Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.

Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.

My Basket

You have nothing in your shopping cart yet.

Title: Ecology and Evolution
Description: Notes on populations, the greenhouse effect, natural selection, and evolution. Also includes important definitions in ecology. Suitable for Higher, A-level, and IB students.

Document Preview

Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above


Ecology  and  Evolution            

 
It  has  been  estimated  that  there  are  as  many  as  ten  million  different  species  on  
earth  and  understanding  where  and  how  they  live  and  interact  is  a  branch  of  
biology  known  as  ecology
...
 One  
result  of  these  changes  is  the  evolution  of  new  varieties  and  species
...
   
 
In  any  ecosystem  there  is  a  hierarchy  of  feeding  relationships  that  influences  our  
nutrients  and  energy  passed  through  it
...
   
 
Plants  are  called  autotrophs;  autotrophs  are  producers  (self  feeding)  because  
they  produce  organic  compounds  by  photosynthesis
...
 
 
 When  an  organism  dies,  its  remains  provide  nutrients  for  other  types  of  
organisms  called  detritivores  and  saprotrophs
...
 Saprotrophs  are  therefore  responsible  for  the  decomposition  of  
organic  matter  and  are  often  referred  to  as  decomposers
...
   
 
Every  ecosystem  has  a  structure  that  divides  organisms  into  trophic  levels  on  the  
basis  of  their  food  sources
...
   
 
Green  plants  are  producers  and  are  at  the  lowest  trophic  level
...
 The  first  consumers  are  primary  consumers,  which  are  
always  herbivores
...
 
 
 
Producer  -­‐>  Primary  Consumer  -­‐>  Secondary  Consumer  -­‐>  Tertiary  Consumer  
 
 
Species  -­‐  a  group  of  organisms  that  can  interbreed  and  can  produce  fertile  
offspring
...
 

 
Population  -­‐  a  group  of  organism  of  the  same  species  who  live  in  the  same  area  at  
the  same  time
...
 
 
Ecosystem  -­‐  a  community  and  its  abiotic  environment
...
 
 
Trophic  level  -­‐  the  position  of  an  organism  in  the  food  chain
...
 For  example,  the  following  food  
chain  describes  one  set  of  feeding  relationships
...
 This  food  chain  can  be  in  linked  with  many  
others
...
 
 
 
Arrows  in  a  food  chain  show  the  direction  of  flow  of  both  the  energy  and  
nutrients  that  keep  organisms  alive
...
 These  studies  reveal  that  at  each  step  in  the  food  chain,  
energy  is  lost  from  the  chain  in  various  ways
...
 In  all  three  cases  that  lost  energy  cannot  be  passed  to  
the  next  trophic  level
...
 The  width  of  each  of  the  
layers  of  the  pyramid  is  proportional  to  the  amount  of  energy  it  represents
...
 Every  link  in  the  food  chain  
results  in  loses  so  that  eventually  there  will  be  insufficient  energy  to  support  any  
further  trophic  levels
...
   
 
 
All  the  organic  matter  from  an  organism,  including  everything  from  living  or  
dead  material  as  waste  is  eventually  consumed  by  other  organisms
...
 Nutrients  on  the  other  hand  are  continually  recycled
...
 The  amino  acid  may  be  passed  onto  an  animal  when  the  plant  material  is  
eaten  and  then  passed  out  of  the  animal’s  body  during  excretion
...
   
 
 

The  Greenhouse  Effect  

 
The  carbon  cycle    
 
Carbon  is  one  of  the  most  important  elements  that  are  recycled  in  an  ecosystem
...
 Some  of  this  carbon  is  returned  back  to  the  
atmosphere  as  plants  respire
...
   
 
In  some  conditions  plants  and  animals  do  not  decay  when  they  die  and  become  
compressed  and  fossilised  in  a  process  that  takes  millions  of  years  and  forms  
fossil  fuels  e
...
 coal,  oil  and  natural  gas  reserves  have  been  formed  and  the  
carbon  trap  in  these  fuels  cannot  return  to  the  atmosphere  unless  the  fuels  are  
burned
...
 
 
Carbon  dioxide  acts  as  a  greenhouse  gas  and  traps  the  heat  that  is  radiated  from  
the  earth's  surface  and  keeps  the  earth  at  a  comfortable  level  for  life  to  exist
...
   
 
Methane  gas  is  another  gas  that  contributes  to  the  greenhouse  effect
...
   
 
The  precautionary  principle  suggests  that  if  the  affect  of  a  change  caused  by  
humans  is  likely  to  be  very  harmful  to  the  environment,  actions  should  be  taken  
to  prevent  it,  even  though  there  may  not  be  sufficient  data  to  probe  that  the  
activity  will  cause  harm
...
 
Population  numbers  can  and  do  change  all  the  time  and  are  effected  by  many  
factors  in  the  environment
...
 
Nutrients  are  abundant  and  there  is  little  collection  of  waste
...
 These  might  be  competition  for  limited  resources  such  as  
food,  space,  increased  predation  and  disease  or  an  abiotic  factor  such  as  oxygen  
might  be  in  short  supply
...
   
 
 
Natality  -­‐  the  birth  rate
...
 Emigration  -­‐  members  leaving  the  
population
...
 
 
The  availability  of  resources  such  as  food,  water,  oxygen  and  light  limits  the  
growth  of  populations
...
 
Levels  of  waste  product  such  as  CO2  and  nitrogen  waste  products
...
 
The  selection  pressures  act  on  individuals  because  of  variation,  some  maybe  
better  suited  to  their  environment  than  others
...
 The  characteristics  of  a  species  are  inherited  and  
passed  onto  succeeding  generations
...
 
 
Paleontology  is  the  study  of  fossils  and  supplies  modern  day  science  with  the  
evidence  that  evolution  does  exist  because  they  show  a  graduation  of  different  
characteristics  among  animals  of  different  ages
...
g
...
   
 
 
Mechanism  for  evolution:  
 
Charles  Darwin  proposed  the  theory  of  evolution  by  means  of  natural  selection
...
 This  remained  a  theory  because  it  postulates  but  can  
never  be  completely  proved
...
 The  fundamental  basis  of  his  argument  is  described  below
...
 

 
(2)  Yet  few  of  these  survive  to  maturity  and  we  rarely  see  population  explosions  
in  any  ecosystem
...
 
The  Resources  may  be  food,  territory  or  even  the  opportunity  to  find  a  mate
...
 This  will  bring  about  a  struggle  for  survival  
between  the  members  of  a  population
...
   
 
(4)  So  different  members  of  the  same  species  are  all  slightly  different  and  this  
variation  is  due  to  the  mechanism  of  sexual  reproduction
...
 When  an  egg  is  
fertilised,  the  zygote  contains  a  unique  combination  of  genetic  material  from  its  
two  parents
...
 
 
(5)  Because  of  the  variation,  some  members  of  the  population  maybe  better  
suited  to  the  surroundings  than  others
...
g
...
 These  individuals  will  outcompete  with  
others;  they  will  survive  better,  live  longer  and  pass  on  their  genes  to  more  
offspring
...
 This  is  called  natural  selection  and  it  occurs  as  the  fittest  survive  to  
reproduce
...
 Species  that  are  living  
today  have  evolved  to  be  suited  to  their  environment
...
 
 
The  antibiotic  resistance  exists  because  of  the  dose  of  the  antibiotic
...
 
 
Treating  a  disease  caused  by  the  resistant  strains  of  bacteria  becomes  very  
difficult  to  treat  because  bacteria  frequently  contain  additional  genetic  
information  in  the  form  of  plasmids,  which  they  can  transfer  or  exchange  with  
other  bacteria
...
 
 

Antibiotic  resistant  and  so  called  super  bugs  such  as  MRSA  are  bacteria  resistant  
to  many  antibiotics
...
 
 
 
 
 


Title: Ecology and Evolution
Description: Notes on populations, the greenhouse effect, natural selection, and evolution. Also includes important definitions in ecology. Suitable for Higher, A-level, and IB students.