Ecology Unit

Ecology = the study of the interactions between organisms and the living and nonliving components of their environment

Levels of Organization

1) Biosphere = thin layer of Earth and atmosphere

2) Ecosystem = all organisms and nonliving components in a particular place

3) Community = all interacting organisms living in an area

- includes only living things

4) Population = all the members of a species that live in one place at one time

5) Organism = one of that species

Components of the Environment

1) Biotic Factors = living components

- ex) all the living things

2) Abiotic Factors = non-living components

- ex) temp, pH, oxygen [ ], amount of sunlight

- importance varies from environment to environment

These two factors create biodiversity = the assortment, or variety, of living things in an ecosystem

Key Theme in Ecology

No organism is isolated

- all organisms are interconnected

- nonliving components effect survival also

- one change can affect everything

Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem

- Biomass = all the energy in an ecosystem

- All starts with the sun

- Producers (autotrophs) = make own food

- Consumers (heterotrophs) = must consume food to get energy

- primary consumers – eat producers (= herbivores)

- secondary consumers – eat consumers (= carnivores)

- omnivores = eat producers and consumers

- Decomposers = break down dead organisms (= detritivores)

Food Chain = sequence that links organisms and feeding relationships

Food web = shows complex relationships of organisms in an ecosystem

- all the food chains put together

Trophic Level = represents an organism’s position in the transfer of energy

Energy Pyramid = a diagram that compares energy used at each trophic level

- as you increase up the pyramid

1) energy available decreases

- only about 10% of the energy from previous level is obtained

2) biomass decreases

3) number of organisms decreases

Habitat vs. Niche

Habitat = the area where an organism lives

Niche = the role the organism plays in the environment

Species Interactions

1) Predation= one organism captures and kills another organism

2) Parasitism = one organism (the parasite) feeds on another (the host)

- usually the host is not killed Why?

3) Mutualism = cooperative relationship in which both species derive some benefit

- most important is probably pollination

4) Commensalism = one species benefits and the other is not affected

Factors of Population Changes

1) Birth

2) Death

3) Emigration = movement into a population

4) Immigration = movement out of a population

- Carrying Capacity = the maximum number of individuals of a particular species that the environment can normally and consistently support

- Population Crash = a dramatic decline in the size of a population

- numerous reasons for this

- Limiting Factor= the factor that has the greatest restrainton population growth

ex) competition (food, shelter, water), predation, disease, weather, natural disasters, human activities

Changing of an Ecosystem

Succession = the gradual change of an ecosystem

- this change usually causes the types of species that live there to change

Two Types

1) Primary Succession = formation of an ecosystem from an uninhabited area

- ex) bare rock, volcanic eruption

- pioneer species = first organism to live there

2) Secondary Succession = reestablishment of a damaged ecosystem

- ex) fires, floods, natural disasters