INTRODUCTION TO ECOLOGY
I. ECOLOGY: The Study of the interactions between organisms and the living and non- living components of their environment:
A.TODAY’S ECOLOGY ISSUES
- Named as a field of study in 1866
- Vast changes have occurred: 10-20, 000 years ago, our ancestors gathered and hunted….Survival depended on practical knowledge of the Environment
- Exploding Human Population **
- Population in 1930 2 Billion
- Population in 2000 6 Billion
- Increase in human population requires an increase in: Energy sources, food, and space for the disposal of waste.
- Sixth Mass Extinction (HOLOCENE PERIOD)
- The Thinning Ozone Layer
- Climatic Changes
B.LEVELS OF ORGANIZATION
- The Biosphere--- The part of the Earth that supports Life
- Ecosystem: Biome--- A unit of the biosphere, that includes all organisms and the nonliving environment living in a particular place.
- Community---All of the organisms in a given ecosystem
- Population---All of the members of a particular species living in a community at one time
- Organism---One species
- A KEY THEME IN ECOLOGY
- No Organism is isolated
- Interconnectedness
- All organisms interact with others in their environment
- All organisms interact with non-living components as well
- Example: You need plants for their energy sources and O2….Conversely, plants need you for your energy sources and CO2
- Disturbances in Ecosystems:
- A Consequence of interconnectedness
- Can you think of an example?
II. ECOLOGY OF ORGANISMS
A.BIOTIC AND ABIOTIC FACTORS
- Definitions:
- Biotic Factors--- All living factors that affect an organism.
- Abiotic Factors---All non-living factors that affect an organism (sunlight, water, temperature, wind, rocks, soil…)
- The Changing Environment---Abiotic factors are not constant.
- Temperature varies from place to place.
- Rainfall can change drastically within days
- Clouds can affect sunlight
- Responses to a Changing Environment
- Tolerance
- Some bacteria can survive 1100C and some plants can survive –700C, BUT no single organism can survive both of these extremes
- What does your body do when you get hot?, get cold? How do you respond? .
- An organism cannot live in area where it is exposed to conditions outside of its tolerance limits
- Acclimation
- Adjusting tolerance to abiotic factors
- Training of Olympic athletes in Colorado…just to name one example. RBCs change due to less O2
- Not to be confused with adaptation: Acclimation is the change over a lifetime, adaptation is genetic change in a species over many generations …i.e Evolution
- Control of Internal Conditions
- Conformers: Organisms that do not regulate their internal conditions…they change as their external environment changes. E.g. Reptiles
- Regulators: Organisms that use energy to control some of their internal conditions. E.g. Your body temperature stays within a few degrees of 370C or 98.60F
- Escape from Unsuitable Conditions:
- Dormancy: Organisms enter a state of reduced activity. E.g. Amphibians and Reptiles
- Migration: Move to another more favorable habitat. E.g. Birds
- Resources:
- Energy and materials a species needs
- Food
- Energy
- Nesting sites
- Water and sunlight
B.THE NICHE
- The way of life or role the species plays in the environment
- Fundamental Niche:
- Range of conditions a species can potentially tolerate
- Range of resources it can potentially use
- Realized Niche:
- Range of resources the species actually uses
- Niche Differences
- Generalists---These are species that possess a broad niche. E.g The Opossum, Feeds on anything form fruits and nuts to eggs and dead animals. And is found almost anywhere in the U.S.
- Specialists---Species with a narrow niche. E.g. The Koala, feeds only on eucalyptus found in Australia. The Yucca Moth, only uses the Yucca plant to spin its cocoon.
III.ECOLOGY OF POPULATIONS
** A population is a group of organisms that belong to the same species and live in a particular place at the same time.
A.PROPERTIES OF POPULATIONS
- Size---How big or small the population is at a given time.
- Scientists count members of populations many different ways.
Count numbers of actual individuals
Estimate size by taking samples from different areas
- Density:
- Measures how crowded a population is.
- Expressed in number of individuals per unit area of volume. E.g. The US is 30 people per square km.
Clumped
Even
Random
B.POPULATION DYNAMICS
- Birth Rate
- Death/Mortality Rate
- Life Expectancy
- Age Structure
- Patterns of Mortality
IV.ECOLOGY OF COMMUNITIES
** A Community is a group of populations interacting. All species interacting is called Symbioses.
APREDATION: A community interaction where one species (Predator) hunts, captures, kills, and consumes another (Prey).
- Natural Selection---The old saying “Survival of the fittest.
- Mimicry: One species resembles another distasteful, or dangerous one to avoid being eaten, or killed. E.g. King Snake Versus Coral Snake. (Red on Black is a friend of Jack, Red on Yellow will harm a fellow)
- Can you think of a few predator/prey relationships?
BPARASITISM: A relationship between organisms in which one organism depends on and harms another organism.
- Parasite: The organism that feeds on the other
- Host: The organism being eaten or harmed
- Endoparasite: Internal parasite that lives in the host’s body. E.g. Bacteria, tapeworms, heartworm…etc…
- Ectoparasite: External parasite that lives outside the host’s body. E.g. Flea, ticks, lice, leeches, lamprey, mosquito.
- Has its own branch of Biology: Parasitology
CCOMPETITION: Fundamental Niche over-lap…The use of the same limited resource by two or more organisms.
DMUTUALISM: Both species in the relationship benefit.
- Bulls Horn Acacia and ants….The flower gets pollinated and the ant has a source of food
- Bees and most flowers
ESUCCESSION: The gradual, sequential re-growth of species in an area. In 1988 a good portion of Yellowstone National Park was burned by forest fire. Now it is recovering quite nicely. Vacant lots, parking lots, sidewalks…..What do you see?
- Primary Succession: The development of a community in an area that has not supported life previously.
- Colonization of new organisms and formation of soil from exposed Rocks.
- First organisms are called Lichens ( A fungus that helps make soil by breaking down rock)
- Grasses and shrubs begin to grow.
- Soil gets richer and deeper, gives rise to larger plants
- Larger plants make soil deeper still and shallow rot trees begin to grow (pine)
- Broad leaf trees and deeper evergreens (Fir, spruce, Birch)
- Hardwoods (Oak, Ash, Maple, Beech, Chestnut)
- Climax Community
- Secondary Succession: Sequential replacement of a species that follows a disruption in a community. E.g. Forest fire. Can you think of another?
V.ECOSYSTEMS AND THE BIOSPHERE
AENERGY TRANSFER:
- Producers: Autotrophs, organisms that can make their own food by way of Chemosynthesis. Make carbohydrates using inorganic compounds….What is a specialized form of chemosynthesis that uses light to make carbohydrates?
- Consumers: Heterotrophs, they obtain energy by consuming organic molecules made by other organisms.
- Herbivores: Consume Producers
- Carnivores: Consume other Consumers
- Omnivores: Consume all
- Decomposers: Break down the Consumers and Producers into the soil and start the energy flow all over again
- Can you think of an example from each category?
- Relate the three levels of energy transfer to a food web?