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Title: ECOLOGY
Description: BASICS OF ECOLOGY

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ECOLOGY AND BIOLOGICAL CYCLES
Ecological Terms


Ecosystem: all the abiotic and biotic factors in an area/environment surrounding a species



Community: "all the organisms present in an area/habitat/ecosystem"1



Population: "all the individuals of one species in an area"2



Environment: sum of all conditions in the ecosystem outside the organism



Habitat: place within an ecosystem where a particular population is found



Niche: species' function in its habitat
o

Two species occupy different niches when they NOT compete


o

Feeding at different times on different organisms

"Two species NO LONGER occupy the same niche when


one species displaces other species (better adapted)/one species
survives/none survive due to



competition (for environmental resources)/insufficient



food, territory, mates (animals); light, CO2, H2O, mineral ions (plants)"2

Investigating Numbers and Distribution
Investigating Variation


Several samples eliminate chance and anomalies (eg three averaged readings)



Random sampling eliminates bias (favour of one type)
o



Random coordinates achieved by calculator

Any differences must reflect real differences in the population of sampled data

Frame Quadrats


Three measurements can be taken / population size of a particular species occupies in a
quadrat



Assumptions
o
o

Quadrats must be chosen randomly

o


Stationary organisms / must not move
Sample represents whole population

To investigate an area

o
o

Quadrats are chosen at random by using random numbers from a calculator

o


Area is divided into a grid by measuring tapes
Organisms under investigation are counted in each quadrat

To investigate a volume
o

Container of known volume is immersed at random points in the pond

o

Number of tadpoles are counted each time



Limitation: Area being studied is much larger than the small quadrats



POPULATION SIZE = (Sorganisms per quadrat * A of field)/A of quadrat)
o

S = Sum of; A = Area;

Line Transects


Measures distribution of species in a straight line across a habitat



Useful for identifying changes in a habitat



Records all species which touch a tape stretched across a habitat
o

Belt transect records species between two lines

o

Interrupted belt transect records species present in a number of quadrats placed at
fixed points along a line stretched across the habitat



Limitation: one transect may not cross typical areas

Mark-Release-Recapture


Animals are marked and released back into the community (N1)



Second sample is collected
o

Total size of sample (N2) and

o

Number of marked animals (n) are counted



Population size = (N1*N2)/n



Marking must not affect organisms' behaviour / non-toxic marking, survival rate must not be
affected / would make it not more vulnerable to predators



Animals must not die, reproduce, migrate into study area → population size must not change



Marked animals in population must mix

Diversity



Measure of the number of species and their success within an area



Shows stability of an ecosystem



COMPARING DIVERSITY IN TWO HABITATS#






Use large number of traps in each of two habitats
Place traps at random / by random coordinates using a calculator
Keep factor (size/length of time/time of day) constant
Count number of organisms of each type
o N = number of organisms of all species present in the community
o n = number of organisms of each individual species
Calculate index of diversity d = N(N-1) / ∑n(n-1) for both habitats
Takes account of number of individuals (as well as number of species)




Abiotic (non-living) Factors


Climatic factors: seasonal changes in temp, humidity, daylength, rainfall



Physical conditions: pH, soil particles, ions, availability of H2O



Organism must have physiological adaptations to live in abiotic conditions



Lack of inorganic ions (nitrate) often limit plant growth



Plants are primary producers, affecting all populations in a community

Biotic (living) Factors - Interaction Between Organisms


Intraspecific competition / members of the same species compete for resources
o



Space, patch of soil to grow on, nesting site, food,
...
net | Ecosystem | Five Kingdoms

Definition of species (basic unit of classification):


Members of a species are similar (phenotype) to each other but different from other species
o

Similarity of organisms in same species can be



biochemical (haemoglobin structure)



immunological (antibody against an antigen equally effective)



development (similar growth of embryos)




physical (branching pattern of trees)

ecological (occupy identical ecological niche)

(Group of) organisms able to interbreed/reproduce giving fertile offspring
o

Each species is reproductively isolated from every other species

The five-kingdom classification of organisms


Nomenclature: Naming of organisms



Binomial: Biological name of an organism → Genus species



Taxon: Set of organisms within a category / Taxonomy / Study of biological classification



Different levels of taxons: SPECIES, GENUS, FAMILY, ORDER, CLASS, PHYLUM, KINGDOM
o

Most number of species on right

o

Most similar organisms on left



Unicellular: Single cell; Colonial: Groups of cells; Multicellular: Many cells



Autotrophs produce energy from inorganic sources
o

Phototrophs from photosynthesis/sunlight

o


Chemotrophs from simple inorganic (oxidative) processes

Heterotrophs digest and absorb organic molecules

Prokaryotae (prokaryotes)


Cell structure:
o

Prokaryotes, unicellular

o

Prokaryotes lack cytoplasmic organelles found in eukaryotes



Cell wall: murein



Nutrition: autotrophic (photosynthesis, chemosynthesis), aerobic heterotrophs



Divide by binary fission, not by mitosis



≈10μm in size (bacterial cell, filaments of blue-green bacteria)



Mutualistic nitrogen-fixing bacteria live in nodules on the root of legumes / symbiotic

Protoctista (protoctists)


Cell structure: eukaryotes, unicellular and multicellular



Cell wall: (sometimes) polysaccharide



Nutrition: autotrophic, heterotrophic



Placed in this category by exclusion / cannot be placed in any other kingdom
o
o

Protozoa / heterotrophic and ingest food

o


Slime moulds / fungi characteristics
Algae / photosynthesis

≈10μm (amoeba) - 1m (Laminaria / large brown alga)

Fungi


Cell structure: eukaryotes, multicellular and unicellular (yeast)



Cell wall: chitin



Nutrition: heterotrophic / saprotrophic decomposers or parasitic



Genus Penicillium
o

Body of a fungus is composed of thin filaments called hyphae / form a mycelium

o

Secret enzymes / external digestion / absorbs resulting nutrients

o

Erect hyphae that grow upwards from the mycelium carry their reproductive spores

o


Chains of spores on the erect hyphae / coloured mould visible on stored food

Break down organic matter

Plantae (plants)


Cell structure: only multicellular, eukaryotic; large vacuoles



Cell wall: cellulose



Nutrition: autotrophic (photosynthetic)



Growth is restricted to meristems (layers/patches of dividing cells)



Non-motile; adapted to land / strong tissues, leave gas exchange system, waterproofed



Eg mosses, ferns, conifers, angiosperms (flowering plants)

Plant kingdom has two different types of adults in their life cycle


Gametophytes, hidden in plant / sexual reproduction forms multicellular zygotes



Sporophytes, what we call plant / asexual reproduction to form spores that germinate into
gametophytes



Gametophyte (n) → gamete (n) → fertilisation → zygote (2n) → mitosis → sporophyte (2n) →
meiosis → spore (n) → mitosis → gametophyte (n)

Animalia (humans, animals)


Cell structure: eukaryotic, multicellular, no cell wall
o

Develop form a blastocyst / embryo

o

Have nervous and hormonal control systems



No cell wall!



Nutrition: heterotrophic, involving a digestive system



Are motile and grow throughout tissues (no mersitems)

Viruses → acellular → not included in classification system → pathogenic
BiologyGuide
Title: ECOLOGY
Description: BASICS OF ECOLOGY