ecology and ecosystems advanced biology montgomery high school

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Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

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Page 1: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Ecology andEcosystems

Advanced Biology

Montgomery High School

Page 2: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

What is Ecology?

• Study of how organisms interact with each other and their physical environment.

• Fundamental unit is the “ecosystem”– Vary in size– Composed of biotic (living) and abiotic

(nonliving) material– May be terrestrial (land) or aquatic (water)

Page 3: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Terrestrial ecosystems are called biomes.

Page 4: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

African Savanna

Page 5: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Rain Forest

Page 6: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Wetlands

Page 7: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Tundra

Page 8: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Desert

Page 9: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Washington State:Rain Shadow

Page 10: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Aquatic Ecosystems

Page 11: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Oceanic Ecosystems

Page 12: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Trophic levels = energy flow

• Producers make food from sunlight.

• Consumers eat others to get their energy.– Herbivores eat plants– Carnivores eat “meat”– Omnivores eat everything (plant and animal)– Decomposers eat dead things (plant and

animal) and release the nutrients bound up in their bodies for reuse.

Page 13: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School
Page 14: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Food Web

Page 16: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Energy Flow

ThroughTrophic Levels

•Energy is lost at each step in an ecosystem

•From one trophic level to another, the transfer of energy is not 100% efficient. “10% rule”

•Energy is lost when it is converted to unusable heat at each step.

Page 17: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Ecological Pyramids:Energy

Page 18: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Ecology

• Materials cycle within ecosystems:

– Water cycle.

– Carbon cycle.

– Nitrogen cycle.

– Phosphorus cycle.

Page 19: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Water Cycle

Page 20: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School
Page 21: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Carbon Cycle

Page 22: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Nitrogen Cycle

Page 23: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Phosphorus Cycle

Page 24: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Interaction of organisms

• Symbiosis: two or more organisms live together in more or less permanent relationships.

– Commensalism.

– Mutualism.

– Parasitism.

Page 25: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Commensalism

• Clownfish and sea anemone, Coral Sea, Australia

Page 26: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Mutualism

• Ants and aphids.

Page 27: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Parasitism

• Ectoparasites:– Lice, animal parasite.– Dodder, plant parasite.

• Endoparasites:– Tapeworm, animal parasite.

Page 28: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Predator-Prey Interactions

• Plant defense systems:

– Toxic or repellent chemicals.

• Animal defense systems:

– Coloration.

– Chemical.

• Predator-prey cycles.

• Mimicry: Monarch vs. Viceroy butterflies.

Page 29: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Community Stability

• Ecological succession:

– Primary succession.

– Secondary succession.

Page 30: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Biodiversity = Species Richness

Page 31: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Threats to Biodiversity

•Loss of habitat (increased human population)

•Pollution

•Introduction of non-native species

Page 32: Ecology and Ecosystems Advanced Biology Montgomery High School

Biomagnification of DDT in a Food Chain