2.1 - structure

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2.1 - Structure IB Topics 2.1.1-2.1.7 Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Topic 2 – The Ecosystem. 2.1 - Structure. IB Topics 2.1.1-2.1.7. Biotic and Abiotic Components. Biotic. Abiotic. All non-living components of the ecosystem Ex:. All living components of the ecosystem Ex:. Food Chains. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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2.1 - StructureIB Topics 2.1.1-2.1.7

Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Biotic and Abiotic ComponentsBiotic

All living components of the ecosystem

Ex:

Abiotic All non-living

components of the ecosystem

Ex:

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Food Chains The position an organism occupies in a

food chain is called the trophic level.

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Local Food Chain Example:

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Food Webs Ecosystems

contain many interconnected food chains

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Pyramid of Numbers A graphical model

of the number of organisms in a food chain

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Pyramid of Biomass A graphical model

of the amount of biomass present in a food chain at a certain point in time

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Pyramid of Productivity A graphical model

of the rate of energy production over time

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Key Words (define and provide a local example of each) Species Population Habitat Niche Community Ecosystem

Parasitism Mutualism Predation Herbivory

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2.2 – Measuring Abiotic ComponentsIB Topics 2.2.1-2.2.2

Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Significant Abiotic Factors Terrestrial

Ecosystem Marine

Ecosystem Freshwater

Ecosystem

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2.3 – Measuring Biotic ComponentsIB Topics 2.3.1-2.3.5

Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Estimating abundance of organisms Counting the

number of organisms is almost always done using an estimate

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Lincoln Index A mathematical

model to estimate population size

Capture-mark-release-recapture

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Example 1

13 deer were caught and marked

14 deer were caught the second time and 5 were marked

Example 2

75 Ladybugs were caught and marked

80 Ladybugs were caught the second time and 3 were marked

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Quadrats A square of area

used to measure the population of non-mobile organisms Can help to

calculate population density and percentage cover

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Diversity1. The number of

different species

2. The number of individuals of each species

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Simpson’s Diversity Index Used to compare

diversity between areas

High value of D implies stable ecosystem

Low value of D implies unstable ecosystem

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2.4 – BiomesIB Topics 2.4.1-2.4.2

Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Biomes A collection of

ecosystems that share similar climactic conditions

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Rainforest

Desert Tundra Temperate Forest

Grassland

Prevailing Climate

Location

Sun Exposure

Precipitation

Limiting Factors

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Rainforest

Desert Tundra Temperate Forest

Grassland

Prevailing Climate

Hot, Humid, Rainy

Hot, Dry Cold Seasonal Varied by location

Location Near Equator

Varied, where no

precip

Poles 40-60o N Latitude

Varied, where some precip

Sun Exposure

High Varied, usually

high

Low Medium, Seasonal

Varied

Precipitation

High None Snow Medium, Seasonal

Low

Limiting Factors

Too much precip.

Not enough water

Too cold, permafrost

Seasons Low precip

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2.5 – FunctionIB Topics 2.5.1-2.5.7

Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Photosynthesis

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Respiration

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Gross Primary Productivity (GPP)The amount of

energy produced by producers

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Net Primary Productivity (NPP)The amount of

energy stored by producers and available to consumers

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Gross Secondary Productivity (GSP)The amount of

energy consumed by consumers

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Net Secondary Productivity (NSP)The amount of

energy stored by consumers and available to the next trophic level

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2.6 – ChangesIB Topics 2.6.1-2.6.7

Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Carrying Capacity The maximum

number of organisms an ecosystem can support sustainably over a long period of time

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Limiting Factors Factors that limit

the amount of individuals in an ecosystem

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Tolerance Species will be most abundant within a

certain range of a limiting factor

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Population CurvesS Curve

Reaches carrying capacity and stabilizes J Curve

Unchecked population growth

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Limiting Factors Density-

dependent factors Limit population

size more as population increases

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Limiting Factors Density-

independent factors Limit population

size regardless of population size

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Limiting Factors External vs

Internal Factors Human Caused:

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r-strategists Opportunistic

species Inhabit

unstable/changing environments

Reproduce early/often, mature quickly

Slow growing/maturing species

Few offspring Long lifespans

K-strategists

C-strategists In between r & K

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Survivorship Curve

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SuccessionA natural increase in the complexity of

the structure and species composition over time

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SuccessionPrimary

Occurs on uncolonized substrate (rock)

Secondary Occurs where a

previous community has been destroyed

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Zonation Patterned

communities over a distance

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2.7 – Measuring ChangesIB Topics 2.7.1-2.7.3

Topic 2 – The Ecosystem

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Environmental Impact Assessment

Before any development gets permission to begin, an EIA must be done

Predicts the potential impacts on habitats, species, and ecosystems

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Stage 1 – Baseline Study Habitat type Species list Species diversity Endangered

species Land use Hydrology Human population Soil quality