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bio 20

ecology

the branch of biology that deals with the study of the interactions among organisms with their environment

ecologists

scientists who study ecology

ecosystems

a physical environment and all the living things within it

habitat

each type of living thing in an ecosystem has a place where it lives

niche

the combination of the job an organism does and the place in which it lives

producers

trap energy in sunlight and produce their own food

consumers

cannot make their own food and must obtain it from producers or other consumers

decomposers

break down dead plant and animal remains and convert them into substances that can be reused

what would happen if all decomposers were destroyed

excess of waste, nutrients wouldnt be put back which would slow growth of plants and animals

trophic level

each step on a food chain/web

detritovore

organisms that eat dead material and animal waste

difference between decomposers and detritivores

While decomposers break down dead organic materials, detritivores eat dead organisms and waste

producer example

wild rice

primary consumer example

minnow (second trophic level)

secondary consumer example

northern pike (fish)

tertiary consumer example

eagle

decomposer example

bacteria fungi

detritivore example

earthworms, crab

food chains and web

A food chain is a linear sequence of organisms that shows their feeding relationships. A food web is all of the food chains in an ecosystem.

primary consumer

feed directly on plants

secondary consumers and tertiary consumers

secondary consumers feed on primary consumers, tertiary consumers feed on secondary consumers

scavengers

carnivores that feed on dead animals

acid precipitation

precipitation that contains more acid than normal

biodiversity

the large variety of organisms that live on this earth

carbon cycle

the flow of carbon through an ecosystem, from living organisms to the atmosphere and back again

cellular respiration

the chemical process by which glucose reacts with oxygen to produce energy, carbon dioxide, and water

closed system

an environment that substances cannot enter or leave

denitrification

the process by which nitrates are changed into nitrogen gas

nutrient cycle

the path of a nutrient through an ecosystem

nutrients

any substance that a living organism consumes and uses for growth, repair, and funciton

photosynthesis

the chemical process, occuring in green plants, by which carbon dioxide and water combine in the presence of sunlight to make glucose sugar and oxygen for the atmosphere

sustainabilitiy

the ablility of the present generation to meet its needs to sustain life without affecting the ability of future generations to meet their needs

sustainable development

using renewable resources in a way that does not harm the nevironment but increases the standard of living for the human population

where does cellular respiration occur

in both plants and animals, in the mitochondrion

what is the mitochondrion made up of

folds called cristae, which is where cellular respiration occurs

cellular respiration equation

C - H20 + O2 = CO2 + H2O + Chemical energy (ATP)
EXPANDED

C6H12O6 + 6O2 = 6H2O + 6CO2 + ATP

what does photosynthesis mean

putting together with light.

how does photosynthesis work

plants capture energy from the sun through pigments called chlorophyll. chlorophyll is found in organelless called chloroplasts

photosynthesis equation

light energy + CO2 + H2O = C - H2O + O2
EXPANDED

light energy + 6CO2 + 6H20 = C6H12O6 + 6O2

carbon cyle diagram

top- mitochnodrion
left- carbohydarate oxygen

right- energy carbon dioxide water

bottom- chloroplast

inside top- cellular respiration

inside bottom- photosynthesis

what can a carbohydrate be

sugar or starch

what do producers do in photosynthesis

take in carbon dioxide from atmosphere, carbon atoms are transferred to carbohydrates

what is glucose

Glucose is the type of sugar that our bodies use for fuel

what do aerobic organisms do in respiration

break down carbohydrates, release carbon dooxide into atmosphere and provide energy

what do decomposers do during cellular respiration

break down plant and animal materials, carbon dioxide is released into atmsophere

algal bloom

population explosion of algae in water bc of an increase in nutrients

eutrophication

a water system that has had to many nutrients added to it, which causes an increase in bacterial growth that uses up the oxygen, animals that require higher o2 levels die

nitrogen in ecosystems

biogeochemical cycles
bio- biotic components must reproduce

geo- abiotic components must be recycled

chemical- water cycle, carbon cycle, nitrogen cycle

abiotic

the nitrogen cycle serves two purposes

helps keep environment clean by breaking down dead organic matter, and replenishes the supply of nitogen available in ecosystem

why do we need nitrogen

it is a necessary component of all proteins
it is necessary for the formation of nucleic acids

how much nitrogen gas is in our atmosphere

80%

we cannot break the bond in N2

atmospheric nitrogen has a strong covalent bond yhay takes a lot of energy to break. the only rhings thay can break teh bond are lightning and volcanic activity. it is a triple bond

bacteria and nitrogen

The majority of the nitrogen that is used by living things is made available by bacteria. Nitrogen can only be used after this strong covalent bond is broken.

the nitrogen cycle steps

1. nitrogen fixation
2. decomposition

3. ammonification

4. nitrification

5. assimilation

6. denitrification

nitrogen fixation

unusable nitrogen-usable nitrogen
n2-ammonia nh3

soil bacteria can reduce atmospheric n2 to nh3. they can be free in soil, or live in roots of some legumes

legumes

peas beans alfalfa clover have bacteria

decomposition

freeing up usable nitrogen- bacteria and fungi break down dead organic matter like waste, fallen leaves, dead plants and animals

ammonification

fixing what comes from decomposition- bacteria and fungi turn the nitrogenous end products of decomposition into ammonia (NH3). This is the same result as in nitrogen fixation, but in this step, the nitrogen comes from an organic compound and there is no high energy bond to break.

nitrification

making different forms of usable
nitrogen- certain bacteria are able to oxidize ammonia (NH3) to nitrite (NO2-), and then to nitrate (NO3-). In this way, the bacteria gain the energy that they need, and give off nitrate (NO3-) as a waste product.

assimilation

• Plant roots absorb ammonia (NH3) and nitrate (NO3-), and use them to build amino acids, proteins, and nucleic acids.
• Animals eat plants and assimilate their nitrogen into more organic molecules

denitrification

usable nitrogen-unusable nitrogen
Some bacteria obtain their oxygen from nitrate (NO2), and release nitrogen gas (N2) and nitrous oxide (NO) into the atmosphere a waste products.

are all members of a food web equal in abadunce and effects?

no, not all members are equal in abundance bc there are less moving up trophic levels, and some have effects disproportionate to their abundance

is every member of a food web is the prey of another member of the food web?

The apex predators are not prey to any member of the food wel

what is a keystone species

keeps the ecosystem together, critical to the diversity and stabilty

green world hypothesis

The green world hypothesis shows that predators limit the
# of herbivores which is from up-down

if a food chain goes grass -> grasshoppers -> mice -> snakes, what would happen to the grass?

I would expect the number of grass to decrease because snakes will make the mouse population go down, making the grasshoppers increase, eating more grass

pyramids

illustrate different feeding relationships, show Visual comparisons amona organisms at different trophic levels generally indicate relative "numbers" of species needed to populate an area successfully

pyramid of numbers

(HOW MANY, DRAWN AS BLOCKS) show numbers at each trophic level, generally large number of producers, fewer + fewer consumers moving up, but, sometimes they can be inverted.

pyramid of biomass

(HOW MUCH, DRAWN AS BLOCKS) improvement: take into account the size or mass of the organisms

pyramid of energy flow

(NOT BLOCKS) shows the amount of nutrient energy at each trophic level, must be upright, on average, only 10% of one trophic level is available to the next level.

biological magnification

the process by which substances eaten by organisms get passed on through the food chain in greater concentrations toward the top of the food chain; also called "bioaccumulation"

biomass

the "weight" of living things in a community or population, divided by the area

carrying capacity

the maximum number of organisms that can survive in an area, living off the available resources

what is a typical population growth curve

s shaped

first region of s curve

region of slow population growth, Only a small number of organisms are sexually mature and able to reproduce.
• The organisms may be adjusting to a new environment.

second region of s curve

region of rapid population growth: • Many organisms have reached sexual maturity. They are able to reproduce.
• The organisms have adjusted to the conditions around them. They have found food, shelter, and water for survival.

third region of s curve

region of steady population growth: • The carrying capacity is reached. Population growth becomes constant.
• The number of deaths equals the number of births.

what are factors that could limit a populations growth?

lack of nutrients, build up of waste, disease, no sunlight

what does grow exponentially mean?

IT MEANS THAT THE POPULATION'S RATE OF INCREASE IS CONSTANT. it is an increasing slope

what does a straighter exponential graph mean?

growing more rapidly, a more slanted one means slower

what does exponential growth have

a fixed/constant doubling time

what happens when it hits carrying capacity

IT WILL SLOW AS IT APPROACHES THE CARRYING CAPACITY AND LEVEL OFF, REACHING A HAPPY ACCOMMODATION WITH THE ENVIRONMENT. THIS GIVES AN S CURVE.

what is a j curve

A PERIOD OF RAPID POPULATION INCREASE FOLLOWED BY COLLAPSE, after depleting the available resources, it leaves a remnant of the og population at a new cc

what usually happens when a population is small compared to cc

IT GROWS MORE OR LESS RAPIDLY, DEPENDING ON ITS INTRINSIC RATE (species specific) OF REPRODUCTION. WHAT HAPPENS NEXT DEPENDS ON MANY FACTORS.

what is a density dependent factor

increase in significance as a population grows. ex) overcrowding

what is a density independent factor

can limit a population regardless of size ex) natural disasters

interspecific competition

When two organisms from different species are after the same resources and food

intraspecific competition

When two organisms from the same species are after the same resources and food

population density

The number of organisms that live in a given area

what happened in the pesticide example?

the ddt concentration built up through the food chain, demonstrating biological magnification

substances that undergo biological magnification have two properties that make them dangerous:

not biodegradable- decomposers cant break them down into harmless substances
fat soluble- can accumulate in the body tissues of animals

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