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Ernst Haeckel
founder of ecology
ecology
the study of the interactions of living organisms with one another and with their physical environment
habitat
the place where a particular population of a species lives
biosphere
the area on earth where all life exists, including land, water, and the atmosphere
8 km, 11 km
the biosphere extends from _____ above the earth's surface and _____ below the surface of the ocean
levels of organization
the way that ecologists break down the biosphere into smaller "levels" to make researching ecology easier
species
a group of organisms so similar to one another that they can breed to produce fertile offspring
populations
groups of individuals that belong to the same species that live in the same area at the same time
community
many different species living together in a habitat
population
most common level of organization that ecologists study
ecosystem
a community and the abiotic factors of it's habitat
abiotic factors
the physical aspects of a habitat
biotic factors
the living organisms in a habitat
biome
a group of ecosystems that have the same climate and similar dominant communities
biodiversity
the variety of organisms, their genetic differences, and the communities and ecosystems in which they occur
tropical rainforest
what ecosystem has the most biodiversity
more stability
more biodiversity =
animals, plants, protists, fungi, bacteria
five things that every ecosystem has
observing, experimenting, modeling
three tools ecologists use to study the living world
models
in ecology they help ecologists better understand complex ecological phenomena and make predictions on ecosystems
sunlight
the main energy source for life on earth
autotrophs
organisms that can capture energy from their environment to fuel the assembly of inorganic compounds into complex organic compounds
photosynthesis
when autotrophs use solar energy to convert carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and carbohydrates
chemosynthesis
when autotrophs use chemical energy in the bonds of inorganic compounds to form carbohydrates
heterotrophs
organisms that rely on other organisms for their energy
herbivores
heterotrophs that eat only plants
carnivores
heterotrophs that eat only animals
omnivores
heterotrophs that eat plants and animals
detritivores
heterotrophs that eat dead matter
decomposers
heterotrophs that break down organic matter
producers
organisms that first capture energy
consumers
organisms that consume other organisms for energy
food chain
a series of steps in which organisms in a specific ecosystem transfer energy through eating and being eaten
food web
links all the food chain in an ecosystem together
trophic level
a step in a food web or chain
ecological pyramid
a diagram that shows the relative amounts of energy or matter within each trophic level in an ecosystem
energy pyramid
represents the relative amount of energy that is passed through different trophic levels in an ecosystem
biomass pyramid
represents the amount of potential food available for each trophic level in an ecosystem
biomass
the total amount of living tissue within a given trophic level
grams of organic matter per unit area
biomass is usually expressed in terms of
pyramid of numbers
represents the number of individual organisms in a trophic level
10
only about _____% of energy in a trophic level is transferred to the next trophic level
10
each higher level on the biomass pyramid contains ___% of the biomass found in the trophic level below it
it is released into the atmosphere as heat energy
where does the energy in the trophic levels go when only a certain percent of it is transferred to the next trophic level
primary productivity
the rate at which organic molecules in an ecosystem are produced through photosynthesis
producers
first trophic level
primary consumers
Second trophic level
herbivores
primary consumers
secondary consumers
third trophic level
carnivores and omnivores
secondary consumers
tertiary consumers
fourth trophic level
tertiary consumers
carnivores that only consume other carnivores
detritivores/decomposers
5th trophic level (but can be all trophic levels)
recycled
just as energy flows in an ecosystem, matter is _______
water, carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus
four most important substances that are cycled in ecosystems
bigeochemical cycles
cycles that show the recycling of matter between the unalive environment and living organisms in an ecosystem
evaporation, condensation, precipitation
three main steps of the water cycle
evaporation
the process of water turning into water vapor in the water cycle
transpiration
the process of water vapor coming from leaves on trees into the atmosphere
respiration, combustion/burning of organic material, volcanic acitvity
three sources of CO2 in the atmosphere
Autotrophs
What organisms take in CO2 and convert it into organic material
bacteria
what is the most important part of the nitrogen cycle
nitrogen fixation
the process performed by bacteria of combing nitrogen with oxygen to form ammonia
denitrification
the conversion of nitrates into nitrogen gas by soil bacteria
DNA and RNA
phosphorus helps with the formation of what macromolecules
protein
Nitrogen helps with the assembly of what macromolecule
inorganic phosphate
what does phosphorus usually exist naturally as
the roots of plants
what absorbs phosphate ions from the ground
limiting nutrient
when an ecosystem is limited by a single nutrient that is scarce or cycles very slowly, this nutrient is called a
algal bloom
when an aquatic ecosystem recieves a large input of a limited nutrient and there is an immediate increase in the amount of algea and other producers