Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Understanding our Environment
- Classification
- Kingdom
- Phylum
- Class
- Order
- Family
- Genus
- Species
- Species can breed
to create fertile
offtspring
- Binomial System: Genus - species
- Problems with classifying
- Organisms at different evolutionary stages
- Archaeopteryx : Bird-reptile
- Bacteria
- Reproduce asexually
- Donkey-horse interbreeding
- Mules: Infertile, have no species
- Evolution
- Consider similarities and
differences
- E.g. Dolphins and bats both mammals, related through evolution.
- Energy Flow
- Biomass/ Number Pyramids
- May differ if:
- Producer is large
- Small parasite on large animal
- Biomass flaws:
- Dry mass means no water: Kills the organism
- Organisms feed on
different trophic levels
- Loss of energy:
- Growth
- Excretion
- Egestion
- Respiration
- Decomposers use this waste
- 90% loss per trophic level
- Growth energy/energy input = efficiency
- Recycling
- The Carbon Cycle
- Removed from air: Photosynthesis
- Released into air: Respiration,
decomposition, combustion
- CO2 absorbed by oceans
- The Nitrogen Cycle
- Plants take in nitrogen in a 'nitrate' form
- Food chains pass on the nitrogen
- Nitrogen compounds in dead organisms
broken down by decomposers
- Nitrogen in the soil once again
- Microorganisms involved
- Decomposers: Convert
proteins into urea/ammonia
- Nitrifying bacteria: Ammonia > nitrates
- Denitrifying bacteria: Nitrates > nitrogen gas
- Nitrogen fixing: Nitrogen
gases > Nitrogen
compounds
- Live in root nodules of leguminous plants
- Interdependence
- Ecological niche: Habitat and an organism's role
- Niche-similar organisms = more competition
- E.g. Harlequin ladybird vs. UK native in 2004
- Predator-Prey
- Both show cyclical changes (up-down)
- More prey > More predators survive
- More predators > Prey eaten
- Predators starve > Numbers drop
- Short lag time due to reproduction
- Parasitism/Mutualism
- Host suffers, parasites gain
- Fleas
- Tapeworm
- Bees' pollination rewarded by nectar
- 'Cleaner' fish in coral reefs eat dirt on larger fish
- Leguminous Pea-plant
- Nodules contain nitrogen-fixers
- Bacteria convert nitrogen to usable form
- Pea, in return, lends sugars produced in P.synth
- Adaptation
- Anatomical adaptations to cold:
- Insulation e.g thick fur, blubber
- Migration/Hibernation:
- Birds fly to warmer locations
- Bears hibernate, slow down body processes
- Specialist adaptations:
- Anti-freeze proteins in cells (Codfish)
- Penguins "counter-current" exchange:
- Warm blood entering flippers passes
heat to cold blood leaving flippers
- Hot/Dry Adaptations
- Animals have large 'Surface
area - volume ratio'
- Heat loss
- Behavioural:
- Seek shade midday
- Dry Conditions:
- Camels have concentrated urine
- Small spines on cacti minimise water loss
- 'Extremophiles'
- Bacteria that live in 100'c+ conditions
- Specialists v. Generalists
- Polar bears
- Rats
- Generalists lose in certain habitats
- Natural Selection
- Charles Darwin
- 1850s
- "Better-suited organisms
are more likely to survive.
They pass on their traits."
- We now know GENES are passed on
- Modern Summary:
- Variation in species
- Competition for food /habitat to survive
- Survival of the fittest: The best adapted will survive
- Successful traits passed on
- Opposition:
- Christianity was still influential
- Jean Baptiste:
- "Giraffes acquired long necks in
order to feed: They pass this on."
- Darwin now accepted due to new
'genes' knowledge
- Peppered Moths:
- Darker moths survive in polluted areas. Their numbers increase.
- Bacteria becoming RESISTANT
- Population and Pollution
- USA and Europe using most fossil fuels
- Carbon Footprint: Total
greenhouse gas / person / time
- Measuring Pollution
- Equipment (Direct)
- Oxygen probes
- Nitrate indication chemicals
- Indicator Organisms
- Presence/Absence used to estimate pollution
- Mayfly larva lives CLEAN water
- Bloodworm: POLLUTED water
- Lichen often killed by city pollution
- Grows in clean air
- Advantages to each method:
- Ind. Organisms:
- Long time period,
cheap, no equipment
- Equipment:
- More accurate at any time
- Sustainability
- Conservation:
- Preserves food chains
- Keeps plants for medicines
- Recreational culture
- Whales
- Hunted for body parts
- Oils for alcohol, machinery
- Skin for belts, shoes, bags
- Kept in captivity for entertainment
- Controversy
surrounding
whaling bans
- Scientists want to dissect for anatomical info
- Need to be kept alive for migratory patterns
- Sustainable Development:
- Taking enough while leaving
some for future generations
- Fish quotas
- Tree replantations
- Endangered species are at risk