- also known as a producer - an organism capable of making its own food from inorganic substances using light or chemical energy.- eg. Green plants, algae, and certain bacteria
shows the transfer of energy between organisms. producer --> primary consumer --> secondary consumer --> tertiary consumereg. passion flower --> heliconius butterfly --> tegu lizard --> jaguar the energy in the carbon compounds (food) is released through respiration. much of this energy is lost as heat.
- diagram that shows the relative amounts of energy or matter within each trophic level in a food chain or food web- should be stepped- the length of the bar represents the amount of energy transferred to the trophic level (resulting in an increase in biomass)- the unit = KJ m^-2 yr^-1- around 10% of energy at any trophic level is passed on to the next trophic level- the number of trophic levels is limited, as there is ever decreasing quantities of energy available for transfer and the energy is passed along the food chain. - reasons for loss of energy between the trophic levels include: * energy is lost as heat due to respiration* not all of the individuals at each trophic level is consumed* not all parts of the organism can be digested.
Consumer that feeds directly on producers;The animal that directly eats the producer;this category includes organisms that consume producers (plants and algae).
An organism that eats primary consumers;A member of the trophic level of an ecosystem consisting of carnivores that eat herbivores;eats primary consumers
an organism that lives on or in non-living organic matter, secreting digestive enzymes into it and absorbing the products of digestion (e.g. mushrooms, bacteria);Obtains nutrients from decaying organic matter
The principle that states that when an activity raises threats of harm to human health or to the environment safety should prevail in control measures should be initiated even if cause-and-effect relationships are fully established
factor that causes the growth of a population to decrease or not grow any larger (ex. food, water, shelter, predation, disease, etc.- abiotic or biotic factors)
is a natural phenomenon which maintains temperatures required for life to live on Earth. short wave (visible light) radiation from sunlight passes through the Earth's atmosphere and strikes the surface of the planet. much of the light is reflected, but some is absorbed and transferred to heat. the earth radiated the hear as infrared (long wavelength) into the atmosphere. the greenhouse effect traps some of the heat keeping the atmosphere warmmost important greenhouse gases = CO2 & H2O (methane and nitrogen also contribute to greenhouse effect)if the concentration of green house gases increase, more heat will be trapped. there is evidence that this is happening due to human activities (eg. combustion of fossil fuels)
1) ice habitats are melting (destruction of habitats)2) flooding (destruction of habitats)3) desertification4) more extreme weather events5) species extinction6) ocean acidification7) destruction of food webs8) sea level rise9) global temperature rise
an organism that is microscopic, or too small to be seen by the unaided human eye; examples include bacteria, archaea, most protists, and some fungi (viruses, although microscopic, are not considered microorganisms because they are non-living)
Obtaining energy from inorganic substances;organisms that obtain energy from chemicals to make their own food;Autotrophic bacteria that derive energy from inorganic sulfur compounds; often live in deep-ocean vents, bacteria
Using a known small area at random to count organisms within that area. The number of organisms within that area can give an approximate estimate of the population of that particular species in a larger area.
all of the places a species can live if no competition;The entire range of resource opportunities an organism is potentially able to occupy within an ecosystem