Ecology

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Ecology: Its Relevance and Relationships With Other Fields

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Transcript of Ecology

Page 1: Ecology

Ecology: Its Relevance and Relationships

With Other Fields

Page 2: Ecology

ECOLOGY• Is a scientific discipline interrelated with a wide variety of fields of study• Its primary focus is on the individual’s relationship with the environment.

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Where is ecology found in the spectrum of life?

•The biological spectrum contains the level of the organization of life:•Protoplasm •Cell•Tissue

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•Organ•Organ system•Organism•Population •Community•Ecosystem•biosphere

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Levels of organization that make up the outside of the organism:

•Population group of organism of the same kind.•Community group of populations living together in a given place.

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•Ecosystem group of various species of plants, animals and microbes interacting with each other and with the environment.•Biosphere is the world of life.

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Types of Ecosystem•Prairie or Grassland is an extensive tract of level or rolling land characterized by a deep soil with covering of tall coarse grasses. This is common in the Central States of America.

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Types of Ecosystem•Desert is an uninhabited and incultivated tract of land. It is desolate, barren, waterless, and treeless region of the earth. It is typically found in the Middle East.

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Types of Ecosystem•Forest is a large tract of land covered with trees and undergrowth, sometimes intermingled with pasture.

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Types of Ecosystem•Tundra is located between the Arctic snow and ice and on the tree line lies the flat, marshly land. Only mosses and low plants grow.

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Types of Ecosystem•Savannah is a place characterized by a very cold night and a very hot day. It is like an enormous meadow.

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Biological spectrum1. Life begins with a

mass of protoplasm and operates within the biosphere. It follows continues pattern.

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Biological spectrum

2. There is an increasing complexity from one level to another.

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Biological spectrum

3. The levels of organization are interrelated with one another.

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Biological spectrum4. The interrelationships of these different levels show that organisms are dependent on one another.

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Historical aspects of ecology

1. Early man as hunter

2. The rise of agriculture

3. Ecology prior to the seventeenth century.