Introduction to ENERGY FLOW ECOSYSTEMS and FOOD CHAINS.

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Introduction to ENERGY FLOW ECOSYSTEMS and FOOD CHAINS

Transcript of Introduction to ENERGY FLOW ECOSYSTEMS and FOOD CHAINS.

Page 1: Introduction to ENERGY FLOW ECOSYSTEMS and FOOD CHAINS.

Introduction to ENERGY FLOW

ECOSYSTEMS and

FOOD CHAINS

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Habitat – place where an organism lives.

Population – group of organisms from the same species.

Community – group of organisms from several species.

Ecosystem – a community and all of the physical aspects of a habitat.

What is an ecosystem?

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Organism

Community

Population

Ecosystem

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Ecology

The scientific study of interactions between organisms and their environments.

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Biotic Factors

All living organisms that inhabit an environment.

Ex: animals, plants, protists…

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Abiotic Factors

All nonliving factors in the environment.

Ex: air currents, temperature, moisture, light, and soil

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sun eclipse with palm

the ultimate energy source is the SUN!!!

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Energy FlowHow does the sun’s energy

enter the biological world?

PHOTOSYNTHESIS

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Energy FlowThe sun’s energy flows into

organisms that can change the sunlight into food then into organisms that eat them.

This flow is:

sunlight producer consumer 1 consumer 2

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PRODUCERS

Producers make their own food. They can also be called autotrophs.

Ex. Plants, algae and some bacteria

sunlight producer consumer 1 consumer 2

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CONSUMERS

Consumers eat something else. They also are called

heterotrophs. Examples: deer, rabbits, cows,

mice, lions, humans, hawks, snakes

sunlight producer consumer 1 consumer 2

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HERBIVORES

Herbivores eat plants.

They can be called primary consumers

Ex. Cows, caterpillars, bunnies

sunlight producer consumer 1Or primary consumer

consumer 2Or secondary consumer

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CARNIVORES

Carnivores eat meat and can be called secondary consumers.

Ex. tigers, wolves, snakes, hawks

sunlight producer consumer 1 consumer 2

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TOP CARNIVORES A “top” carnivore is a tertiary

consumer. They are at the top of the food chain.

Ex. whale eating a sea lion or hawk eating a snake.

sunlight producer consumer 1 consumer 2

consumer 3

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OMNIVORES Omnivores eat meat and

plants. They are considered

secondary consumers. Ex. bears and humans

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Where do allthe dead things go?

They are eaten. YUMMMM!

They decay. SMELLY!

What’s the difference?Is it just a matter of taste?

decomposerdetri

tivore

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Detritivore vs Decomposers

DETRIVORES: feed on the remains of dead

plants and animals and other dead matter (detritus)

Crabs, mites, earthworms, snails

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Detritivore vs Decomposers

DECOMPOSERS:break down dead organic matter

Bacteria & fungi

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“RECYCLERS”They break down and release nutrients from dead matter back into the environment

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Detritivores and Decomposers

Why would they be called the environmental “recyclers”?

sunlight producer consumer 1 consumer 2

consumer 3

decomposer

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Food Chains & Food Webs Organisms in ecosystems transfer

energy from organism to organism in a graphic organizer known as trophic levels.

producer consumer 1 consumer 2 consumer 3

1 2 3 4

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The Path of Energy

ARROWS on a food chain describe this path of energy.

Notice that the arrows point from the organism being eaten to the organism that is eating it.

producer consumer 1 consumer 2 consumer 3

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Food Chains & Food Webs Energy is “lost” at each trophic

level as a result of the activities of the organisms such as metabolism.

Only 10% of the energy is actually passed on to the next level.

producer consumer 1 consumer 2 consumer 3

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Food Chains & Food Webs What vital “recycler” is not shown

in this food chain?

producer consumer 1 consumer 2 consumer 3

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Food Chains & Food Webs If all of the snakes in this chain died,

what would happen to the hawk? To the decomposers?

producer consumer 1 consumer 2 consumer 3

decomposer