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Ecology and Energy notes Ecology and Energy notes

Ecology and Energy notes - PowerPoint Presentation

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Ecology and Energy notes - PPT Presentation

What is Ecology The study of organisms and their relationships with each other and with the environment they live in It all comes down to who eats who and how is energy passed between organisms and their environment ID: 645354

food energy run chemical energy food chemical run mechanical cold organisms plant transfer eats heat eaten chain trophic waste creating window expending

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Slide1

Ecology and Energy notesSlide2

What is Ecology?

The study of organisms and their relationships with each other and with the environment they live in

It all comes down to – who eats who and how is energy passed between organisms and their environmentSlide3

Types of energy

Think back to 8

th

grade! How many can you think of?Slide4

Types of energy

Mechanical: movement (like kinetic energy)

Energy expended while running, breathing, etc.

Thermal: heat

Solar: light

From the sun

Chemical: in chemical compounds (like nutrients)

FoodSlide5

Energy expenditure and transfer

Energy can be conserved, transferred or used up.

Identify the type of energy in each example:

When I woke up, I ate a piece of toast.

Then, I went for a run.

Even though it was cold outside, I felt warm on my run.

When I got home, I moved my plant so that it could get sunlight from the window.

Then, I got eaten by a lion.Slide6

When I woke up, I ate a piece of toast.

Obtaining Chemical Energy (food)

Then, I went for a run

.

Expending Chemical Energy

Creating Mechanical Energy

Even though it was cold outside, I felt warm on my run

.

Expending Chemical Energy

Creating Thermal Energy

When I got home, I moved my plant so that it could get sunlight from the window.

Solar Energy (for the plant)

Then, I got

eaten

by a lion

.

Transferring chemical energy (food aka me) from one organism to anotherSlide7

Food chains

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

Each step in a food chain is called a “trophic level”Slide8

ExampleSlide9

Energy transfer in food chains

When one organism eats another in a food chain, only 10% of the energy is passed on.

Example: A rabbit has 2000 calories of chemical energy available in it’s body (think stored fat, muscle, tissue, etc.). If a fox eats the rabbit, how much energy does it actually gain by eating it?

200 calories (2000 x .10)Slide10

Where does the other 90% go?

Lost as heat

Used as mechanical energySlide11

Energy pyramids

Used to represent the amount of energy available at each trophic levelSlide12

There is more energy available at the bottom of the pyramid, but as that energy travels up the food chain, most of it is expended as

mechanical energy or lost as heat, so there is less available towards the topSlide13

Pyramid of numbers

Used to represent the number of organisms available at each trophic levelSlide14

There are more clovers in an ecosystem than there are snails, and more snails than thrush, and more

sparrowhawk

than thrush.

The higher the consumer, the less of it there will be.

Think: in the African Savana, there is a ton of grass, but way less lions than actual blades of gradesSlide15

Energy conservation strategies

Animals use specific behaviors to conserve the energy they obtain so that they don’t waste any

Bears hibernates

Cold-blooded animals only hunt at night so that they don’t waste energy trying not to overheat

Some turtles spend cold winters hibernating in the bottom of lakes in order to save energy

Birds can spread their wings and coast along the wind (think eagles) instead of having to flap constantly to stay afloat