Ecology review 2

18
Ecology Review The branch of Biology that describes relationships between organisms and the environments in which they live

Transcript of Ecology review 2

Page 1: Ecology review 2

Ecology Review

The branch of Biology that describes relationships between organisms and the environments in which they live

Page 2: Ecology review 2

Principles

• The law of conservation of matter:

• Matter can be changed from one form to another

• but it cannot be created or destroyed

Page 3: Ecology review 2

1st law of energy

• Energy cannot be created or destroyed but can be converted from one form to another– Radiant energy – sun– Chemical energy – photosynthesis– Kinetic energy – animal movement– Thermal energy – creating heat

Page 4: Ecology review 2

2nd law of energy

• Every time energy is converted from one form to another, energy is lost in the form of heat

Page 5: Ecology review 2

Energy Cycle

• The fundamental source of energy in almost all ecosystems is radiant energy from the sun

• energy and organic matter are passed along an ecosystem's food chain.

• Organisms are classified based upon the number of energy transfers through a food web

Page 6: Ecology review 2

Primary Production

• Photoautotrophic production of organic matter represents the first energy transfer in ecosystems

Page 7: Ecology review 2

2nd Trophic Level

• Consumption of a plant by a herbivore is the second energy transfer,

• Herbivores occupy the second trophic level,

• also known as secondary production.

Page 8: Ecology review 2

Consumers

• Consumer organisms that are one, two, or three transfers from autotrophs are classified as primary, secondary, and tertiary consumers.

Page 9: Ecology review 2

Energy Loss

• Moving through a food web, energy is lost during each transfer as heat, as described by the second law of thermodynamics.

Page 10: Ecology review 2

Energy Loss

• Consequently, the total number of energy transfers rarely exceeds four or five;

• with energy loss during each transfer, little energy is available to support organisms at the highest levels of a food web.

Page 11: Ecology review 2

Cycles

• Carbon Cycle

• Nitrogen Cycle

• Water Cycle

Page 12: Ecology review 2

Ecological Classifications

• Organism – individual plant or animal

• Population – groups of similar organisms in a defined area

• Community – All of the populations of organisms in a defined area

• Ecosystem – All of the communities of living organisms plus the abiotic – rocks, water, soil,

Page 13: Ecology review 2
Page 14: Ecology review 2

Balance

• Ecosystems are balanced when living organisms equal the available resources

• Unbalanced ecosystems occur when a organism or organisms over consume the available resources

• If an ecosystem becomes unbalanced, an adaptation must occur to rebalance it

Page 15: Ecology review 2

Succession

• Primary succession – occurs where living organisms have not lived before – rare in nature – ie lava flow

• Secondary succession – an ecosystem is damaged or partly destroyed – remnants of the community still exist

Page 16: Ecology review 2

Habitat & Niche

• A habitat is the environment where plants and animals live. A place

• Niche is the function that an organism has in its ecosystem. A role

Page 17: Ecology review 2

Competitive Advantage

• When one organism is better able to survive in a environment than another

• Competitive exclusion: when two or more species cannot co-exist in an area with limited resource

Page 18: Ecology review 2

Range of tolerance

• The ability of an organism to survive change in its environment

• The greater the range of tolerance for an organism, the greater its ability to survive

• Largely determined by its inherited ability to adapt to new environmental conditions