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IBDP Biology- Species,Communities and Ecosystems (1/3)

Topic 4- Ecology

July 6, 2021

What is the relationship between different living organisms? This IBDP Biology blog post is a introduction to Topic 4, Ecology. We will look at:

  • What population is
  • What an ecosystem is
  • The differences between consumers, detrivores and saprotrophs

Ecology 

Species: Groups of organisms that can potentietally interbreed to produce fertile offspring

If species are not closely related it is usually impossible for individuals of different species to interbreed 

If individuals of different species interbreed and produce offspring - Hybrids will be sterile [infertile don't produce sex cells because the chromosomes of parents from different species don't match] 

Population 

Population: A group of organisms of the same species living in the same area at the same time

Organisms of the SAME species are SEPARATED geographically and are UNLIKELY to breed but the ability to do so remains. The seperated organisms are part of different populations

U2: Members of a species may be reproductively isolated in seperate populations

Example: South Africans within SA and South Africans in Egypt  

Community 

Community: Group of populations of different species living together and interacting with each other in the same area

All organisms are dependent on interactions with members of other species for survival this includes plants and microbes

Example: Lions depend Zebras or Bucks 

                Finding Nemo fishbowl 

Ecosystems 

Ecosystem: A community forms an ecosystem by its interactions with the abiotic environment

Biotic: Living eg, [preys and predators]

Abiotic: Non-living surroundings of a community [soil, air, water] 

Ecosystem = Community + Abiotic Environment   

Consumers 

Consumers: Heterotrophs that feed on organisms by ingestion to obtain their organic molecules

Ingestion: The taking in of a substance 

Consumers can be classified as:

  • Herbivores- 

feed on Producers

Example: Zebras, Deer and Asphids

  • Carnivores- 

feed on other Consumers

Example: Lions, Snakes and Ladybirds

  • Omnivores- 

feed on both Producers and Consumers

Example: Chimpanzee and Mice

  • Scavengers- 

specialized carnivores that feed mostly on dead and decaying animals

Example: Hyenas, Vultures and Crows  

Detrivores 

Detrivores: Heterotrophs that obtain organic nutrients from non-living organic sources such as detrius and humus by internal digestion

Detrius: Dead material from living organisms [dead leaves, parts of decomposing animals and feces]

Humus: Decaying leaf litter mixed with soil

Example: Dung beetles, Earthworms, Woodlice and Crabs  

Saprotrophs 

Saprotrophs: Heterotrophs that obtain organic nutrients from dead organisms by external digestion

  • Saprotrophs live on or live in non-living organic matter.
  • Secrete digestive enzymes into the organic matter [dead leaves, dead animals, wood]
  • Absorb the needed substances/products of digestion
  • Proteins, Carbs, Lipids are digested externally and absorbed

NOT Consumers - do not ingest the food

External digestion - digestive enzymes are secreted

Decomposers - breakdown organic material 

Example: Bateria and Fungi  

And that's the end of part 1!

References:

https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&url=http%3A%2F%2Fib.bioninja.com.au%2Fstandard-level%2Ftopic-4-ecology%2F41-species-communities-and%2Fheterotrophs.html&psig=AOvVaw2eMKnV3LfFht8ltu_PJYZb&ust=1625627503655000&source=images&cd=vfe&ved=0CAsQjhxqFwoTCLio08G8zfECFQAAAAAdAAAAABAS

Drafted by Venetia (Biology)