An ecosystem is composed of biotic and abiotic factors that interact with each other. The document defines an ecosystem as a biotope (physical environment) and biocenosis (living things) that interact. It discusses the key components of ecosystems, including producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, decomposers, and trophic levels. Examples are provided of different ecosystem types (aquatic, wetland, forest), and the abiotic and biotic adaptations organisms have to survive within different ecosystems. Food webs and chains are used to illustrate the feeding relationships and energy/nutrient flow between organisms within an ecosystem.
2. A Little bit of etymology
Ecology: is the science
that studies ecosystems.
Root: ECO (Oikos):
HOUSE (in terms of
place where a living
being lives)
ECO-SYSTEM: how the
“house” works or is
organized
ECO-LOGY: the study of
the “house”
ECO-SPHERE: sphere of
houses. The great
terrestrial ecosystem.
3. 1. What is an ecosystem?
An ecosystem is a place (or biotope), the living
things that live in it (or biocenosis) and the
interactions among them.
1. Biotope (abiotic factors) non-living (rocks,
water) + physical properties (Tª, light, humidity)
2. Biocoenosis (biotic factors): all living organisms
3. Relation between them (interaction):
1. Biotic factors interact and influence each other
through predation, competence, symbiosis….
2. Abiotic factors also influence each other and also
to the biotic factors (lack of water influences the
temperature, or low temperatures induce
hibernation)
6. 2. Abiotic factors and the biocenosis
2 types of adaptations:
Anatomical adaptations: related to the physical characteristics (plants with spines to prevent water loss)
Behavioral adaptations (like migrations)
ABIOTIC FACTORS THAT AFFECT THE BIOCENOSIS (they determine the type of adaptation and the
distribution of the biocenosis in the biotope (WATER, LIGHT AND TEMPERATURE):
WATER: (basically to prevent water loss)
Plants: spines, waterproof layers of wax
Animals: exoskeleton, scales.
LIGHT: (affect the habits)
Photosynthetic organisms: wide leaves to capture more light in ecosystems that are darker. (sea bottom, forest floor)
Behavior of animals can be nocturnal (owls, bats) or diurnal (pigeons, horses)
TEMPERATURE (there is a range of temperature for each organism, varies day/night, altitude and seasonaly)
Plants: lose their leaves (deciduous) or these are protected against low temperatures (needles). Bloom in warm temperatures.
Animals: fur, fat for cold. Refrigeration (big ears). Behavious (hibernate
7. Say the type of adaptation and
the abiotic factor that is
influencing.
8. 3. Relationships in the biocooenosis.Intraspecificrelationships
Family
associations
Gregarious
associations
Social
associations
Colonial
associations
Interespecific
relationships
Interespecific
competition
Predation
Parasitism
Mutualism
Commensalism
9. Intraespecific relationships:
among individuals of the same species
Family: related to one another.
Purpose to reproduce and take
care of offspring
Gregarious: not necessarily
related. Specific purpose
(defend themselves, look for
food, migrate)
Social: they form a hierarchy
and organize the work.
Colonial: have the same
progenitor and remain together
Family: pride of lions
Gregarious: Flock of
cranes
Social: society of
bees
Colony: colony of
corals
10. Interespecific relationships:
Between organisms of different species.
Symbols: Neutral(0) Benefit(+), Harm(-)
Interspecific competition (-,-)Both are
harmed: Use the same resource and
compete for it when it is in short supply.
Predation (+,-) The predator(+) captures
and kills the prey (-) to feed on it.
Parasitism (+,-) the parasite (+) feeds on
the host (-) without killing it.
Mutualism (+,+) both are benefited.
Symbiosis they have a close relation
Comensalism (+,0) Benefits one species
while the other is indifferent.
Interespecific competition:
elephants and girraffes
compete for water
Predation: Lions and gazelles
Parasitism: lice on humans
Mutualism: cattle egret and
buffalo or ox.
Symbiosis*: clownfish and
anemone
Commensalism: Vultur and
zebra
Quizlet link Interesting web
11. SYMBIOSIS (5 examples in
the ocean)
Symbiosis is a relationship between two or more organisms that live closely
together. There are several types or classes of symbiosis:
Commensalism:One organism benefits and the other is neither harmed nor
helped.
Mutualism: Both organisms benefit. An obligate mutualist cannot survive
without its partner; a facultative mutualist can survive on its own.
Parasitism: One organism (the parasite) benefits and the other (the host) is
harmed.
To be successful, a symbiotic relationship requires a great deal of balance. Even
parasitism, where one partner is harmed, is balanced so that the host lives long
enough to allow the parasite to spread and reproduce.
These delicate relationships are the product of long years of co-evolution. Bacteria
were the first living things on the planet, and all of Earth's other creatures have been
living and evolving with them for hundreds of millions of years. Today, microbes are
essential for many organisms' basic functions, including nourishment, reproduction,
and protection.
13. Examples of interespecific relations.
Identify the type
Wolf and vultur
Frog and
grasshopper
Shark and
remora fish
Anemone and
clownfish
Tick in dogs
14. 4. Trophic levels
Trophic level consists of all the organism in an ecosystem which
obtain their food in the same way. There are three trophic levels.
Producers: autotrophic. Convert inorganic matter into organic matter
using the energy contained in light. Green plant, algae and some
bacteria
Consumers: heterotrophic that feed on other living things.
Primary consumers: herbivores. Feed on producers. (Deer, rabit, mice)
Secondary consumers: feed on primary consumers. (some snakes)
Tertiary consumers: feed on secondary consumers. (Eagles, wolves) (on top of
the food chain)
Decomposers: heterotrophic that feed on the remains of the other
trophic levels. Release minerals, water and gases (which producers use
to make their food) Bacteria and fungi.
Food chain: diagram showing the different trophic levels of the
ecosystem and their feeding relationships using arrows. The arrow
shows the flow of matter
Grass Rabbit Hawk
16. Food webs
Food web: diagrams of all the
food chains in an ecosystem and
their connections to each other.
17. Create a food web with the following
information of a specific ecosystem
Ivy leaves, snail trush and a falcon represent a
chain.
Wheat, hare and fox represent a chain.
Alfalfa, rabbit and fox represent a chain.
Fruit, squirrel and eagle represent a chain.
Eagle also eat rabbits and falcons also eat hare
(liebres).
Rabbits also eat fruit.
18. 5. Aquatic
ecosystems
Plankton: drifting microscopic organisms.
Amoebas, protozoa, small crustaceans.
Nekton: swim and move independently. Fish,
marine mammals
Benthos: live on the seabed or riverbed,
attached to a substrate. Algae, anemones.
19. Classify the following organisms according to their
way of life in plankton, nekton and benthos
The multicelular red algae that lives on the rocks.
Sea urchin
Sardine
Crustacean larvae that floats int he wáter
Unicellular green algae
Anemone
Whale
20. Marine ecosystems and zones: video
According to their distance from the coast
Neritic zone: from the shore (coast line) to
the edge of the continental shelf.
Biodiversity
Oceanic zone or open sea: Beyond the
neritic zone. Limited nutrients. Less
biodiversity
According to the depth.
Pelagic zone: closest to the surface. 0-
200m. Nekton and plakton. Algae. PHOTIC
ZONE. (or
Bathyal zone: 200-2000m. Nexton adapted
to lack of light (whales, squids, sharks)
APHOTIC ZONE
Abyssal zone: below 2000. Feed on remains
that sink. Some luminous organs. APHOTIC
ZONE
21. Adaptations to
marine life video
After watching the video,
answer to the questions:
What adaptations do you think
the living things that live in the
abyssal zone have developed?
How can organisms adapt to the
increasement of pressure?
Why aren´t there algae in the
bathyal and abyssal zones?
In which zones do the nekton
organisms live and why?
22. Freshwater ecosystems:
Lentic: Standing water (lakes, ponds, wetlands)
Lotic : Flowing water (torrents, rivers)
Lake-lago Ponds-charca Wetland-humedales
River Torrent
23. Wetlands
(humedales):
lentic ecosystem covered with a
shallow layer of water that sometimes
dry up. Can have a mixture of fresh
and salty water
IMPORTANCE OF WETLANDS
Endemic species (only live there)
Migratory birds stop there (cranes-grullas, flamingos)
Source of resources (rice-arroz, reed-cañas, sedge-juncos)
Control of floods-inundaciones.
Recharge aquifers (ground water)
Marshes-
marismas
Swamps-
zonas
pantanosas
Delta-delta
24. Types of wetlands
(identify the pictures)
Delta: the exit of a river to the ocean.
(the mouth of the river) Presence of
sediments.
Marshes-marismas: low-lying land
which is flooded in wet seasons or at high tide,
and typically remains waterlogged (encharcada) at
all times (Doñana)
Swamp-Manglares: (zonas
pantanosas) in the tropical weather. Presence
of trees. Florida swamps.
25. Identify the species (flamingo, catfish, crane,
reed, sedges, rice, foch, alligator)
26. The river: lotic ecosystem. Moving
water changes speed.
IMPORTANCE: biodiversity, energy production,
sediments and nutrients for coastal ecosystems.
Fasting-flowing water: upper course of the river.
Adaptations to the stream
Algae attach to the substrate
Fish hydrodynamic shape
Examples: trout-trucha, salmon-salmón, crabs-cangrejos,
newts-salamandras, kingfishers-martin pescador, blackbirds-
mirlos.
Slow-moving water: middle and lower courses.
Adaptations to slow current and higher temperatures.
Examples: barberls-barbos, perch-percas, eels-anguilas
27. Look at the picture and create a table showing
which of the organisms are producers, which
are primary consumers, which are secondary
consumers and which are decomposers.
Represent the ecosystem through a food web
Producers Primary
consumers
Secondary
consumers
Decomposers
28. 6. Terrestrial ecosystems
Biome: biological community located in a large area of the Earth and
characterized by particular climatic conditions
Cold zones
• Polar desert
• Tundra
• Taiga
Temperate
zones
• Deciduous
forests
• Mediterranean
forests
• Steppe
Warm zones
• Desert
• Savannah
• Tropical forest
30. In the book you have information about
the different biomes.
Get in groups of 2 or 3.
Create a presentation using “presentaciones de google” for your classmates
about the biomes of one big climatic zone (you can chose between COLD
ZONES, TEMPERATE ZONES or WARM ZONES) All zones need to be studied at
least for one group
Each member of the group must study one biome.
Use the information given in the book about location, vegetation and fauna.
Include photos that show information about the location and the biome.
Include photos of vegetation and fauna, with the names both in English and Spanish
Share the presentation with your teacher.