Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Science
- biology
- classification
- 1) the largest groups are called kingdoms
- 2) the kingdoms are then split up
into smaller and smaller groups
(phylum, class, order, family,
genus, species
- 3) it can be hard to classify
organisms into distinct (clear)
groups. this is because some
organisms seem to fit into more than
one group
- 4) classification is important because it helps
us to understand: - how organisms are related
(their are evolutionary relationships) - how
organisms interact (their ecological
relationships)
- the five kingdoms
- 1) the plant kingdom:
multicellular- cell walls
made up of cellulose- uses
energy from the sun to
make food by
Photosynthesis
- 2) the animal
kingdom:
multicellular- don`t
have cell walls-
feed of other
organisms
- 3) the fungi kingdom:
single-celled and
multicellular
organisms- cell walls
made up of chitin-
reproduce using
spores
- 4) the protoctisia
kingdom:
single-celled
organism- has a
nucleus to
control the cell
- 5) the prokaryote
kingdom:
single-celled
organism- don`t
have a nucleus to
control the cell
- four main groups of the Arthopods
- myriapods: lots of legs(around
20-400 legs)- bodies are made up of
segments (bands)
- arachnids:
eight legs and
no antennae
- crustaceans: mostly live in
water- legs branch into two
at the end
- insects: has six
legs and two
antennae- bodies
are made up of
three parts
- pyramids of biomass and Numbers
- each bar on the
pyramid of biomass
represents the mass
of living material at
that particular stage
of the food chain
- the weight of the all
the organisms
together
- pear tree- 1000kg
- aphids- 5kg
- ladybirds- 1.5kg
- partridges- 0.5kg
- The pear tree bar is
bigger because it weighs
more
- the pear tree is at the bottom
of the pyramid because it is at
the bottom of the food chain
- to construct a pyramid
of biomass you have to
use the `dry biomass` of
the organism
- you have to remove the
water from the
organisms before
weighing them
- each bar on a pyramid of
NUMBERS shows the number of
organisms not the mass
- the pyramid of
biomass is shaped as
a pyramid but a
pyramid of numbers is
not
- energy transfer and energy flow
- the suns energy is
the source of energy
for nearly all life on
earth
- the sun enters the food chain
when plants absorb the sunlight
for photosynthesis
- photosynthesis is where a plant
uses the suns light to produce
their own food
- all of the organisms in the food
chain depend on the energy
from plants
- animals can only get energy by
eating plants, or by eating other
animals that have eaten plants
- energy is
passed through
the food chain
as animal eat
the plants and
each other
- at each (tropic
level) energy
is lost as heat
from
respiration
- energy is also
lost from the food
chain as waste
products (poop)
- food is
passed
out as
poop
- excretion is when the
waste products of the
body are released e.g as
wee wee
- waste products and
uneaten parts (bones)
can become starting
points for other food
chains
- example: houseflies eat poop. YUM
- energy lost at 1st
trophic level= 80000 kj-
10000 kj= 70000 kj
- interactions
between organisms
- animals compete for:
- food
- water
- shelter
- mates
- plants compete for:
- soil minarals
- water
- light
- organisms compete
for these to survive
and reproduce
- competitions between organisms affect:
- population
- disribution
- example: where
they live
- similar animals that live in
the same habitat will be
closely competing for the
same things
- example: the same food
- there are two types of relationships:
- parasitic relationships
- parasites live on or in a host (an animal or plant)
- they will take what they
need to survive and not
give anything back to the
host
- mutualistic relationship
- both organisms benifit
- cleaner species
- example: Oxpeckers live on a buffalos back
and feed on the harmful insects that live on the
buffalos back
- food chains and food webs
- food chains show what eats what in an ecosystem
- food chains always start
with a producer. the
producer MAKES THEIR
OWN FOOD using energy
from the sun
- producers are
usually green
plants, but they
can be other
organisms (such
as algea)
- an animal that
EATS
PRODUCERS is
called a
PRIMARY
CONSUMER
- a SECONDARY
CONSUMER is
an animal that
EATS the
PRIMARY
CONSUMER
- food webs are
made up of lots of
food chains joined
together
- example: grass is
eaten by a snail
and the hedgehog
but the snail is
eaten by a thrush
and a hedgehog
- the snail is a primary consumer
- the thrush is a secondary consumer
- the hedgehog is both a primary
and secondary consumer
- each stage in a food chain or web is
called a TROPIC LEVEL
- species
- a species is a group of
organisms which can
interbreed to produce fertile
offspring
- the binomial system
- this system gives each species a two-part Latin name
- the first part is refered to as the genus that the organism
belongs to
- a genus is a
group of closely
related species
- the second part refers to
the species
- example: humans are known
as Homo sapiens
- Homo is the genus
- Sapiens is the species
- used by
scientists all
over the world
- variation of any speccies
- the same species can show a
great amount of vatiation
- dogs are the same
species but have
different breeds
- they often look alike
each other and often
live in similar types of
habitats
- example: dolphins and whales
- closely related species
may look very different if
they have evolved to live
in different habitats
- example: zebras and horses
- predators, prey and adaption
- the size and population can
grow depends on how much
food there is for it to eat
- if a population of prey
increases, the population of
predators will also increase
because there is more food
- as the population of
predators increases, the
number of prey will
decrease because there
are more being eaten
- adaptations
are features or
behaviours of
organisms that
help them to
compete and
survive
- some animals are
adapted to be
successful predators.
others are adapted to
avoid being caught
as prey
- most predators
have binocular
vision
- this means they can judge
the size and distance of
their prey
- many predators
chase their prey
- example: wolves often
chase deer over long
distances
- some hunt in teams
- example: groups
of lions can kill
large animals
- others ambush
their prey
- example: alligators hide and
wait for their prey to move closer
- many predators only breed when
there is lots of prey available to feed
their young