ECOLOGY TEST STUDY GUIDE

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Living Things and the Environment

MAIN IDEAS

 An organism's habitat provides food, water, shelter, and space necessary for the organism to live, grow, and reproduce.

 An ecosystem includes Biotic and Abiotic factors.

Abiotic factors include water, sunlight, oxygen, temperature and soil

Biotic factors include all living things in an ecosystem.

 Given adequate biotic and abiotic resources, an ecosystem will maintain equilibrium and continue indefinitely.

 A population consists of only one species

 More biodiversity means more stability for an ecosystem.

 Different populations living together make up a community

Ecosystem -All living and non living things interacting in an area

Habitat -The place where an organism lives and provides the things the organism needs

Biotic factor -A living part of an organism

Abiotic factor -A non- living part of an organism

Population -All the members of one species in a particular area

Community -All the different populations together in an area

Ecology -The study of how living things interact with each other and their environments

Biodiversity- The number of different species in an ecosystem. ( bio= life; diversity =different forms of)

Interactions Among Living Things

MAIN IDEAS

 Over time, species of organisms develop specialized adaptations and behaviors that help them to succeed in their environments.

 The three major types of interactions between organisms are competition, predation, and

symbiosis

 Symbiosis is a close relationship between two species. The three types of symbiotic relationships are mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism

Niche An organism’s particular role in an ecosystem or how it makes a living

Competition -The struggle between organisms for the limited resources in a habitat

Predation -An interaction in which one organism hunts another animal for food.

Predator -A carnivore that hunts and kills other animals for food and has adaptations that help the animal catch the prey

Prey -An animal which a predator feeds upon

Symbiosis -A close relationship between two organisms in which al least one of the organisms benefits.

Mutualism -A type of symbiosis in which both partners benefit from living together.

Commensalism - A relationship between two species in which one species benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed.

Parasitism -A relationship in which one organism lives in or on a host and harms it.

Parasite -An organism that lives in or on a host, causing harm to the host.

Host -An organism that provides a source of energy or a suitable environment for another organism to live

Examples of the three types of symbiotic relationships:

1. Mutualism - There are birds that eat the fruits of plants and later deposit the seeds with a little bird manure as fertilizer. The birds get nutrients and the plants get their seeds distributed in the environment. Earthworms pull organic matter from the surface of the soil to eat and deposit earthworm wastes in the soil that are absorbed by the roots of plants.

2. Parasitism - A mosquito can take blood from another animal. The mosquito may carry a deadly virus and takes blood from the animal and the animal only gets hurt.

3. Commensalism - A bird builds a nest in a tree. The bird gets a nest, and the tree doesn’t mind.

Energy Flow in Ecosystems

MAIN IDEAS

 The energy role of an organism is that of a producer, a consumer, or a decomposer.

 Producers are the source of all life in an ecosystem.

 The four types of CONSUMERS are: o herbivores- eat plants only o carnivores- eat animals only o omnivores- eat both plants and animals o scavengers- eat things found already dead

DECOMPOSERS return nutrients back into the environment, where they can be used again.

 A FOOD WEB shows the path energy and nutrients travel through an ecosystem.

 At each level UP in an energy pyramid, there is less energy than the level lower.

Producer -An organism that can make it’s own food.

Consumer -An organism that obtains energy by feeding off another organism

Herbivore -an animal that only eats plants

Carnivore -An animal that only eats another animal

Omnivore -An organism that eats plants and other animals

Scavenger an animal that eats the remains of another animal

Decomposer -an organism that breaks down nutrients and returns them to the soil and water

Food chain -A series of events in which one organism eats another

Food web -The pattern of overlapping food chains in an ecosystem

Energy pyramid -A diagram that shows the amount of energy that moves from one feeding level to another in a food web

Cycles of Matter

MAIN IDEAS

Nutrients are necessary building blocks of living things.

 The water cycle includes these three processes

 1. Evaporation 2. Transpiration 3. (Condensation) Precipitation

 The nitrogen cycle includes decomposers that break down wastes and put nutrients into the soil

 The nitrogen cycle includes bacteria that live on the roots of some plants and “fix” the nitrogen into compounds

 When decomposers break down the matter contained in plants and animals.

Nutrients can be recycled through the ecosystem and used by plants to produce food or as building material for all organisms.

decomposition / decay- the breakdown of living tissue, done by decomposers (fungi, bacteria, etc.)

nutrient- chemical building blocks of organisms; nutrients are recycled through cycles of matter

evaporation – water changing from liquid to gas

transpiration- evaporation of water through the leaves of plants

water cycle – the cycling of water through the environment; evaporation, condensation, and precipitation

nitrogen fixation- the way bacteria in the soil convert nitrogen gas to a usable form for plants and animals

** Study your NOTES. This is not all the information you need to know **

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