SC.912.L.17.9 Made by Janice Garcia E.O.C Review.

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SC.912.L.17.9 Made by Janice Garcia E.O.C Review

Transcript of SC.912.L.17.9 Made by Janice Garcia E.O.C Review.

Page 1: SC.912.L.17.9 Made by Janice Garcia E.O.C Review.

SC.912.L.17.9Made by Janice Garcia

E.O.C Review

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ProducersProducers get their energy from the sun

through a process called Photosynthesis. Plants take the sunlight and use its energy

to make sugar.

The plant uses this sugar, also called glucose to make many things, such as wood, leaves, roots, and bark.

Oxygen is also produced by the plant in this cycle, which is then let off into the air

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Photosynthesis

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ConsumersAnimals are called consumers because they

can not make their own food, instead they eat other organisms.

There are 3 consumers--PRIMARY CONSUMER--SECONDARY CONSUMER--TERTIARY CONSUMER

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Primary ConsumersPrimary consumers feed directly upon

primary producers to obtain their nutrients and energy.

This group of organisms includes familiar grazers such as cattle, horses and zebras.

Example: Grass is a producer. A dear is a Primary consumer. The dear eats the grass (producer).

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Tertiary ConsumerA carnivore at the top level in a food chain

that feeds on other carnivores or an animal that feeds only on secondary consumers and producers.

Tertiary consumers are mostly on the highest level of a food chain.

Some examples includes, lions, hawks and even humans.

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DecomposersDecomposers break down dead plants and

animals. They break down the waste of other organisms.

Decomposers are very important for ecosystems because if they weren't in the ecosystem, the plants would not get essential nutrients, and dead matter and waste would pile up.

Worms, molds, fungus, bacteria, and actinobacteria are some general categories of decomposers.

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Trophic levels are the feeding position in a food chain such as primary producers, herbivore, primary carnivore, etc. Plants form the first trophic level, the producers. Herbivores form the second trophic level, while carnivores form the third and even the fourth trophic levels.

The feeding of one organism upon another in a sequence of food transfers is known as a food chain.

In an ecosystem there are many different food chains and many of these are cross-linked to form a food web.

There are 3 types of ecological pyramids .

-Number pyramid -Biomass pyramid -Energy pyramid

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Energy Flow Chart

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The Water CycleThe water cycle is made up of different parts-evaporation (and transpiration)

-condensation

-precipitation

-collection

EVAPORATION-Evaporation is when the sun heats up water in oceans or other

water sources and turns it into vapor. The water vapor or leaves the river, lake or ocean and goes into the air.

CONDENSATION

-Water vapor in the air gets cold and changes back into liquid, forming clouds. This is called condensation.

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PRECIPIATION-Precipitation occurs when so much water has

condensed that the air cannot hold anymore. The clouds get heavy and water falls back to the earth as rain, hail, sleet or snow.

COLLECTION-When water falls back to earth as precipitation, it

may fall back in the oceans, lakes or rivers or it may end up on land. When it ends up on land, it will either soak into the earth and become part of the “ground water” that plants and animals use to drink. The cycle starts all over again.

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Carbon CycleCarbon is a part of the ocean, air, rocks and

even living things.Carbon is attached to some oxygen in a gas

called carbon dioxide. Plants use carbon dioxide and sunlight to make

their own food and grow. Plants that die and are buried may turn into fossil fuels made of carbon like coal and oil over millions of years.

When humans burn fossil fuels, most of the carbon quickly enters the atmosphere as carbon dioxide.

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Carbon Cycle Chart

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Energy in JoulesJoules is a measure of energy.

It measures heat, electricity and mechanical work. It was named after English physicist James Prescott Joule.

The joule is a unit equivalent to a Newton-meter, or a kilogram-meter squared per second per second.