Ecology Notes

What is Ecology?

The study of the interactions between organisms andtheir environment.

The environment consists of two parts:

Biotic: all of the organisms that live together and interact with one another.

Abiotic: all the physical factors of the environment that affect organisms in an area. Examples: water, soil, light, temperature.

Organization in the Environment

Organism: A living thing

Population: A group of individuals that live in the same area at the same time.

Community: All of the populations of different species that live and interact in an area

Ecosystem: A community of organisms and its abiotic environment.

Biosphere: The part of Earth where life exists.

Habitat: The environment in which an organism lives.

Niche: An organism’s way of life within an ecosystem.

How Organisms Obtain Energy

Producer: Use sunlight to obtain food.

Consumer: Eat producers or other organisms for energy.

Decomposer: Get energy by breaking down the remains ofdead organisms.Examples: bacteria, fungi "Nature's recyclers"

Types of Consumers

Herbivore: eats only plants

Carnivore: eats only animals (meat)

Omnivore: eats plants and animals

Scavenger: animals that feed on bodies of dead animals

Flow of Energy

Food chain: shows the flow of energy from one organism to the next.

Food web: shows energy pathways

Energy pyramid: represents the amount of energy and number of organisms

Types of Interactions

1.  With the environment.

Limiting factor: A resource that keeps populations from growing out of control. Examples: food, water, living space

Carrying capacity: The largest population an environment can support over a long period of time.

2. With organisms

Competition: When two or more individuals or populations tryto use the same resources such as food, water and space.

Prey: An organism that is eaten. (hunted)

Predator: The organism that eats the prey. (hunter)

Relationships

Symbiosis: A close relationship (interaction) between two or more species.

Types of Symbiosis:

Mutualism: A relationship where both organisms benefit. Example: humans and intestinal bacteria

Commensalism: A relationship where one organism benefits and the other is unaffected. Example: sharks and remoras

Parasitism: A relationship where one organism benefits and the other is harmed. Example: deer and a deer tick

Ecological Succession

Succession: A gradual development of a community over time.

Primary Succession: The beginning of life in an area where living things did not previously exist.

Secondary Succession: The re-growth of a community that has been destroyed due to a natural disaster (ex. fire, flood).