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Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

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Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary. Autotroph. Organism that can capture energy from sunlight or chemicals and use it to produce its own food from inorganic compounds ; also called a producer. Producer. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Page 2: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Autotroph

• Organism that can capture energy from sunlight or chemicals and use it to produce its own food from inorganic compounds; also called a producer

Page 3: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Producer

• Organism that can capture energy from sunlight or chemicals and use it to produce food from inorganic compounds; also called an autotroph

Page 4: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Heterotroph

• Organism that relies on other organisms for their energy and food supply; also called a consumer

Page 5: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Consumer

• Organism that relies on other organisms for its energy and food; also called heterotroph

Page 6: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Herbivore

• Heterotroph that obtains energy by only eating plants

Page 7: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Carnivore

• Heterotroph that obtains energy by eating animals

Page 8: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Omnivore

• Heterotroph that obtains energy by eating both plants and animals

Page 9: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Decomposer

• Heterotroph that breaks down organic matter

Page 10: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Food Chain

• A series of steps in which organisms transfer energy by eating and being eaten

Page 11: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Food Web

• Links all the food chains in an ecosystem together

Page 12: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Trophic Level

• Each step in a food chain or food web; first level is producers, then consumers, which make up second, third, and higher levels

Page 13: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Ecological Pyramid

• A diagram that shows the relative amounts of energy or matter contained within each trophic level in a food chain or web; 3 types: energy, biomass, and pyramids of numbers

• The energy/biomass starts at 100% for the producers with only about 10 percent of that energy transfers to organisms at the next trophic level

Page 14: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Biotic Factors

• Biological influences on organisms within an ecosystem

• Including birds, trees, mushrooms, and bacteria, etc.

Page 15: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Abiotic Factors

• Physical, or nonliving, factors that shape ecosystems

• Temperature, precipitation, humidity, wind, nutrient availability, soil type, sunlight, etc.

Page 16: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Predation

• An interaction in which one organism (predator) captures and feeds on another organism (prey)

• Predator Prey

Page 17: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Symbiosis

• Any relationship in which two species live closely together

Page 18: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Mutualism

• Both species benefit from the relationship

Page 19: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Commensalism

• One member of the relationship benefits and the other is neither helped nor harmed

Page 20: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Parasitism

• One orgasm lives on or inside another organism and harms it

Page 21: Ecology and Ecosystems Vocabulary

Thermal Energy

• Heat; the total amount of kinetic energy due to the random motion of atoms or molecules in a body of matter; energy at its most random form; with each energy transfer from ATP, a bit of energy slipped off into the surroundings as thermal energy