Made of Cells: All living things are composed of one or more cells.
Reproduction: Must be able to produce offspring (sexually or asexually).
Metabolism: Ability to convert energy for cellular functions.
Excretion: Removal of waste products.
Growth and Development: Capacity to grow and change over time.
Response to Stimuli: React to changes in the environment.
Environmental Adaptation: Make physiological or behavioral changes in response to surroundings.
Organisms respond to their environment via physiological changes or behavioral adaptations.
Examples:
Plants are phototropic (grow toward light sources).
Flowers display specific colors to attract pollinators like bees.
Animals release hormones for "fight or flight" in response to threats.
Change in physical appearance (e.g., color changes for camouflage or signaling).
Alter taste or chemical composition for protection (e.g., toxic plants).
Use signals for:
Territory marking.
Establishing dominance.
Locating food.
Reproductive success.
Behaviors that increase fitness (ability to survive and reproduce) are favored by natural selection.
Example: Birds flying in flocks or schools of fish reduce predation risk and increase reproductive success.
Organisms need energy intake and produce cellular output.
Energy intake must exceed energy use for growth; if not, it leads to energy loss, stunted growth, and eventual death.
Endotherms:
Use metabolic energy to maintain body temperature.
Require more energy than ectotherms.
Ectotherms:
Regulate body temperature behaviorally (e.g., basking in sunlight).
Smaller animals have higher metabolic rates than larger animals.
Autotrophs: Capture energy from physical or chemical sources.
Photoautotrophs: Use sunlight (e.g., plants, algae).
Chemoautotrophs: Use inorganic molecules (e.g., some microorganisms).
Heterotrophs: Obtain energy from organic molecules produced by other organisms (e.g., carbohydrates, lipids, proteins).
Matter cycles continuously in ecosystems (e.g., water, carbon, nitrogen).
Energy flows through ecosystems (sunlight to producers to consumers).
Primary Producers: Autotrophs like plants capture energy from the sun.
Primary Consumers: Herbivores that consume producers.
Secondary Consumers: Carnivores that eat herbivores.
Tertiary Consumers: Top-level predators.
Apex Predators: Predators at the top of the food chain.
Only 10% of energy passes to the next trophic level; the rest is lost as heat.
Reduced sunlight leads to energy loss for all trophic levels.
Fewer producers reduce energy for consumers, disrupting ecosystems.
Population: Group of individuals of the same species interacting in an area.
Growth Factors:
If birth rate > death rate: Population increases.
If birth rate < death rate: Population decreases.
If birth rate = death rate: Population remains steady.
Density-Dependent Factors:
Competition, predation, disease, waste accumulation.
Territoriality can also limit population size.
Density-Independent Factors:
Weather events, natural disasters, human activities.
Growth rate equation: dN/dt = B – D (birth rate minus death rate).
Exponential Growth:
No limiting factors.
Population grows by a constant proportion (J-shaped curve).
Equation: dN/dt = r_max N.
Logistic Growth:
Growth slows as population approaches carrying capacity (S-shaped curve).
Equation: dN/dt = rN(K – N)/K.
Maximum population size an environment can sustain.
Populations often stabilize near carrying capacity due to resource limitations.
Defined by species composition and diversity.
Diversity measured using Simpson's Diversity Index:
Equation: 1 – ∑ (n/N)^2, where "n" is individuals of a species, and "N" is total individuals.
Accounts for species richness and relative abundance.
Competition: Species compete for limited resources (e.g., food, space).
Competitive Exclusion: One species outcompetes the other.
Niche Partitioning: Coexistence by using different resources or areas (e.g., anoles in distinct habitats).
Exploitation: One species benefits at another's expense.
Predation: Predator-prey dynamics.
Herbivory: Animals feed on plants/algae.
Parasitism: Parasites harm their hosts.
Mutualism: Both species benefit (e.g., clownfish and anemones).
Commensalism: One species benefits; the other is unaffected (e.g., barnacles on whales).
Variety of living organisms in ecosystems.
Biodiverse ecosystems are more resilient to environmental changes.
Loss of biodiversity reduces ecosystem stability and homeostasis.
Autotrophs convert sunlight into usable energy for heterotrophs.
Ecosystems collapse without primary producers.
Dominant Species: Most abundant species in a community.
Keystone Species: Species with a disproportionate impact on ecosystem function. Loss can lead to ecosystem collapse.
Natural selection allows species to adapt to their environments.
Random mutations drive genetic variation; selection is non-random.
Habitat Loss: Urbanization, deforestation.
Invasive Species: Outcompete natives and disrupt ecosystems.
Pollution: Degrades habitats and harms species.
Climate Change: Alters weather, temperature, and ecosystems.
Overexploitation: Overfishing, hunting, and unsustainable practices.
Habitat loss and fragmentation reduce genetic diversity and promote inbreeding.
Urbanization causes "extinction vortices" where one disruption leads to others.
Invasive species thrive without natural predators, altering ecosystems.
Geological and meteorological events can disrupt ecosystems (e.g., continental drift).
Living organisms share common traits like cellular structure, energy use, and response to stimuli.
Ecosystems rely on energy flow and nutrient cycling, and changes can disrupt trophic levels.
Population and community dynamics depend on growth factors, interspecific interactions, and diversity.
Biodiversity ensures resilience; conservation efforts are vital for ecosystem stability.
Growth rate: dN/dt = B – D.
Exponential growth: dN/dt = r_max N.
Logistic growth: dN/dt = rN(K – N)/K.
Simpson’s Diversity Index: 1 – ∑ (n/N)^2.