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Bio2129 lecture 3

Ecology seeks to

undertsnd the general processes and laws that govern the distrobution of species and their interactions within the physical enviroment

what must we understand when it comes to ecology

the naural history

what is natural history in the ecology

observation of organisms behaving and interacting with their surroundings, this includes other organisms and their enviroment.

what are some important ecological characteristics

Biomass, ecosystem functions/services, species diversity, population and species distrobution

what is biomass

the mass of living materials in a defined area. can be living or dead and include species, area and biological communities

biomass can be a ...

natural phenomenon or caused by human activites (ex. stream pollution)

what happens when biomass is negtaivley affected by human activities (stream polluted by sewage)

1)Biodiversity loss: excess algae block sunlight which other submerged plants need to survive. 2) Trophic level distrobution : algae dominates the food web and the system of trophic levels are no longer balanced. when alegae die, consumes O in ecosystem. 3) Water quality: algae produces dead zones, making water harmful to humans. 4) Ecosystem transformation: changes in biomass effect how nutrients and gases cycle.

shifting trends in biomass =

biogeochemical and climate changes

what are ecosystem functions

the biophysical interactions in an ecosystem that keep it running. the fundemental biological, geochemical and physical processes.

What is primary productivity

The rate at which autotrophs ( like plants, algae, phytoplanton) produce new organic matter (biomass) through photosynthesis

How do primary producers function

autotroph absorb CO2 from the atm and convert it into organic matter (glucose and plant tissues) using sunlight

what are the roles of primary productivity

base of all food webs (everything depends on the engery captured by autotrophs), regulates carbon balance by absorbing CO2, determines how much energy is available for other trophic levels.

Why is primary productivity important

high primary productivity produces fertile soil and more food production. influences biodiversity

more productivy = more herbivores because..

ecosystems with a higher biomass can support a bigger population of grazers

how can Herbivores also affect productivity

grazing lowers biomass, but makes way for new growth by preventing build up of old or deat plant material.

Productivity varies by

location, some regions produce more plant biomass then others

why is water cycling an important ecosystem function

is controls how nutrients move through ecosystems, heavy water loss (erosion) can wash away nutrients and reduce soil fertility

what are some more examples of ecosystem functions and services

Decomposition ( breakdown of dead organisms and recyles them back into soil, which supports primary production) Biogeochemical cycles ( cleans water, nutrient rich soil, stable climate) Pollination ( plants reproduce via pollen and allow crops to grow)

why is species diversity good

effects how ecosystems function, which can also have an effect on functions that humans need to survive.

losing species diversity can...

reduce productivity, make ecosystems less stable because of drought, fire or climate change.

why is species abundance important

population estimates help to dtermine whether a species is considered threatened or endangered (legal protection)

what is hyperabundance

when species becomes very abundant, it can alter the biotic environment and ecosystem balance

what is species distrobution

where species occurs geographically. its range

why is species distrobution important

helps use describe and predict where species are found now and where they might be spread in the future. important for conservatio, species management and predicting impact of climate or land-use change

what is primary succession

the process where life colonizes an area that was previously sterile and had no living organisms or soil. overtime species like (lichen, mosses or certain plants) slowly build up soild and organic matter that makes it possible for other species to grow.

how does species abundance affect human economies

abundant and accessible populations can provide economic value, but sustainability is threatened by environmental change, overharvesting and ecological interactions

what are the factors that influence ecological characteristics

History, evolution, Physiological tolerance, Limiting resources and
Biotic interactions

how does does evolution affect species distrobution

shaped by evolutionary history and barriers to dispersal

what is wallace's line

a deep-water barrier in southeast asia separates regoins with marsupials from from placental mammals

Evolution usually opertates

over long timescales, which means slow changes in ecological timescals

what organisms is an eceptions to the time scales of evolution, why?

bacteria because they can reproduce so quickly that evolutionary changesare observable in a short time frame

what is an niche

the totale set of environmental conditions a species can tolerate ( temperature, light, subtrate, water)

what is the defintion of an ecological niche

an n-dimentional hypervolume that defines where a species can persist.

what is the key point of ecological niches

organisms usually need multipule enviromental conditions simultaneously not just one factor

what is physiological tolerance

the range of environmental conditions (like temperature, moisture, salinity, pH, or light) that an organism can survive, grow, and reproduce in.

rapid environmental changes can

pass the tolerance and cause mortality

physiological tolerance influences

a species geographical range

why is physiological tolerance important

it is critical for adaptation and distrobution of life on earth

what challenges are there in physiological tolerance

rapid change in environment can exceed tolerance and caus emortality

what are limiting factors

a factor essential for individual growth that can become depleted and limit further growth or survival

example of limiting factors

nutrients like (N,P,K), light, water, space

what is th elaw of minumum

growth is controlled by the scarcest resource, not the total resources available

what are biotic interactions

interactions among living organisms that influence nuches and survival

what are the types of biotic interactions

competition, mutualism, parasitism, predation

distrobution is not just tolerance but shaped by

biotic interactions

fundamental niche

all conditions a species could occupy without competition

what is a realized niche

actual competition a species occupies after competition

what is Liebig’s Law of the Minimum

Whichever essential factor is in the smallest amount relative to an organism’s needs will limit its growth

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