food webs within ecosystems marine, freshwater, and terrestrial food webs

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Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

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Page 1: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Food Webs Within Ecosystems

Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial

FOOD WEBS

Page 2: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Ecosystems

• An ecosystem is a community of organisms interacting with one another and their environment.

• An ecosystem includes all biotic and abiotic factors.– Biotic Factors – All living things

• Plants, animals, fungi and bacteria

– Abiotic Factors – All nonliving things• Water, land, light, temperature and soil composition.

Page 3: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Marine Ecosystems

Oceans

Page 4: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Freshwater Ecosystems

Lakes, ponds, rivers, streams and aquifers

Page 5: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Terrestrial Ecosystems

Forests, Deserts, Grasslands, Mountains

Page 6: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Habitat

A habitat is a place where an organism lives.

Page 7: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Population

A population is a group of individuals of the same species that live in a certain area.

Page 8: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Community

A community is all of the populations that live and interact with each other in an area.

Page 9: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Niche

A niche is the role of an organism

within it’s community.

Includes what it eats, when it eats

and where it lives.

Coral, plankton, fish

Page 10: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Food Chain

A food chain shows how the

energy in food is passed from organism to

organism in an ecosystem.

Page 11: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Food Web

A food web is a combination of

all the overlapping

food chains in an ecosystem.

Page 12: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Producers

• Producers are organisms that make their own food through photosynthesis.

• Examples – plants, algae and plankton

Page 13: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Consumers

• Consumers are organisms that eat other organisms to obtain food for energy.

Page 14: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

There are 3 Types of Consumers

• Herbivores – Animals that only eat plants

• Omnivores – Animals that eat plants and other animals

• Carnivores – Animals that only eat other animals (meat)

Page 15: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

• Primary Consumer

• Secondary Consumer

• Tertiary Consumer

Page 16: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Predator/Prey Relationships

• Predator – Organism that eats another organism

• Prey – Organism that is eaten by the predator

Page 17: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Parasite/Host Relationships

• Parasite – organism that feeds off other living creatures – Fleas, Ticks, Worms, Lice, etc.

• Host – organism on which the parasite is feeding. Always bad for host!

Page 18: Food Webs Within Ecosystems Marine, Freshwater, and Terrestrial FOOD WEBS

Decomposers

• A decomposer is an organism that gets their energy by breaking down dead organisms.