living things and the environment practical science ii chapter 11
TRANSCRIPT
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Living Things and the Environment
Practical Science IIChapter 11
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What is Ecology?
• Environment – everything that surrounds an organism and acts upon it
• Interact – process of organisms acting upon one another or on the nonliving parts of their environment
• Ecology – the study of the relationships and interactions between organisms and all the living/nonliving parts of their environment
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Why is ecology important?
• Earth’s resources limited• Medicines, e.g., tropical rainforests• Understanding nutrient cycling—slash & burn, agriculture• Rise in greenhouse gases—climate change (CO2, CFCs,
CH4)• Tropical Rainforests and greenhouse gases
To sum: basic ecology for maintaining ecosystem functioning
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Biosphere
• Zone of the earth which supports life, including parts of the:
• Lithosphere (solid earth)
• Hydrosphere (water bodies)
• Atmosphere (envelope of air)
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What is a Population?
• All of the same kind of organism (species) living in the same place
• All the deer in the Olympic National Park; all the tadpoles in Kilpisjarvi; all the hawks on the Rathdrum Prairie
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What is a Community?
• All the different populations living in the same place
• All the trees in Post Falls; a mangrove forest community; the grasses on the Rathdrum Prairie
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What is an Ecosystem?• A group of
communities interacting with each other and the non-living parts
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Habitat
• Where an organism lives
• A physical place or type of place
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Niche
• An organism’s role in the environment
• Producer, consumer (herbivore/carnivore), saprovore (scavenger/ decomposer)
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Learn to share!
• Organisms can share the same habitat
• How?
• Timing their activities– Birds eat daytime insects in forest– Bats eat nighttime insects in same forest
• By occupying different niches– They don’t compete with each other– They complete each other
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Are there limits?
• Limiting factors – conditions in an environment that place controls on how large a population can be
• Rainfall, sunlight, and soil limit numbers and kinds of plants in an area
• Temperature, water, food supply (# & kind of plants?), and shelter (plants again?) limit the animal populations
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Obviously there are limits!
• The largest population that can be supported by an area is its carrying capacity
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In real life…….
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What is a Biome?• A large region with a characteristic
climate and plant/animal communities
Marine/Aquatic Tundra/Polar
Plain/prairie/savannaDeciduous/chapparalconiferous
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What is a climatogram?• Summarizes temperature and precipitation
averages for a biome/location
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Abiotic vs Biotic
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Air
Rock
Trees
Water
Grass Dirt
Snow
Prairie Dog
Log cabin
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Hierarchy of Life
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Succession• A slow change in organism populations
• Change in dominant organisms
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Pond Succession
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Pond Succession
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What are natural resources?
• Materials from nature which man uses to survive and better his condition
• Renewable – can be reused or replaced
• Nonrenewable – finite amount and cannot be replaced
• Conservation – wise use of resources to extend their availability
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CLASSIFICATION OF NATURAL RESOURCES
Complexresources
Simple biotic resources
Recyclable Non-recyclable
RENEWABLE NON-RENEWABLE
NATURAL RESOURCES
UNCONDITIONALLY RENEWABLE
CONDITIONALLY RENEWABLE
Abiotic flow resources
Abiotic cycling resources
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Renewable
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Non-renewable
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The End