocean. A termite’s habitat is a termite nest.

Page 9: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

HOW ARE ECOSYSTEMS DIFFERENT?

What makes one ecosystem different from another? In many cases water is the key. Only a small number of species of plants

and animals can survive with little water.

Page 10: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

HOW ARE ECOSYSTEMS DIFFERENT?

Another important resource that can affect an ecosystem is soil.

Areas with soil rich in nutrients can support many plants.

Few plants grow in areas with soil that does not have many nutrients.

Page 11: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

HOW ARE ECOSYSTEMS DIFFERENT?

The types of plants and animals that live in a particular ecosystem depend on a combination of these things. A woodland forest has enough rich soil and

enough water for many grasses to grow. However, a woodland forest does not have

enough sunshine which is needed by most types of grasses. Why? The sun’s light is blocked by the trees

and the forest floor is dark.

Page 12: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

WHAT KINDS OF ECOSYSTEMS ARE THERE?

Climate differences produce a variety of ecosystems.

Climate is the long-term weather pattern of an area.

Page 13: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

TUNDRA Long, dark, and very cold

winters. Few trees. Ground is frozen for most of

the year, and trees can’t grow.

Not easy to survive in these very cold places.

Most tundra regions are in the Arctic.

There is a small amount of tundra on parts of the Antarctic that are not covered with ice.

Tundra is also found on mountains at high altitudes and it’s called alpine tundra.

Page 14: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

TUNDRA

In the summer, energy from the Sun thaws the top surface of the ground.

Plants grow, but trees can't because the ground is frozen a few inches down.

Lots of animals go to the tundra in the summer.

Some even stay through the cold winter!

Page 15: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

ARCTIC FOX

Page 16: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

CARIBOU

Page 17: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

GRIZZLY BEAR

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HARLEQUIN DUCK

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MUSK OX

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POLAR BEAR

Page 21: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

SNOWY OWL

Page 22: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

MAP OF THE TUNDRA REGIONS

Page 23: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

TAIGA

It is located south of the tundra region.

Very cold winters & cool summers.

More rain or snow falls than in the tundra.

Many fir and spruce trees grow in this region.

Yellowstone, Sequoia, and Yosemite are national parks in the Taiga regions of the United States.

Page 24: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

GRASSLANDS

Cold winters & hot summers.

More rain or snow falls than in the taiga.

Rich soil. Grassland biomes are

large, rolling terrains of grasses, flowers and herbs.

We may know this areas as the “prairie.”

Page 25: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

GRASSLANDS MAP

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DESERT

Very hot days all year.

Very little rain. Plants and animals

adapted to conserve water.

There are four desert in the western U.S.

Page 27: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

GREAT BASIN DESERT IN NEVADA

Page 28: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

MOJAVE DESERT IN CALIFORNIA

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SONORAN DESERT IN ARIZONA

Page 30: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

CHIHUAHUAN DESERT IN MEXICO

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DESERTS OF THE WORLD

Page 32: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

TROPICAL RAIN FOREST

Hot and rainy all year.

8 to 14 feet of rain per year.

Poor soil. Variety of plants

and animals. Most tropical rain

forests are located near the equator.

Page 33: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

MAP OF THE TROPICAL RAIN FOREST REGIONS

Page 34: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

MILD FOREST LANDS

Mild winters and summers.

Plenty of rain or snow.

Tree lose their leaves in winter.

Located in the eastern United States, Canada, Europe, parts of Russia, China, and Japan. 

Page 35: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

MILD FOREST LANDS

The word "deciduous" means exactly what the leaves on these trees do: change color in autumn, fall off in the winter, and grow back again in the spring.

Page 36: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

OCEAN BIOME The ocean biome is the largest of all

the biomes. Approximately 70% of the earth is

covered in water and most of that is saltwater.

Scientists divide the ocean into different biomes depending on the temperature and amount of light.

The ocean is the only biome where insect do not live.

Page 37: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

SALTWATER SHORES Many organisms live

where the water level changes from high tide to low tide.

The plants and animals that live in this biome have interesting adaptations.

Some organisms make the shallow waters of the shore their home.

Others live on land, but have adjusted to higher levels of salt in their environment.

Page 38: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

OPEN SEA: SURFACE

This area gets plenty of light.

It is rich in nutrients and home to many populations.

Clams, crabs, barnacles, flounders, mussels, oysters, sea cucumbers and sting rays live close to shore

Page 39: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

OPEN SEA: DEEP BOTTOM

Ecosystems change as the amount of light decreases with depth.

Ninety percent of the ocean is in the midnight zone.

It is entirely dark—there is no light.

The water pressure is extreme. The temperature is near freezing.

Because there is no light in this zone, some animals don't have eyes. There are no plants in this zone.

Page 40: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

FRESHWATER RIVERS

Many habitats are along the shore and river bottom.

Although there are many rivers and streams, these sources of running water account for a very small portion of the earth's total surface, just .3%.

Page 41: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

FRESHWATER LAKES AND PONDS

Many habitats are at the shore, on the surface water, and under the water.

Some lakes are the source for some rivers.

Important rivers, most often, originate from lakes.

Some rivers end in lakes. Lakes can range in size

from small ponds to huge bodies of water such the Great Lakes in the U.S. 

Page 42: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

WHAT TYPES OF ROLES DO ORGANISMS PLAY?

Within a community, each member of a team has its own job to do.

There are three different types of team members: Producer Consumer Decomposers

Page 43: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

PRODUCERS

Producers are important to many parts of the ecosystem.

Without producers there would be no way for other organisms to survive.

Consumers and decomposers would not have a valuable source of energy.

Page 44: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

PRODUCERS You can tell most

producers by their green color (chloroplasts).

Producers capture light energy from the Sun and transform it into food.

They make food by using water, carbon dioxide in the air, and the Sun’s energy.

Producers use only some of the food they make and the rest is stored.

Page 45: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

PRODUCERS Other members of the

community eat producers or organisms that have eaten producers.

Without producers there would be no way for other organisms to survive.

Consumers and decomposers would not have a source of energy.

Page 46: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

PRODUCERS Producers also affect

nonliving parts of the ecosystem.

Plant roots hold the soil in place.

Other producers provide shelter for other consumers and producers.

Most producers contribute to the air that we breathe.

Page 47: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

WHAT ARE CONSUMERS AND DECOMPOSERS?

Producers are only the beginning of the food chain. A food chain is the steps in which organisms get the

food they need to survive. Producers make their own food. Consumers and decomposers must get food from

producers or other consumers.

Page 48: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

CONSUMERS Organisms that eat

food are consumers. They use the food that

producers make, or they eat other organisms.

Animals and some one-celled organisms are consumer.

In order to stay alive, consumers must get food from other organisms.

Page 49: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

CONSUMERS

There are three types of consumers. Herbivores:

consumers that eat only plants.

Carnivores: consumers that eat only meat.

Omnivores: consumers that eat both plants and animals.

Page 50: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

DECOMPOSERS

When plants and animals die they become food for decomposers.

Decomposers break down living and dead matter into simple chemicals that they use for food.

The chemicals left behind by decomposers are recycled (used over and over again.

Sowbugs are usually the first decomposers under a rotting tree stump.

Page 51: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

DECOMPOSERS

They can include bacteria, and some kinds of fungi which includes mold and yeast.

Can also include worms and snails.

Page 52: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

FOOD WEB

It shows how energy is passed from the Sun to producers, consumers, and decomposers.

In any ecosystem many food chains overlap. Different food chains may include some of the same organisms.

Several consumers may all eat the same kind of plant or animals.

When this happens, the food chains form a “Food Web.”

Page 53: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

FOOD WEBSHOWS HOW FOOD CHAINS ARE RELATED WITH AN ECOSYSTEMA FOOD WEB IN ONE COMMUNITY MAY BE CONNECTED TO FOOD

WEBS IN ANOTHER COMMUNITY.

Page 54: Chapter 1 Lesson 4. Students will:  Explore how all the living and nonliving parts of an environment interact.  Describe how the living organisms interact.

THE ENDA ROOM 27 PRODUCTION