4.7.1 Adaptations, interdependence and competition

4.7.1.1 Communities

Biodiversity

  • Biodiversity is a measure of the variety of living organisms within a particular habitat, ecosystem, biome, or all over Earth.

Habitat

  • A habitat is an area where one or more organisms live.
    • For example, a fish could have a pond as its habitat.

Population

  • A population is all of the organisms of the same species in a certain area.

Community

  • A community refers to all of the populations present inside a single habitat.
    • For example, a pond might have populations of birds, frogs, fish and insects.

Ecosystem

  • An ecosystem is the interaction of the community with all of the abiotic and biotic features in the environment.

Abiotic and Biotic Factors

  • Abiotic factors are non-living factors and biotic factors are living factors.

Food Chain

  • There is a food chain in ecosystems.
  • This consists of:
    • producers
    • primary consumers,
    • secondary consumers
    • tertiary consumers.
  • These are known as trophic levels.

Producers

  • Producers provide energy to the ecosystem by photosynthesising to produce food.
    • They are general algae and plants.

Primary Consumers

  • Primary consumers are herbivores.
    • These are organisms that eat only plants.
    • Examples include deer and cows.

Secondary Consumers

  • Secondary consumers get their energy from primary consumers.
    • Therefore, organisms at this level of organisation are called carnivores.
    • These types of organisms eat only animals.
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Tertiary Consumers

  • Tertiary consumers eat the secondary consumers.
    • Organisms at this trophic level are also carnivores.

Interdependence

  • Ecosystems are very intricately linked.
    • Each organism is inextricable linked to one another.
    • If one relationship fails, the whole food chain can fall.

Competition

  • Competition occurs usually at the same trophic level.
    • Plants will compete with other plants for nutrients, space, light, water and minerals at the producer level.
    • Animals will compete for territory, mates and food.

Competition

  • Organisms with better adaptations will outcompete the others, therefore will survive and have more offspring.
  • Competition can come from within an a species or from different species.
    • It all depends on whether the resources required are from one species or another.

Stable Communities

  • In stable ecosystems, the size of the community stays constant at all times.
    • This occurs in the ecosystem of the fruits, bats and eagles.
    • In such ecosystems, even the environmental factors, such as light and minerals are balanced.
  • This explains why problems such as deforestation can cause so much harm to ecosystems.

4.7.1.2 Abiotic factors

Abiotic factors

  • Abiotic factors are non-living factors that affect a community.

Light Intensity

  • Light intensity is an incredibly important abiotic factor.
    • Plants require light for photosynthesis.
    • Therefore, if there is competition for light in an ecosystem, those organisms that are more adapted to catch more light are more likely to survive.
    • One example of this adaptation would be having larger leaves.

Light Intensity

  • Some plants have developed an optimum light intensity.
    • This means that some plants require a lot of light, whereas others do not.
    • Dracaena plants and cacti grow well with little light, whereas plants such as aloe vera require a lot of light.

Temperature

  • Plants and animals have an optimum temperature.
    • If the temperature is greater than the optimum temperature, its enzymes will denature.
    • If the temperature is too low, the enzymes will work too slowly.

Moisture

  • Different plants have different optimum levels of moisture.
    • If you overwater a plant, the soil will become waterlogged.
    • This means that the roots will be drowned and unable to respire, killing the plant.

Soil and aquatic pH

  • Some plants grow well in areas with a higher pH and others grow well in more acidic soils.
    • Some plants, like the hydrangea plants, can grow in both types of soil.
    • If the pH of an aquatic ecosystem changes, it could have a huge effect.
    • Organisms have adapted to survive at different pH levels in the water.

Mineral Content

  • Plants have different optimal mineral content levels.
    • Some plants require a high mineral content to grow well.
    • For example, many plants require a lot of magnesium.
    • Magnesium is a key ingredient for the composition of chlorophyll.
    • Some plants even trap organisms in the soil in order to increase the level of minerals.

Wind Intensity and Direction

  • Organisms often prefer sheltered environments.
    • Some locations are very affected by wind.
    • This will mean that plants suffer and the seeds of the plant will be easily dispersed around.
    • This will affect the organisms that feed upon these and the plant will struggle to grow.

Carbon Dioxide Levels for Plants

  • Plants require an optimum carbon dioxide level.
    • Higher levels of carbon dioxide will lead to increased plant growth, as it will allow more photosynthesis.
    • Woodland areas have a high level of carbon dioxide, so promote crop growth.
    • Plants in other areas have evolved to survive in areas with lower carbon dioxide levels.

Oxygen Levels for Aquatic Organisms

  • Oxygen dissolves into the water in order to provide supplies for aquatic organisms.
    • In polluted rivers, the oxygen level decreases.

Oxygen Levels for Aquatic Organisms

  • You must take all of this info into account and analyse tables of data. For example:
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4.7.1.3 Biotic factors

Biotic factors

  • A biotic factor is a living factor that can affect an ecosystem.

Availability of Food

  • Organisms need food for survival.
    • This means that the areas where food is in abundance, such as rainforests, allow a great amount of growth.
    • Tundra areas, such as Siberia, however, have less food and so fewer organisms can survive here.

New Predators

  • When a new predator enters a stable ecosystem, they provide more competition to the organisms in their trophic level.
    • This will mean that the number of prey will dramatically decline.
    • This could wipe out all of the other predators, as their food supply will be reduced dramatically.

New Pathogens

  • Pathogens being introduced into an ecosystem can have a dramatic effect.
    • When Europeans colonised Australia, smallpox was introduced from the colonisers.
    • This devastated the Aboriginal population, as they had not developed the required immunity.

Uses of Pathogens

  • Pathogens can be used for biological control.
    • Ash borers are controlled by introducing pathogens and parasites into their population.

Species Outcompeting

  • New species can outcompete an existing species.
    • The cane toad was introduced from Europe to Australia.
    • This led to it outcompeting the existing species’ and led to an increase in the population of the cane toad.
    • Such a system also occurred with the introduction of grey squirrels in Europe.

4.7.1.4 Adaptations

Types of Adaptation

  • Plants and animals are well adapted to different surroundings.
    • These adaptations have helped them to survive and reproduce.
  • They can be:
    • behavioural
    • structural
    • Physiological.

Physiological Adaptations

  • An organism’s physiology involves the processes it undergoes to stay alive.
    • Some plants are specifically adapted in order to stay alive. Some are toxic to  eat for predators, for example the Water Hemlock.
    • Some on the other hand are resistant to antibiotics and pesticides.
    • These advantages are internal or cellular features that help a plant to survive.

Behavioural Adaptations

  • Some plants have modified their behaviour in order to survive.
    • The Venus Fly Trap for example can trap insects in its leaves for food.
    • Tropisms are also an example of a behavioural adaptation.

Structural Adaptations

  • The structure of certain plants have been developed to survive.
    • For example, some plants, such as cacti, have thorns and spines to defend from predators.
    • They could also be a darker colour, to absorb solar heat.

Physiological Adaptations

  • Animals can also be toxic or produce venom in order to add off predators.
    • The spitting cobra projects venom from its fangs as a form of defence.
    • This venom can blind predators.
    • More over, organisms secrete pheromones to attract or repel organisms.

Behavioural Adaptations

  • Courtship behaviours attract the opposite sex.
    • They are ritualised actions to attract members of the opposite sex of the same species.
    • They enable the development of a bond to raise offspring together.
    • Wolves huntings in packs is another example of a behavioural adaptation.

Structural Adaptations

  • Birds of prey have very sharp claws and are incredibly strong, in order to fly fast and hunt their prey.
  • The most common structural adaptation is the difference between predators and prey.
    • Predators have eyes on the front of their face, whereas prey have eyes on the sides of their face.

Extremophiles

  • Extremophiles are organisms are adapted to live in extreme environments.
    • This can include dangerous temperatures, pressures and salt levels.
    • The majority of these organisms are not animals and plants, but bacteria.

Animals

  • Polar bears are well adapted to their Arctic conditions.
    • Polar bears have strong senses of smell and sight in order to sense well camouflaged prey.
    • They have a high surface area: volume ratio, which reduces heat loss as it reduces the speed of conduction.

Animals

  • Penguins are adapted to the Antarctic conditions.
    • Emperor penguins must survive in winds of around -60 degrees celsius.
    • They are well adapted for this with blubber and a thick, waterproof set of feathers for insulation

Bacteria

  • Ecosystems exist in the deep sea volcanic vents which have very high temperatures, pressures and are also pitch black.
    • Bacteria have adapted to live off the chemicals in these vents.
    • They act as producers and provide food for tubeworms.
    • These highly adapted organisms have a symbiotic relationship.
    • This means that they interact with one another and depend on each other to survive.
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