Vocabulary

-  Ecology - Study of how living things interact with each other and with their environment.

Biotic factors – all the living things that affect an ecosystem

Abiotic factors – non-living things that affect an ecosystem

-  Population – group of same species that breed and live in the same area

-  Community – all the different living populations in the same area

-  Ecosystem – all the living (biotic) and non-living (abiotic) factors in an area

-  Biome – environment defined by it’s climate and the biological communities

-  Biosphere – the Earth

-  Producers – organisms that make their own energy (autotrophic)

-  Consumers – organisms that consume other living things for energy (heterotrophic)

-  Herbivore – consumer that eats plants

-  Carnivore – consumer that eats animals

-  Omnivore – comsumer that eats both plants and animals

-  Decomposer – consumer that breaks down living/dead organic matter

-  Detritivore – consumer that eats decaying organic matter and feces

Trophic Level – energy level or step in a food chain/web

-  Succession – series of predictable changes in a community over time.

-  Symbiosis – two organisms living together in a close relationship

-  Mutualism – symbiosis in which both organisms benefit

-  Commensalism – symbiosis in which one organism benefits and the other gets no benefit and is not harmed either

-  Parasitism – symbiosis in which one organism benefits (parasite) and one is harmed (host). The parasite usually lives in or on the host

-  Predation – when one organism kills and eats another

-  Competition – occurs two individuals try to use the same resource at the same time and place

Interspecific competition – competition between 2 members of different species

Intraspecific competition – competition between 2 members of the same species

-  Niche – an organisms way of life and role in an ecosystem. Includes all the biotic and abiotic factors that a specific organism needs to live.

-  Immigration – occurs when individuals move IN to a population

-  Emigration – occurs when individuals leave/move OUT of a population

Exponential growth – “J-curve” – very fast, non linear growth

Logistic growth – “S-curve” – very fast growth followed by stable population

Carrying capacity - highest number of individuals that an ecosystem can support

Limiting factor – anything causing a population to stop growing/decrease in size

Density dependent – limiting factor that depends on population size and density

Density independent – limiting factor that affects populations equally regardless of size or density

MAJOR CONCEPTS

The ecological levels of organization from smallest to largest are:

Organism < Population < Community < Ecosystem < Biome < Biosphere

Biomes - Study your webquest.

Biomes are environmental and geographic regions defined by their climate and biological communities. We studied 6 biomes in class: Tundra, Boreal Forest/Taiga, Temperate Deciduous Forest, Tropical rain forest, Grassland, and Desert


Energy Flow

Energy in an ecosystem flows in only one direction from the lowest trophic level to the highest trophic level.

- Only 10% of the energy in one trophic level is transferred to the next highest level

Producers make up the lowest trophic level in a food chain or web. Consumers make up the trophic levels above that. Each step in the food chain is a different trophic level.

- Every consumer depends on lower trophic levels for energy.

- Producers get their energy from the sun

*Be able to read/create food chains and food webs.

Population Density and Sampling:

3 types of sampling methods: quadrats, indirect counting, and mark/recapture.

Be able to calculate population density and population samples by using graphs or formulas.

Population Growth

Four (4) factors affect population growth: Birth rate, Death rate, Immigration, and Emigration

There are two (2) types population growth:

1.  Exponential growth = J-curve, Very fast growth, occurs when resources are very abundant

2.  Logistic growth = S-curve, Fast growth followed by plateau.
This is what population growth tends to look like in nature

Carrying Capacity and Limiting Factors

Carrying Capacity describes the maximum number of individuals that an ecosystem can support.

Carrying capacity is limited (made smaller) by limiting factors

Limiting factors are things that cause a population to stop growing or get smaller. There are two(2) types of limiting factors:

1.  Density-dependent – affected by population size and density
Greater effect on large/dense populations
Usually are biotic factors (e.g. competition, predation, disease)

2.  Density-independent – not affected by population size/density
Affect all size/density populations equally
Usually are abiotic factors (e.g. natural disaster, weather)

Community Interactions

Symbiotic relationships occur when two species live together in a close relationship.
There are three types (defined above). You should also know the following chart:

Organism A / Organism B
Mutualism / + / +
Commensalism / + / 0
Parasitism / + / –
Draw a ‘+’ if the organism benefits. Draw a ‘–’ if the organism is harmed
Draw a ‘0’ if the organism does not benefit AND is not harmed

Competition occurs when two organisms try to use the same resource at the same time and place. There are two types:

1.  Interspecific competition – competition between 2 members of different species

2.  Intraspecific competition – competition between 2 members of the same species

Predation occurs when one organism kills and eats another.

Predators kill and eat other organisms

Prey get eaten.

Predator-Prey populations
Look at the graph for hare and lynx populations in your notes (boom/bust)

1.  Predators cause the population of prey to decrease.

2.  When population of prey falls, predator population decreases after.

3.  Decrease in predators causes the population of prey to increase.

4.  When population of prey rises, predator population increases after.

Ecological Niche

A niche is an organism’s role/job and way of life in an ecosystem.

It includes everything the organism does or needs to live.

Examples: what it eats, predators, when/how it reproduces, what biome it lives in, what habitat it lives in, what climate it lives in

The competitive exclusion principle states that no two species can occupy the same niche.


Succession

There are two types of ecological succession that we discussed.

1.  Primary succession – occurs in areas where there is no soil. Pioneer species are the first to arrive and begin to break down rock into soil.
Examples: after a glacier melts or a volcano erupts

2.  Secondary succession – occurs in an area where there has been a disturbance or change in the ecosystem and the soil is still intact. Secondary succession is more common and leads to a stable climax community.
Examples: forest fires, natural disasters, clearing land