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Ecology - IBDP Biology SL

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A presentation summarising (almost) all you need to know to study the 4th chapter on the Biology SL course.

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Uploaded on
October 22, 2023
Number of pages
64
Written in
2023/2024
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ECOLOGY
the study of relationships between organisms and their interactions with their environment

, Terms
- Species: A group of genetically similar organisms that are able to interbreed to produce a fertile offspring
- Community: A group of populations living and interacting in a particular environment (a single species can never live in isolation)
- Ecosystem: A community and its abiotic (physical, not organic) environment
- Abiotic factors: Non-living factors in an ecosystem, such as
- pH
- Salinity
- Wind speed
- Type of soil
- Biotic factors: Living factors in an ecosystem, such as

- Biome: A group of ecosystems having the same climate and dominant groups of plants and animals
- Biosphere: A collection of all biomes on Earth

, Species
- Species: A group of genetically similar organisms that are able to interbreed to produce a fertile offspring
- Interbreeding: When 2 organisms of the same species mate
- Cross-breeding: When 2 organisms of different species mate (offspring’s infertile)
- Examples of cross-breeds:
- Lion + Tigress = Liger
- Tiger + Lioness = Tigon
- Male Whale + Female Dolphin = Wholphin
- Male Bison + Cow = Beefalo
- Population: A group of organisms in the same species that are living in the same area at the same time
- 2 members of the same species may be reproductively isolated if they belong to different populations
→ unlikely to interbreed
- Occurs to behavioural, physiological, or genetic differences
- Still classified as the same species because interbreeding is functionally possible

, Types of nutrition
- Autotrophs: Produce their own complex organic compounds using carbon dioxide and other simple compounds
- Heterotrophs: Feed on other organisms to obtain organic compounds
- Consumers: organisms that obtain nutrients by ingesting or absorbing other organisms (either living or recently dead)
- Detritivores: Obtain nutrients from detritus (waste products or organic debris) by internal digestion (inside the body with the help of
a digestive tract)
- Saprotrophs: Gain nutrients from dead organic matter by digesting them externally. AKA Decomposers

- Mixotroph: Obtain organic compounds both autotrophically and heterotrophically (Euglena gracilis have chloroplasts and
can also feed on smaller organisms by endocytosis)
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