Abiotic and Biotic Factors

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Abiotic and Biotic Factors

description

Abiotic and Biotic Factors. Biotic factor : living, or once living, factor in an ecosystem. Biotic and Abiotic Factors. Biotic and Abiotic Factors. Abiotic factor : physical, or non living, factor in an ecosystem Abiotic factors were NEVER living. Characteristics of Living Things. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Abiotic and Biotic Factors

Page 1: Abiotic and Biotic Factors

Abiotic and Biotic Factors

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Biotic and Abiotic Factors

• Biotic factor: living, or once living, factor in an ecosystem

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Biotic and Abiotic Factors

• Abiotic factor: physical, or non living, factor in an ecosystem– Abiotic factors were

NEVER living

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Characteristics of Living Things

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• Universal genetic code (DNA)

• Made up of cells

How do we know something is alive?

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• Reproduction

• Growth and development

How do we know something is alive?

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• Response to environment

• Energy

How do we know something is alive?

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• Maintain stable internal environment (homeostasis)

• Adaptation and Evolution

How do we know something is alive?

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Is it ALIVE?!• Chalk• Fire• Earthworm• Apple seed• Pine tree• Mildew• Sand• Potato• Rose bush• Ocean

• Corn• Mouse• Dirt• Virus• Mushroom• Frog• Snake• Milk• Blood• Chair

As a pair, tell me whether each object above is alive or not alive. Explain your reasoning for each using what you just learned about living vs. non-living things.

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Classification of Living Things

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How are organisms classified?• Similarities in:– Habitat– Adaptations– DNA sequences and number of genes– Evolutionary relationships

• Homologous structures• Similarities in embryology

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Cladograms

• Shows evolutionary relationships among groups of organisms

• Derived characters: characteristics that appear in recent parts of a lineage but not in older members

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Hierarchy of Classification

KingdomPhylum

ClassOrderFamilyGenus Species

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Kingdoms

Five Kingdoms• Monera• Protista• Fungi• Plantae• Animalia

Six Kingdoms• Eubacteria• Archaebacteria• Protista• Fungi• Plantae• Animalia

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Animals

• Multicellular• Heterotrophic• No cell walls

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Types of Heterotrophs

• Heterotroph: cannot make it’s own food– Must eat to obtain energy

• Herbivore• Carnivore• Omnivore• Parasite• filter feeder• Detritus feeder (Detrivore)

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Animal Phyla• Porifera• Cnidaria• Ctenophora • Platyhelminthes• Annelids (Annelida)• Nematoda• Echinoderm

(Echinodermata)• Arthropods (arthropoda)• Mollusks (molussca)• Chordates (chordata)

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Characteristics of all Chordates

• Have 4 common characteristics for at least one stage of life– Dorsal, hollow nerve cord– Notochord (support structure below the nerve

cord)– Pharyngeal pouches– Tail that extends beyond the anus

• Most chordates are vertebrates

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Types of Vertebrates

• Myxini - hagfishes • Cephalaspidomorpha - lampreys• Chondrichthyes - cartilaginous fishes • Osteichthyes - bony fishes • Amphibia - frogs, toads, salamanders• Reptilia - turtles, snakes, lizards• Aves - birds • Mammalia - mammals