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Ecology —An Overview

Ecology —An Overview

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Ecology —An Overview. What is Ecology?. Ecology is the scientific study of the interactions between organisms and their environment. It is the science that seeks to describe and explain the relationship between living organisms and their environment. What is Ecology? (Cont…). - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ecology —An Overview

Ecology—An Overview

Page 2: Ecology —An Overview

What is Ecology? Ecology is the scientific study of

the interactions between organisms and their environment.

It is the science that seeks to describe and explain the relationship between living organisms and their environment.

Page 3: Ecology —An Overview

What is Ecology? (Cont…)

Ecology is describing the relationships between living organisms and their environment.

Ecology comes from the Greek words

Oîkos= House -λογία, -logia= Study of Life Study of the “house/environment”

in which we live.

Page 4: Ecology —An Overview

Factors of Ecology

There is two factors that Ecology study: The Abiotic Factors (non-living

components) are those inert factors of the ecosystem, as the light, the temperature, the chemical products, the water and the atmosphere.

Biotic Factors (living organisms) are all the living beings in an environment.

Page 5: Ecology —An Overview

Ecology is study of interactions between non-living components in the

environment… light water wind nutrients in soil heat solar radiation atmosphere, etc.

AND…

Page 6: Ecology —An Overview

Living organisms… Plants Animals microorganisms in soil, etc.

Page 7: Ecology —An Overview

Ernst Haeckel, a German zoologist coined the term Ecology in 1866.

After that….

Danish botanist, Eugenius Warming elaborate the idea of Ecology.

Page 8: Ecology —An Overview

Classification of Ecology Ecology is a broad discipline comprising

many sub-disciplines. Under this system the subjects studies: Ecophysiology examines how the

physiological functions of organisms influence the way they interact with the environment, both biotic and abiotic.

Behavioral ecology examines the roles of behavior in enabling an animal to adapt to its environment.

Page 9: Ecology —An Overview

Classification of Ecology (cont…)

Population ecology studies the dynamics of populations of a single species.

Community ecology (or synecology) focuses on the interactions between species within an ecological community.

Ecosystem ecology studies the flows of energy and matter through the biotic and abiotic components of ecosystems.

Page 10: Ecology —An Overview

Classification of Ecology (cont…)

Systems ecology is an interdisciplinary field focusing on the study, development, and organization of ecological systems from a holistic perspective

Landscape ecology examines processes and relationship in a spatially explicit manner, often across multiple ecosystems or very large geographic areas.

Page 11: Ecology —An Overview

Classification of Ecology (cont…)

Evolutionary ecology studies ecology in a way that explicitly considers the evolutionary histories of species and their interactions.

Political ecology connects politics and economy to problems of environmental control and ecological change.

Page 12: Ecology —An Overview

Individual

Population

Population interactions

Community

Ecosystem

Landscape

Region = Biome

Biosphere

“ Levels” of Ecology

Page 13: Ecology —An Overview

Levels of Ecology Biosphere

Surface of the earth It is the whole portion of Earth

colonized by living beings

Page 14: Ecology —An Overview

Levels of Ecology (cont…)

Region Group of ecosystems with the same

climate and dominant communities.

Tropical rain forest

Tropical dry forest

Tropical savanna Temperate woodlandand shrubland

Desert

Temperate grassland

Boreal forest(Taiga)

Northwesternconiferous forest

Temperate forest

Mountains andice caps

Tundra

Page 15: Ecology —An Overview

Levels of Ecology (cont…) Ecosystem

A group of communities and the populations within them embedded in a common physical environment and tied together by physical processes.

It refers to all the abiotic factors (physical and chemical constituents) and all the communities that established in a specific area.

It is a collection of organisms that live in a place with the nonliving environment.

Page 16: Ecology —An Overview

Levels of Ecology (cont…) Community

A group of populations of different species occurring in one place; individuals of different species may interact with each other

And all the living beings distributed into a specific geographical area. A community includes organisms of different species.

Page 17: Ecology —An Overview

Levels of Ecology (cont…) Population

A group of individuals of a given species that live in a specific geographic area.

A group of organisms, all of the same species, which interbreed and live in the same area.

A group of individuals that collectively interact to give birth to new individuals and eventually die

Page 18: Ecology —An Overview

Levels of Ecology (cont…) Individual Group of similar organisms that can

breed and produce fertile offspring

Page 19: Ecology —An Overview

Ecosystem Ecosystem is a dynamic complex of

plant, animal and micro-organism communities and their non-living environment, interacting as a functional unit.

Every element of the environment have their own ecosystem.

A dynamic ecosystem makes the balance of nature.

Page 20: Ecology —An Overview

Ecosystem (cont…) Example of Ecosystem:

Page 21: Ecology —An Overview

Hydrologic (Water) Cycle

Page 22: Ecology —An Overview

Status of Ecology Past Status

Calm and Quite Human don’t disturb the nature Ecosystem had been going on its

natural cycle

Page 23: Ecology —An Overview

Status of Ecology (cont…) Present Status

Population increasing Negative Effect Ecological Crisis

Page 24: Ecology —An Overview

Ecological Crisis The main causes of Ecological

Crisis are: Over Population Environment Pollution Deforestation

Page 25: Ecology —An Overview

Over Population Over population is a depletion of resources

that occurs when too many of at least one kind of living thing inhabits an ecosystem.

Page 26: Ecology —An Overview

Ecological Crisis Major Ecological Crisis which are

facing the World: Greenhouse Effect Global Warming Climate Changes

Page 27: Ecology —An Overview

Green House Effect Greenhouse effect means the

change in the thermal equilibrium temperature of a planet by the presence of an atmosphere containing gas that absorbs infrared radiation.

Page 28: Ecology —An Overview

Green House Effect (cont…)

Page 29: Ecology —An Overview

Global Warming Global warming is an increase in

the average temperature of the earth's atmosphere.

Page 30: Ecology —An Overview

Climate Changes Climate change means a long-

term significant change in the “average weather” that a given region experiences. Average weather may include average temperature, precipitation and wind patterns.

It causes natural disasters.

Page 31: Ecology —An Overview

Natural Disasters

Page 32: Ecology —An Overview

Conclusion Ecosystem is a natural cycle. Ecosystem makes the balance of

nature. Human beings are an integral part

of ecological systems and depend on nature for survival and quality of life.

Save Nature, survive ecosystem, safe ourselves.

Page 33: Ecology —An Overview

The End