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Autotroph Heterotroph

AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

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Page 1: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Autotroph Heterotroph

Page 2: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Food Web

Page 3: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Energy Flow

Page 4: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Energy Pyramids:

Page 5: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Habitats, Niches, and Community

Interactions4.2: Pg. 90-93

Page 6: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Biotic and Abiotic Factors

• Ecosystems are influenced by a combination of biological and physical factors

• Biotic Factors: the biological influences on organisms

• Abiotic Factors: Physical, or nonliving, factors– i.e. temp, precipitation, humidity, wind,

nutrient availability, soil, sunlight, etc.

Page 7: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:
Page 8: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Habitats and Niches

• Habitat: the area where an organism lives. Includes both the biotic & abiotic factors

• Niche: the full range of physical & biological conditions in which an organism lives & the way in which the organism uses those conditions

Page 9: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Niche includes…

• Place in the food web• Range of temp. organism needs to

survive• Type of food organism eats• How it obtains food• Who uses the organism for food• Physical conditions required to survive• When & how organism reproduces

Page 10: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Competitive Exclusion Principle

• No two species can share a niche in the same habitat!!...example is the Warblers…

Page 11: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Warbler Niches Each of these warbler species has a different niche in its spruce tree habitat. By feeding

in different areas of the tree, the birds avoid competing with one another for food.  

Page 12: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Community Interactions

• Community interactions, such as competition, predation, and various forms of symbiosis can powerfully affect an ecosystem.

Page 13: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Competition

• Competition: occurs when organisms of the same or different species attempt to use a resource at the same place and time.

Trees in competition for light

Page 14: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Predation• Predation: one organism captures

and feeds on another

Lynx and Hare

Page 15: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Symbiosis• Symbiosis: Any relationship in which

two species live closely together– Mutualism: both species benefit

Hummingbird and Flower

Clownfish and sea anemone

Page 16: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

– Commensalism: one species benefits, other neither harmed nor helped

Barnacles on a whale

Page 17: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

– Parasitism: one organism lives in or in another & harms it

A flea or tick feeds on the blood of its host and may also carry disease-causing microorganisms Mistletoe in a

tree

Page 18: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Characteristics of Populations

5.1 pg. 119-122

Page 19: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Characteristics of Populations are:

1. Geographic distribution (area inhabited by population)

2. Density

3. Growth rate

4. Age structure

Page 20: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Factors that affect population size are:

1. Number of births

2. Number of deaths

3. Number of individuals that enter or leave population

• Immigration – move in • Emigration – move out

Page 21: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

• If a population has abundant space and food and is protected from predators & disease, then organisms will multiply and the population will increase.

Page 22: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

Exponential growth occurs when the individuals of a population reproduce at a constant rate.

J-shaped Curve – Exponential growth

Occurs under ideal conditions with unlimited resources

(Has not reached its carrying capacity)

Page 23: AutotrophHeterotroph. Food Web Energy Flow Energy Pyramids:

S-shaped curve – Logistic Growth

Carrying capacity – largest number of individuals that a given environment can support

Populations are limited by space, food, etc.