Flow of Energy with the Cycling of Nutrients in an Ecosystem

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Section 1: Organisms and Their Relationships
Section 2: Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
Section 3: Cycling of Matter
1.
2. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Section 1: Organisms and Their Relationships
Section 2: Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
Section 3: Cycling of Matter
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3. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
Ecology
 Scientific discipline in which the relationships
among living organisms and the interaction
the organisms have with their environments
are studied
 Ecologists observe, experiment, and model
using a variety of tools and methods.
4. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
The Biosphere
 A thin layer around Earth
 Extends several kilometers above the
Earth’s surface
 Extends several kilometers below the
ocean’s surface
5. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
The Biosphere
6. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
Biotic Factors
 Living factors in an organism’s environment
Abiotic Factors
 Nonliving factors in an organism’s environment
 Organisms adapt to survive in the abiotic
factors present in their natural environment.
7. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
Levels of Organization
 Levels increase in complexity as the numbers
and interactions between organisms increase.
 organism
 population
 biological community
 ecosystem
 biome
 biosphere
8. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
 The lowest level of organization is the
individual organism itself.
 Organisms of a single species that share the
same geographic location at the same time
make up a population.
 A biological community is a group of interacting
populations that occupy the same geographic
area at the same time.
9. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
 An ecosystem is a biological community and
all of the abiotic factors that affect it.
 A biome is a large group of ecosystems that
share the same climate and have similar types
of communities.
Visualizing Levels
of Organization
10. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
Ecosystem Interactions
 A habitat is an area where an organism lives.
 A niche is the role or position that an organism
has in its environment.
11. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
Community Interactions
 Competition
 Occurs when more than one organism
uses a resource at the same time
 Predation
 Many species get their food by eating other
organisms.
12. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Organisms and Their Relationships
Symbiotic Relationships
 The close relationship that exists when two
or more species live together
 Mutualism
 Commensalism
 Parasitism
13. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
Energy in an Ecosystem
 Autotrophs
 Organism that collects energy from sunlight or
inorganic substances to produce food
 Heterotrophs
 Organism that
gets it energy
requirements by
A lynx is a heterotroph.
consuming other organisms
14. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
 Detritivores eat fragments of dead matter in an
ecosystem, and
return nutrients
to the soil, air,
and water where
the nutrients can
be reused by
organisms.
Fungus
15. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
Models of Energy Flow
 Food chains and food webs model the energy
flow through an ecosystem.
 Each step in a food chain or food web is
called a trophic level.
Model
Ecosystems
16. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
Food Chains
 A food chain is a
simple model that
shows how energy
flows through an
ecosystem.
17. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
Food Webs
 A food web is a model
representing the many
interconnected food
chains and pathways
in which energy flows
through a group of
organisms.
18. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
19. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Flow of Energy in an Ecosystem
Ecological Pyramids
 A diagram that can show the relative amounts
of energy, biomass, or numbers of organisms
at each trophic level in an organism
20. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
Cycles in the Biosphere
 Energy is transformed into usable forms to
support the functions of an ecosystem.
 The cycling of nutrients in the biosphere
involves both matter in living organisms and
physical processes found in the environment
such as weathering.
21. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
The Water Cycle
22. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
23. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
 Approximately 90 percent of water vapor
evaporates from oceans, lakes, and rivers; 10
percent evaporates from the surface of plants
through a process called transpiration.
 Freshwater constitutes only about 3 percent of
all water on Earth.
 About 69 percent of all freshwater is found in ice
caps and glaciers.
24. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
The Carbon and Oxygen Cycles
25. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
26. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
 Carbon and oxygen often make up molecules
essential for life.
 Carbon and oxygen recycle relatively quickly
through living organisms.
27. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
Long-term Cycle
 Organic matter converted to peat, coal, oil, or
gas deposits (carbon)
 Calcium carbonate (carbon and oxygen)
Short-term Cycle
 Burning fossil fuels (carbon)
28. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
The Nitrogen Cycle
 The capture and
conversion of
nitrogen into a form
that is useable by
plants is called
nitrogen fixation.
29. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
30. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
 Nitrogen enters the food web when plants
absorb nitrogen compounds from soil.
 Consumers get nitrogen by eating plants or
animals that contain nitrogen.
31. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
 Nitrogen is returned to the soil in several ways:
 Animals urinate.
 Organisms die.
 Organisms convert ammonia into nitrogen
compounds.
 Denitrification
32. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
The Phosphorus Cycle
33. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
34. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Cycling of Matter
Short-term Cycle
 Phosphorus is cycled from the soil to
producers and then from the producers
to consumers.
Long-term Cycle
 Weathering or erosion of rocks that contain
phosphorus slowly adds phosphorus to the
cycle.
35. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Resource Menu
Chapter Diagnostic Questions
Formative Test Questions
Chapter Assessment Questions
Standardized Test Practice
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Glencoe Biology Transparencies
Image Bank
Vocabulary
Animation
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36. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Diagnostic
Questions
The act of one organism consuming another
organism for food is _______.
A. predation
B. parasitism
C. commensalism
D. mutualism
37. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Diagnostic
Questions
Identify how energy flows through an
ecosystem in a typical food chain.
A. from an autotroph to a heterotroph
B. from a heterotroph to an autotroph
C. from a carnivore to an herbivore
D. from an omnivore to an herbivore
38. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Diagnostic
Questions
What is a chemical substance that an organism
must obtain from its environment to survive?
A. biomass
B. energy
C. matter
D. nutrient
39. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Formative
Questions
Which are biotic factors in a forest
environment?
A. plants and microscopic organisms living
in the soil
B. pH and salt concentration of the soil
C. sunlight, soil type and soil nutrients
D. temperature, air currents and rainfall
40. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Formative
Questions
What is the name for a group of interacting
populations that occupy the same area at
the same time?
A. ecosystem
B. habitat
C. biological community
D. biotic collection
41. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.1 Formative
Questions
Which defines habitat?
A. all of the biotic factors in an ecosystem
B. an area where an organism lives
C. an area in which various species interact
D. the role or position that an organism has
42. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Formative
Questions
What type of organism is the foundation of
all ecosystems?
A. autotroph
B. herbivore
C. heterotroph
D. decomposer
43. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Formative
Questions
How do detritivores obtain their energy in an
ecosystem?
A. They feed on fragments of dead plants and
animals.
B. They feed on organisms by releasing
digestive enzymes.
C. They get energy from inorganic substances
to make food.
D. They use chlorophyll to capture energy from
the sun.
44. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.2 Formative
Questions
Which type of organism exists at all trophic
levels except the first trophic level?
A. carnivores
B. herbivores
C. autotrophs
D. heterotrophs
45. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Formative
Questions
What type of organism returns nutrients to an
ecosystem?
A. decomposer
B. primary producer
C. secondary producer
D. top level consumer
46. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Formative
Questions
What type of scientist studies water found
underground, in the atmosphere, and on the
surface of the earth?
A. biochemist
B. ecologist
C. geologist
D. hydrologist
47. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Formative
Questions
Which biogeochemical cycle involves
evaporation, transpiration, precipitation
and runoff?
A. carbon cycle
B. nitrogen cycle
C. phosphorus cycle
D. water cycle
48. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Formative
Questions
Which process in this
cycle converts carbon
dioxide and water into
carbohydrates?
49. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
2.3 Formative
Questions
A. photosynthesis
B. respiration
C. combustion of
fossil fuels
D. deposition of
dead material
50. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Assessment
Questions
Use the diagram to compare and contrast biotic
and abiotic factors. Give examples of each.
51. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Assessment
Questions
Answer: Biotic factors include the living
factors in an organism’s
environment, such as animals,
reptiles, plants, and microscopic
organisms. Abiotic factors are the
nonliving factors, such as water
temperature, rainfall, soil, and
available nutrients.
52. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Assessment
Questions
Use the image below to explain how decomposers
supply phosphorus to soil, groundwater, oceans,
lakes, ponds, and rivers.
53. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Assessment
Questions
Answer: All organisms contain phosphorus.
When organisms die or produce
waste products, decomposers
return the phosphorus to the soil
where it can be used again.
54. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Assessment
Questions
The diagram shows
how carbon cycles
through the
environment.
Describe how
photosynthesis is
involved in the
carbon cycle.
55. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Chapter Assessment
Questions
Answer: During photosynthesis, green
plants and algae convert carbon
dioxide and water to carbohydrates
and release oxygen into the air.
The plants use the carbohydrates
for energy. Carbon dioxide is
released back into the air through
cellular respiration.
56. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Standardized Test
Practice
In what type of activity would you most expect an
ecologist to be involved?
A. identifying and classifying various species of
insects in an ecosystem
B. locating fossils of distinct species of turtles in
a geographical area
C. observing the relationships that woodpeckers
have with other species in their environment
D. studying the internal organs of a seal to learn
how it survives in its environment
57. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Standardized Test
Practice
Certain types of tropical orchids use trees for
support in order to grow higher and obtain more
light. This neither harms nor benefits the tree.
What type of symbiotic relationship is this?
A. commensalism
B. competition
C. mutualism
D. parasitism
58. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Standardized Test
Practice
True or False
If an ecologist finds that
the long-tailed weasels
have disappeared from
the desert community,
she should conclude
that there will be a
decrease in the
population of coyotes.
59. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Standardized Test
Practice
Why is this mouse classified as an omnivore?
A. It consumes
grasshoppers.
B. It is consumed by
snakes.
C. It consumes both
grasshoppers and
snakes.
D. It is a third-level
consumer.
60. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Standardized Test
Practice
Which process returns nitrogen to the
food web?
A. decomposition
B. denitrification
C. nitrification
D. nitrogen fixation
61. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Glencoe Biology Transparencies
62. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Image Bank
63. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Vocabulary
Section 1
ecology habitat
biosphere niche
biotic factor predation
abiotic factor symbiosis
population mutualism
biological community commensalism
ecosystem parasitism
biome
64. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Vocabulary
Section 2
autotroph food chain
heterotroph food web
herbivore biomass
carnivore
omnivore
detritivore
trophic level
65. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Vocabulary
Section 3
matter
nutrient
biogeochemical cycle
nitrogen fixation
denitrification
66. Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology
Animation
Visualizing Levels of Organization
Desert Community Food Web
The Water Cycle
The Carbon Cycle
The Nitrogen Cycle
The Phosphorus Cycle