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Chapter 1 Chapter 2

About 8,000 waves


strike the Big Sur
coastline every day.
CHAPTER 1

Earth’s
Ecosystems

How do organisms exchange energy


and nutrients in an ecosystem?

20
Lesson 1
Introduction to
Earth’s Ecosystems

PAGE 24
Lesson 2
Photosynthesis:
The Basic Process
of Life
PAGE 40
Lesson 3
Microscopic Organisms
on Earth

PAGE 54
Lesson 4
Earth’s Food Chains,
Webs, and Pyramids

PAGE 66
Lesson 5
Earth’s Cycles for Life

PAGE 80
6 LS 5. Organisms in ecosystems exchange energy and
nutrients among themselves and with the environment.

21
Literature
POEM

ELA R 6.3.6.
Identify and
analyze features of
themes conveyed through
characters, actions, and
images. • ELA W 6.2.4.
Write responses to
literature.

22
from MY AMERICA
ed. Lee Bennet Hopkins

by Natasha Wing
Redwood trees rise like skyscrapers
Fingering the clouds in search of moisture
Pulling down the fog and passing it
From limb to limb
Into the deep of the forest.
The fog blankets the forest
Blocking out light, movement, and sound
Like a curtain
Draped across a stage.
Yet behind the redwood curtain
Black bear walk and stalk their prey
Deer sleep and leap away
Slugs climb and slime on leaves
Birds sing and wing in the breeze.
The show must go on
As it has for thousands of years
Behind the redwood curtain.

Write About It
Response to Literature In this
poem the author describes a forest.
What is life like in this forest? What
plants and animals live there? Write an
essay explaining the main idea of the
poem. Use details from the poem to
show how the author makes her point.

-Journal Write about it online


@ www.macmillanmh.com

23
Lesson 1

Introduction
to Earth’s
Ecosystems

California is home to one of the most diverse


collections of living things in the world. Why
do you think this is so?

6 LS 5.e. Students know the number and types of organisms an ecosystem


can support depends on the resources available and on abiotic factors, such
24 as quantities of light and water, a range of temperatures, and soil composition.
ENGAGE
Do different ecosystems contain Materials

different organisms?
Form a Hypothesis
Why do certain plants and animals live in certain
places? How does the amount of sunlight affect
different organisms? Write your answer as a
hypothesis in the form “If a plant needs lots of
sunlight, then . . .”
• trowel or spade

Test Your Hypothesis • 4 small stakes


• meterstick
Experiment With your teacher select two
areas on or near your school grounds to study. • string
Choose one area that receives plenty of sunlight • thermometer
and another that receives very little. Mark off
a 2-by-2-meter plot in each area with stakes • field guides
and string. • graph paper
Measure Measure the air temperature at • safety goggles
ground level and at 1 meter above ground
Step
level in each area.
Record Data Using graph paper record the
locations of the living things in each area. What
kinds of organisms do you see? Use field guides
to help you identify the organisms.

Draw Conclusions
Compare your observations about the two areas.
How do the temperatures differ? Which area
contains more living things? What statement
can you make about the effect of sunlight on
an ecosystem?
Step
Explore More
How do you think the amount of water in an
ecosystem affects living things? Make a prediction
about this, and design a procedure to test it. How
have people affected the ecosystem?

6 IE 7.a. Develop a hypothesis. • 6 IE 7.e. Recognize whether


evidence is consistent with a proposed explanation.

25
EXPLORE
What Is an Ecosystem?
▶ Main Idea 6 LS 5.e
A system is a group of things that work
together as a unified whole. There are systems all
The number and types of
organisms in an ecosystem around you. Our bodies contain organ systems
depend on the resources for breathing and for digesting food. Schools are
available. organized into school systems. Planets are part
of our solar system. Each system is made up of
▶ Vocabulary parts that interact with one another closely.
ecosystem, p. 26
biotic factor, p. 27
The living things in an area also work
abiotic factor, p. 27
together in systems. They all depend on the same
humus, p. 32
resources and are affected by changes that occur
topsoil, p. 32
around them. For example, a major change in
minerals, p. 32
a nonliving part of an ecosystem, such as an
acidity, p. 33
extreme drought, can affect all the organisms
alkalinity, p. 33
in an ecosystem.
ecology, p. 34 Living things are part of an ecosystem.
population, p. 34 An ecosystem consists of the living and nonliving
community, p. 35 things in an area that interact with one another.
habitat, p. 36
niche, p. 36
An Ecosystem
-Glossary
@ www.macmillanmh.com

▶ Reading Skill
Main Idea

;OW\7RSO 2SbOWZa

Explore ecosystems
with a park ranger.

26
EXPLAIN
Ecosystems look for first when searching for
Any living thing that is part of an signs of life on other planets. Other
ecosystem is a biotic factor . This term abiotic factors include air, climate, and
includes the root bio, which means altitude. All these factors influence the
“living.” Living things include tiny number and types of organisms that
organisms, such as bacteria, as well as can live in an ecosystem.
the plants and animals people can see. Identifying the living things in an
Any nonliving part of the ecosystem, ecosystem might seem to be easy. At the
such as water, minerals, sunlight, air, beach you might see birds, fish, seals,
or soil, is an abiotic factor . This term and seaweed. In contrast, think about
includes the prefix a-, which means microscopic organisms inside your
“not” or “without.” mouth. The warm, moist environment
How can you identify the abiotic there supports millions of bacteria.
factors in an ecosystem? Abiotic factors
are the parts of the ecosystem that Quick Check
help make life possible. For example,
Main Idea What are five abiotic
sunlight provides warmth and energy.
factors in an ecosystem?
Rocks provide shelter and, in time,
form soil. Water is so important to Critical Thinking How do biotic
living things that it is what scientists and abiotic factors differ?

Reading Diagrams

How would the abiotic factors shown here


affect the organisms that live in the pond?
Clue: What are the nonliving things in the
picture? 27
EXPLAIN
Why are sunlight and The parts of Earth that receive the
least direct sunlight are the North
temperature important? and South poles. Areas near the poles
The amount of sunlight a have sparse or no vegetation and
location receives directly affects fewer kinds of living things. For most
the temperature in that location. organisms, especially plants, sunlight
Temperature, in turn, affects the is an important abiotic factor.
number and types of animals and
plants that can survive in a location. Temperature
Temperature change is another
Sunlight factor that affects living things.
Areas of Earth that receive greater In some regions the temperature
amounts of sunlight have higher changes very little.
temperatures than other areas. The
equator is the part of Earth that
receives the most direct sunlight. Areas
around the equator that are not at
extremely high elevations are generally
known for their lush vegetation and
great diversity of living things.

◀ Parrots thrive in warm


climates, such as the
Amazon rain forest.

28
EXPLAIN
In tropical rain forests, for example, the seasons, some organisms migrate,
the temperature stays around 80°F or travel to a different place. Others
(27°C) almost all the time. Many become dormant, or less active, or
animals and plants thrive in places have other adaptations that enable
where the temperature does not change them to survive.
much in a single day.
In other places, the temperature Quick Check
may vary from day to night and Main Idea How does temperature
from season to season. In deserts the affect organisms in rain forests?
temperature can vary from about 32°F
(0°C) to more than 100°F (38°C) in a Critical Thinking How does the
single day. The plants and animals in amount of direct sunlight affect
a desert must be able to survive these the plant growth in an area?
wide variations in temperature.
Changes in the seasons have similar
effects. Most organisms survive better
in warm, mild summers than in
cold, icy winters. In places where the
temperature changes a great deal with

▼ These penguins are adapted


to the temperatures in their
Antarctic surroundings.

29
EXPLAIN
Central Valley irrigation

Why is water important?


Without a steady supply of water, life would not exist on Earth.
Water helps living things in several ways. It keeps cells strong and healthy.
Cells are the basic units of life. Water dissolves and transports substances.
It also helps regulate the temperature of an organism.

Your Body’s Need for Water


Press your hands together, and they will seem
firm and solid. However, about 60% to 70% of
your body is made up of water. Some parts of your
body have an even greater percentage of water.
It is no wonder that water is so important to
your survival.
Water is the body’s main transportation
vehicle. Many substances dissolve in water.
This property of water is what makes it so
vital to life. Water carries nutrients, oxygen,
and other substances to various parts of your body.
Water also carries waste materials out of your body.
Water helps regulate your body’s temperature. It cools
your skin, making you feel cooler all over. It also helps
carry excess heat away from your cells.

30
EXPLAIN
Plants’ Need for Water
Plants, too, are made up mostly of
water. Some parts of a plant, such as
the leaves and stems, may be as much as
90% water. Water transports minerals
and nutrients throughout the plant.
Water keeps plant cells rigid. You
have probably seen what happens when
a plant does not receive enough water.
The leaves and stems become weak,
and the plant wilts.
Plants need water to grow. For this
reason, the amount of water in an
area affects the number and types of
plants that live there. Areas with little
rainfall, such as deserts, have fewer
plants. The plants that do grow there
have special adaptations that allow
them to conserve water.
Plants that grow in areas that receive
little rain have adapted to the dry
conditions. For example, the shape of
the barrel cactus enables it to expand
when rain falls and to shrink during
dry times. When it expands, this cactus
stores water in its spongy tissues.
Animals have adaptations for drought
and heat, too. The kit fox has large ears ▲ barrel cactus, Anza-Borrego Desert
with dense networks of veins. These State Park, California
veins help the fox’s body shed heat.
One way that humans adapt to
dry conditions is to use irrigation. In Quick Check
places where not enough rain falls to
grow crops, farmers water their fields. Main Idea Why do plants need
Water taken from the Colorado River, water?
for example, irrigates almost 1 million
Critical Thinking Why is water
acres of land in Southern California.
good for transporting substances
This water helps crops such as lemons,
in plants and animals?
grapes, oranges, lettuce, and tomatoes
grow on land that would otherwise be
too dry for farming.
31
EXPLAIN
Why is soil important? Soil is made up of weathered rock
Soil supplies the water, air, and and humus (HYEW•muhs). As rock
nutrients that plants need in order to weathers it breaks down slowly into tiny
grow. By supporting the growth of pieces. Humus is the material in soil
plants, soil helps living things survive. formed by the breakdown of plant and
Conservation of soil is important. animal remains. It mixes with the bits
We can put plants on hillsides so the of rock and adds nutrients to the soil.
soil will not erode. Farmers conserve The substances in soil affect the types
soil by rotating their crops and letting of organisms that can live in it. Some
fields lie fallow, or unplanted, every compounds known as acids can harm
few seasons. living things if they are present in high

Soil Layers

Topsoil is the upper layer


of soil, which is made
mostly of humus, minerals,
water, and air. The humus in
topsoil is spongy and holds
water very well. This makes
topsoil an ideal material for
plants to live in.

The layer below the topsoil is called


the subsoil. Some humus can be
found near the top of this layer. As
water seeps through the topsoil into
the subsoil, it brings particles of
minerals and clay with it.

Below the subsoil is partly weathered


parent rock. The parent rock is the
rock from which the soil is formed.
Minerals are the There is no humus at this depth.
naturally occurring
solid materials of
Earth’s crust. They
include clay, sand,
and silt. Below this layer is solid rock, or bedrock.

32
EXPLAIN
concentrations. Acidity is the amount
of acid in a substance. Other compounds,
known as alkalis (AL•kuh•lighz), or bases,
may also be present in soil. Alkalinity Testing Soil pH
(al•kuh•LIN•uh•tee) is the amount of base Put three different soil samples
in a substance. in separate cups.

The acidity or alkalinity of soil is Using the soil-test kits provided


measured on a scale known as the pH by your teacher, test the pH of
each sample. Record the pH
scale. The lower the pH, the more acidic of each.
the soil is. The higher the pH, the more
Predict What do you think would
basic or alkaline the soil is. The pH of
happen if you added an antacid
the soil in an area helps determine which to the soil samples? Design an
plants will grow there. If the pH of the experiment to test your prediction.
soil changes greatly, the plants there may
not be able to survive.

Quick Check
Main Idea Why is soil important?

Critical Thinking Why should


people test soil before growing
crops in it?

The pH Scale

antacid household drain


(pH 10) ammonia cleaner
distilled water (pH 11) (pH 13)
(pH 7)

milk
(pH 6)

OaWQ
tomato
`S  P
[]
(pH 4)

b`OZ
lemon
(pH 2) \ S c
W R WQ
`S OQ
[ ]
33
EXPLAIN
What lives in an ecosystem?
All the abiotic factors in an area, population. At one time, people hunted
including temperature ranges, sunlight, elephant seals for their oil until only
water, and soil type, influence what about 100 remained. Today, there are
living things are found there. Every many elephant seals along California’s
organism in the ecosystem plays an coast. California sea lions are social
important role. The study of organisms animals. The females recognize their
and how they interact in an ecosystem pups by their sounds and their smells.
is ecology (ee•KAHL•uh•jee). Scientists Ecologists study populations,
who study this subject include ecologists, looking at the role each population
zoologists, biologists, foresters, geologists, plays in the ecosystem. They might
and geographers. observe behaviors such as breeding
In an ecosystem, all the organisms and feeding. Members of a population,
of one species make up a population . or species, breed with one another and
The millions of bacteria living in your produce offspring. They also compete
mouth make up a population. The for resources such as food, water, and
thousands of elephant seals living in shelter. Almost all populations are
the waters off California are another influenced by the human population.

California sea lions

34
EXPLAIN
Populations interact with other
Tide-Pool Community
plants and animals in their ecosystem.
Different species can compete with
each other and may even try to eat
each other. They can also help each
other.

Populations and Communities


All the populations living in an area
make up a community . To understand
this think about an orchestra. All the
violins in the orchestra would make
up one population, the cellos another,
the clarinets another, and the trumpets
another. Each group of instruments
represents a population, and each
group makes a unique contribution
to the community, or the orchestra.
Communities are often named after
the locations in which they are found.
Cactuses, sagebrush, kangaroo rats,
and jackrabbits are part of a desert
community. Frogs, minnows, cattails,
and dragonflies live in a pond
community. Each community includes
a group of populations that can survive
in the conditions found there.
Tide-pool communities are found
where the ocean meets the land.
Organisms must be able to withstand
the changing tides and the motion of
the waves.
Reading Photos
Quick Check
What items in the photo
Main Idea What is ecology? show that this is a tide-pool
community?
Critical Thinking What is the Clue: What kinds of organisms
difference between a community and land features do you see?
and an ecosystem?

35
EXPLAIN
What roles do organism does and everything it
needs. Although organisms may share
organisms have? habitats, they may not occupy the same
The success of an ecosystem niche. Suppose everyone in your town
depends on its ability to sustain life. had the same job and tried to eat at
For life to thrive, there must be plenty the same time in the same place. The
of resources, such as food and water. competition would become fierce.
In addition, the interactions among Towns, and ecosystems, are successful
living things must be in balance. To because individuals and groups make
achieve this balance, each member different contributions.
of a community has a role to play. Some populations occupy niches
A habitat is the place in which of such importance that many other
a population lives. Your home is a organisms depend on them. These
habitat. It provides you with the shelter populations are called keystone
and food you need to survive. All of species. For example, beavers build
an organism’s needs must be met by dams that flood the surrounding area,
its habitat. If you have ever set up an creating valuable wetlands. These
aquarium, you know that fish require wetlands are a rich habitat for a wide
water, the proper temperature, food, variety of living things.
and oxygen. Some types of fish and
other aquatic organisms can share a Quick Check
habitat. In natural ecosystems several
populations may share the same habitat. Main Idea What is a habitat?

The role of an organism in an Critical Thinking Why can


ecosystem is called a niche (nitch). populations share a habitat
A niche includes everything the but not a niche?

Wetlands help control flooding, filter


pollutants from water supplies, and serve
as habitats for many organisms.
36
EXPLAIN
Summarize the Main Idea Think, Talk, and Write
Main Idea What determines the number
Ecosystems are
and types of organisms in an ecosystem?
areas where living
things interact with Vocabulary In an ecosystem, all
each other and with organisms of one species make up
nonliving things. a(n) .
(pp. 26–27)
Main Idea What is the difference
Sunlight and between biotic and abiotic factors?
temperature are
;OW\7RSO 2SbOWZa
among abiotic factors
that influence the living
conditions in an area.
(pp. 28–33)

Populations include all Critical Thinking If deserts had more


the organisms of one plant life, do you think that a greater
species. Communities variety of animals would live there?
include all populations Why or why not?
living in an area. Test Practice Which of these is
(pp. 34–35) considered one of the layers of soil?
A alkalinity
B acidity
Make a C bedrock
Study Guide D humus
Make a layered-
look book (see pp. Test Practice Which of the following
487–490). Use the is an abiotic factor?
titles shown. On A plants
the inside of each B sunlight
fold, write two C animals
sentences about D people
the main idea of
the topic.

Writing Link Math Link


Expository Writing Monitor Population Growth
Research an endangered species (plant A state park contains 200 deer. If the
or animal) in or near the ecosystem in deer population doubles every year for
which you live. What biotic and abiotic 3 years, how many deer will live in the
factors have contributed to the decline park? Make a line graph to show how
of this species? the population changes over time.

-Review Summaries and quizzes online @ www.macmillanmh.com 37


EVALUATE
Compare
When scientists compare they look for
similarities among objects, materials, and data. As
scientists study a particular ecosystem over time,
they can make comparisons. They can compare
the way the ecosystem functions in the present
with the way that it functioned in the past. With
this information they can predict what the These hom
ecosystem might be like in the future.
es in Lagun
were unaf f a
ected by a Beach
landslide.
Learn It
When scientists study an ecosystem, they examine
every change they can. Scientists study changes
because one small change in an ecosystem can affect
many biotic and abiotic factors.
Charts and Venn diagrams are tools used to compare.
After you have collected and recorded data, you can see
at a glance whether the data, objects, or materials are
similar or not. Line graphs and bar graphs can also be
used to analyze changing conditions over time.

Try It
▶ Scientists monitor how sudden events such as floods
age d these
and mudslides affect an ecosystem. In this activity
A landslide dam Beach.
a
homes in Lagun
you will compare a miniature landscape before and
after a “flood.” You will need a dishpan, soil, rocks,
small twigs, water, and a watering can.

▶ Build a hill landscape of soil, rocks, and


twig “trees” in a dishpan. Draw a picture of
your landscape on a chart like the one on
this page. Use the watering can to sprinkle
water gently on your hills. Record your
observations.

▶ Hold the can high, and continue to let


water fall down on the hills. Record
your observations. Pour the rest of the
water quickly over the hills. Record your
observations. Draw a picture of the way
your landscape looks now.

38
EXTEND
Apply It
▶ Now use the information from your chart to create a Venn
diagram like the one on this page. Draw two overlapping
ovals. In one oval list the characteristics of your hill
ecosystem before the “flood.” In the other oval, list the
characteristics of your hill ecosystem after the “flood.” Write
the common characteristics in the area where the two ovals
overlap.

▶ How did your hill ecosystem change?

▶ How did it stay the same?

▶ Next, choose an ecosystem near your school or home to


observe for a month. Note any changes in the ecosystem,
and make a chart or Venn diagram to compare its
characteristics at the beginning and at the end of the month.

6 IE 7.h. Identify changes in natural phenomena over time without manipulating


39
the phenomena (e.g., a tree limb, a grove of trees, a stream, a hillslope).
EXTEND
Lesson 2

Photosynthesis:
The Basic
Process of Life

Energy from the Sun helps a plant grow.


A hummingbird gets food and energy from
a plant. How does sunlight produce energy?

6 LS 5.a. Students know energy entering ecosystems as sunlight is


transferred by producers into chemical energy through photosynthesis
40 and then from organism to organism through food webs.
ENGAGE
How does light affect plants? Materials

Form a Hypothesis
Plants need light to grow. What do you think will
happen to a plant’s leaves if you cover parts of them,
so that no light reaches those parts? Write your
answer as a hypothesis in the form “If parts of
a plant’s leaves do not receive any light, then . . .”

Test Your Hypothesis


Wrap small pieces of aluminum foil over parts of
several leaves. Wash your hands after handling
• growing plant
the plant.
(a large-leafed
Use Variables Cover at least four different plant will work
leaves of the plant in the same way. best)

Place the plant in a window where it will get • aluminum foil


lots of light. Water the plant with a measured • paper clips
amount of water.
• water
Experiment After one day, carefully lift the
foil and check each leaf. Write down your Step
observations. Gently replace the foil in the same
position. Continue your observations each day for
one week. Replace the foil in the same position
each time. How did the areas covered by the foil
differ from the other parts of the leaves?

Draw Conclusions
Interpret Data How did the changes you
observed progress after one day? After two Step
days? After a week? How do light and darkness
affect the growth of leaves?

Explore More
Remove the foil from the leaves. Water the plant with
the same amount of water you used in the previous
week, and observe it each day for another week.
What happens when the leaves remain uncovered?

6 IE 7.a. Develop a hypothesis. • 6 IE 7.d. Communicate the steps and


results from an investigation in written reports and oral presentations.

41
EXPLORE
Why is photosynthesis
▶ Main Idea 6 LS 5.a important?
Energy enters ecosystems Every living thing needs energy to live and
as sunlight, which is used grow. Some organisms, such as animals, get their
by plants to make food. energy from eating plants. Where do the plants
▶ Vocabulary get their energy from? Did you know that plants
chloroplast, p. 43
store energy from the Sun in their cells?
chlorophyll, p. 43
photosynthesis, p. 43 Photosynthesis
roots, p. 44
stem, p. 45
Light
Water + Carbon dioxide → Sugar + Oxygen
transpiration, p. 48
respiration, p. 50

-Glossary
@ www.macmillanmh.com

▶ Reading Skill
Summarize

Ac[[O`g

Poppies use sunlight to make food.

42
EXPLAIN
coleus plant ▶ chloroplast
seen through
a microscope

Photosynthesis Inside the chloroplasts the energy


Almost all organisms on Earth from the Sun is used to split the water
depend on the Sun for energy. The molecules into hydrogen and oxygen.
Sun’s energy is stored by plants as The hydrogen and oxygen combine
food during the food-making process. with carbon atoms to produce food
This activity goes on in plant cells that in the form of sugars. Oxygen, which
have chloroplasts (KLOR•uh•plasts), is given off by the plant as a waste
structures found in the cells of leaves product, enters the atmosphere.
and stems of green plants. Chloroplasts Photosynthesis helps sustain life on
contain a substance called chlorophyll Earth. In addition to producing oxygen,
(KLOR•uh•fil), a green substance in plants which animals breathe, plants also take
that absorbs energy from sunlight. in carbon dioxide to make food. This
When sunlight falls on a leaf, the helps our environment, because plants
chlorophyll traps energy from the Sun. act as natural air scrubbers. They absorb
Photosynthesis (foh•toh•SIN•thuh•sis)
carbon dioxide that would otherwise
is the process of making food by pollute the air. Then they turn it into
using sunlight. Plants, and some other oxygen that other living things need.
organisms, take in carbon dioxide from
the air and water from the environment. Quick Check
The plant or other organism then Summarize Where do plants
changes these two raw materials into store energy from the Sun?
two products. The products are sugar,
or food, and oxygen. Critical Thinking What is
photosynthesis?
43
EXPLAIN
What do roots and stems do?
When you think of photosynthesis, which part of the
plant do you think of first? Most people think of the leaves.
However, other plant structures play important roles in
photosynthesis as well.

Roots Parts of a Root


Most roots hold plants in the soil
and take in water and minerals to feed
the plants. There are two kinds of
Root Hairs Secondary
roots: taproots and fibrous roots. roots that are
Taproots are thick and straight with threadlike tissues on
a few root hairs along the sides. the surface of the root
If you have ever tried to pull a through which water
and minerals enter
dandelion out of the ground, you
know that taproots grow very
deep and strong.
Fibrous roots do not grow as Xylem Tissue
deep, but they branch out into through which
a network of thin, hairy roots. water and
These roots can form thick mats. minerals flow up
through the plant
Plants such as marigolds and
grass have fibrous root systems.
Some plants, such as orchids, have Phloem Tissue
aerial roots. Aerial roots do not anchor through which
the plant to the ground or absorb food from the
leaves moves
minerals from the soil. Instead they down through
reach out above the ground for water the plant
and sunlight to nourish the plant. To
get the sunlight and water they need,
plants with these roots grow high in
the branches of rain-forest trees. Epidermis The
outermost layer
Their green aerial roots are actually of the root
able to carry out photosynthesis.
Roots also store some of the food that
the plant produces. This is why edible
roots such as carrots, sweet potatoes, and Root Cap A thin covering,
sugar beets have such high nutritional made up of cells, that
value. When animals eat these roots, protects the root tip as
energy from the Sun passes along to them. it grows into the soil

44
EXPLAIN
Parts of a Stem

Soft Stem Woody Stem

cambium

xylem

phloem

Reading Diagrams

How are the xylem, the phloem, and the


cambium arranged differently in a woody
stem and in a soft stem?
Stems Clue: Compare the drawings of the two
Stems are the parts of a plant types of stems. How are they alike? How
are they different?
that support leaves and flowers. The
stem also transports water and other
substances between the roots and of an edible stem. Some plants, such as
leaves. Why do you think plants need asparagus, have photosynthetic cells in
to hold their leaves up to the Sun? They their stems that can help make food.
need to do this so they can receive as Other plants use stems as a reservoir
much sunlight as possible to carry out for water. In what environment do you
photosynthesis. think it is very important for plants to
Look at the diagram on this page. store large amounts of water? You are
Inside the stem are tubes called xylem correct if you said, “The desert.” Some
(ZIGH•luhm) and phloem (FLOH•uhm). kinds of cactuses can store enough
Xylem carries water and minerals up water to get through several days or
from the roots through the plant to even several years without rainfall!
the leaves. Phloem carries food from
the leaves to other parts of the plant. Quick Check
Xylem and phloem may be separated
by another layer of cells called the Summarize What functions do
cambium. roots and stems share?
Stems also help store energy. Like Critical Thinking How do roots,
roots some stems store energy in the which are not green, contribute
form of food. Sugarcane is an example to photosynthesis?
45
EXPLAIN
What are leaves?
Look at a leaf from a tree or (KYEW•ti•kuhl). This waxy covering
a shrub. You might have difficulty helps prevent water from leaving the
accepting the fact that the leaf is such plant. The leaf makes food in cells
a powerful food-making machine. between the layers of the epidermis.
Inside the thin blade of the leaf are These cells contain chloroplasts. The
the structures that provide Earth with epidermis on the lower surface of a
food, oxygen, and clean air. Leaves leaf contains many tiny pores called
with only one blade are simple leaves. stomata (STOH•muh•tuh) (singular,
Leaves with two or more blades are stoma). Stomata open and close to
compound leaves. let gases, such as carbon dioxide and
oxygen, in and out. These openings
The parts of a leaf work together
also control the amount of water
to help keep the plant alive. The
that leaves the plant. Guard cells
outermost part of a leaf is its epidermis
surrounding the stomata regulate
(ep•i•DUR•mis). Cells of the epidermis
when the stomata open and close.
secrete a waxy coating called a cuticle

Parts of a Leaf

46
EXPLAIN
How Leaves Work
The veins that run through the
leaf blade bring water and minerals Leaves
to the last stop on their journey from
Collect a variety of leaves.
the roots. When carbon dioxide enters
through the stomata and sunlight is Observe Examine each leaf with
captured by the chlorophyll in the a hand lens, and write down each
structure that you can identify.
chloroplast, all the ingredients are
in place to produce food. Place a piece of white paper over
the leaf, and rub back and forth
Some leaves, such as those of with a crayon, making a print of
spinach or lettuce, store food. Others the leaf.
are designed to protect the plant. The Identify On the rubbing, identify
spines on a cactus are actually the the leaf as simple or compound,
leaves. They do a good job of protecting and label each structure.
the plant from being eaten, and their Using two different-color crayons,
small size and pointed shape minimize trace the flow of water and food
water loss in the dry environment of through the veins.
a desert.
In some areas of the world
where there are seasonal changes in
temperature, plants shut down their
food-making factories at certain times
of year. During the winter months, they
live off the food they have stored. Green
chlorophyll disappears from the leaves.
When this happens people can see the
other colors, such as yellow and orange,
that are usually masked by the green
pigment. Maple trees, as well as some
other plants, store sugar in their leaves.
The stored sugars trigger the formation
of a red pigment, giving these plants
their vibrant autumn colors.

Quick Check
Summarize What do leaves do
for a plant?
Critical Thinking What is the
difference between a simple leaf
and a compound leaf?

47
EXPLAIN
How does water move through plants?
Roots absorb water and minerals from the soil. The stems
and leaves transport the water and minerals throughout the
plant. This might not seem like a huge task in a small plant,
but how can water reach the top of a 90-meter (295-foot)
giant sequoia?
Several forces work together to move water through a
plant. Pressure builds up in the roots and forces water to
move upward into the stems. In small plants root pressure
alone can move water all the way through the plant. However,
in most plants root pressure is not enough to push water
through tall stems and into leaves. Forces that pull the water
upward are needed as well.
Capillary action is one force that pulls water up into plants.
Water molecules stick to one another and to other substances,
such as glass, cloth, cells, and soil. You can observe capillary
action by dipping the corner of a paper towel into a glass of
water. The water will appear to climb up the paper towel.
The other force that pulls water upward through a plant
is caused by evaporation. Transpiration (trans•puh•RAY•shuhn)
is the loss of water from plant leaves. The water in the
plant travels up through the veins of the leaves, and then it
evaporates into the atmosphere through the stomata. As the
plant loses water, more water moves into the plant cells to
take the place of the water that has been lost.
These three forces—root pressure, capillary action,
and transpiration—work together to keep water moving
through the parts of the plant. These forces help the plant
carry out photosynthesis and keep it from wilting.

Quick Check
Summarize What three forces move water upward
through a plant?
Critical Thinking What would happen to the plant if
it did not have stomata on the bottoms of its leaves?

◀ A huge tree can move more than 1,800 liters (476 gallons)
of water from the ground to its leaves each day. Most
people drink about 2 liters (4 pints) of water each day.

48 sequoia tree, Sequoia National Park, California


EXPLAIN
How Water Moves Through a Plant

Almost 99% of the water


that enters the roots is
vein
given off into the air by
transpiration through
the leaves’ stomata.

petiole

Water moves up the stem,


through a leaf’s petiole,
and into the leaf’s veins.
The veins carry the water
to the leaf’s cells.
Loss of water through
transpiration in the leaves
helps pull the water upward
through the xylem toward
the top of the plant.

xylem
The water is pushed upward
into the xylem and travels
up the stem. Capillary
action pulls water up
through the xylem.

Water and dissolved


Reading Diagrams minerals enter the plant’s
root hairs from the soil.
What causes water to travel from a plant’s Pressure builds up in the
roots to its stem? roots as water moves in.
Clue: Follow the path of the blue arrows in
the diagram, and read the text on page 48.

Watch how plants


transport water @ www.macmillanmh.com

49
EXPLAIN
Apples contain energy stored
during photosynthesis.

Photosynthesis
Light
Water + Carbon dioxide → Sugar + Oxygen
What happens during happens only in cells with chloroplasts

respiration? needs sunlight

stores energy
When food is eaten, energy passes from
turns energy to a sugar
organism to organism. Every time energy
produces oxygen
is passed along, some energy is lost. Each
organism uses some of the energy for its own uses water to make food

daily activities. How does a plant or animal uses carbon dioxide

use the energy that is stored in the food it eats? Respiration


When an organism needs fuel, its cells can Sugar + Oxygen → Carbon dioxide + Water + Energy
use oxygen to break apart food molecules. The happens in most cells
release of energy in plants and animals from happens in light or dark
food is called respiration (res•puh•RAY•shuhn).
releases energy
In respiration, which occurs in plants and
turns a sugar to energy
animals, sugars and oxygen join to produce
uses oxygen
water, carbon dioxide, and energy.
produces water

Quick Check produces carbon dioxide

Summarize What role does


respiration play in cells?
Critical Thinking Why can
photosynthesis and respiration
be considered reverse processes?
50
EXPLAIN
Summarize the Main Idea Think, Talk, and Write
Main Idea How does energy enter
Photosynthesis is the
ecosystems?
process in which plants
convert energy from the Vocabulary The process by which
Sun into usable chemical plant leaves lose water is .
energy stored as food.
Summarize How does root pressure
(pp. 42–43)
differ from transpiration?
Roots and stems
transport water and
other substances
between the roots
and the leaves. Ac[[O`g
(pp. 44–49)

During respiration, Critical Thinking Explain


plants and animals the relationship between plants
release energy from and an atmosphere suitable for
food. sustaining life.
(p. 50)
Test Practice In addition to carbon
dioxide, is one of the
products of respiration.
Make a A sugar
Study Guide B oxygen
C chlorophyll
Make a three-tab book D energy
(see pp. 487–490).
Use the titles shown. Test Practice What is the process
On the inside of each of making food by using sunlight?
tab, summarize how A photosynthesis
that topic can help you B xylem
understand how plants C transpiration
make food. D chloroplast

Writing Link Math Link


Write a Narrative Calculate Oxygen Released
Describe the journey of a water A forest produces 56 liters of oxygen
molecule through a plant. How does in 1 week. A single plant can produce
it enter the plant? How does it move 1 liter per week. How long will it take
through the plant? How does it exit the forest to produce enough oxygen
the plant? to fill a 10,000-liter tank?

-Review Summaries and quizzes online @ www.macmillanmh.com 51


EVALUATE
Life in the

Good expository writing


▶ introduces the main idea
Until recently scientists thought that
and develops it with facts
all life on Earth depended on sunlight.
and supporting details.
In the 1970s they made a startling
▶ gives important information discovery. They found creatures on the
about a topic. ocean floor that did not need sunlight
▶ summarizes information
to live. The question, then, was how
from a variety of sources. these creatures could survive on the
cold, dark ocean floor.
▶ uses transition words, such Earth’s mantle contains hot,
as therefore and then, to melted rock called magma. When
connect ideas. breaks in Earth’s crust occur on the
▶ draws a conclusion based ocean floor, magma wells up, fills in
on the facts and information the spaces, and gushes forth as a hot
presented. liquid called lava.

These worms live near


hot-water vents on the
ocean floor. They eat
bacteria that live on
chemicals in the water.

galatheid crab

ELA W 6.1.2. Create multiple-paragraph expository compositions: a. Engage the interest


of the reader and state a clear purpose. b. Develop the topic with supporting details and
precise verbs, nouns, and adjectives to paint a visual image in the mind of the reader.
52 c. Conclude with a detailed summary linked to the purpose of the composition.
EXTEND
The lava contains large amounts
of various chemicals that bacteria
feed on. These hot spots are called
hydrothermal vents. Scientists found
worms, clams, crabs, mussels,
and fish living near these vents.
The animals survive in this dark
environment by eating these bacteria.
Most life on Earth depends on
sunlight and on photosynthesis—but
not all life does! Nature is full of
surprises.

Write About It
Expository Writing Write a report
telling how sunlight helps support your
life. Engage your reader right away, and
clearly state your purpose for writing.
Introduce the main idea, and develop it
with facts. Use supporting details and
precise verbs, nouns, and adjectives to
describe and explain your subject. Do
print and online research. Summarize
your findings at the end of the report.

-Journal Write about it online


@ www.macmillanmh.com

53
EXTEND
Lesson 3

Microscopic
Organisms
on Earth

Did you ever think about where some of the most


amazing and beautiful organisms can be found? Look at
several drops of pond water through a microscope. The
paramecium shown here is one part of the fascinating
world of microscopic organisms.

6 LS 5.b. Students know matter is transferred over time from one organism to
54 others in the food web and between organisms and the physical environment.
ENGAGE
What can you see through Materials

a microscope?
Make a Prediction
What do you think you will see if you look at an
onion skin, sand, or yeast under a microscope? Write
your prediction in the form “If I look at an onion skin,
sand, or yeast under a microscope, then . . .”
• microscope

Test Your Prediction • 4 microscope


slides
Observe Place a piece of newspaper on a
microscope slide. Place the slide on the stage • dropper
of the microscope, and observe it under • water
low power. Draw what you see. Look at the
• toothpick
newspaper again under high power. Record
your observations. • small pieces
of newspaper
Observe Select your own samples. Repeat
step 1 for each sample. Record what you see. • onion skin
• sand
Record Data Make a data table to record
the details of what you observed. How many • yeast
organisms did you observe? How big were
Step
they? What colors were they?

Draw Conclusions
Observe What did you learn about the
way objects appear when viewed through a
microscope? What happened to your observations
as you changed from low power to high power?
Observe Describe the appearance of each
of the samples you observed.

Explore More Step


Did you see any differences among the samples
under the microscope? Research the types of cells
you looked at. Analyze and present your results.

6 IE 7.b. Select and use appropriate tools and technology


(including calculators, computers, balances, spring scales,
microscopes, and binoculars) to perform tests, collect data,
and display data.

55
EXPLORE
What are microscopic
▶ Main Idea 6 LS 5.b organisms?
Energy and matter are Microscopic organisms are found everywhere.
transferred from one They live and grow on every surface in the
organism to another at world. Some are producers, which can make
the microscopic level.
their own food by photosynthesis. Others are
▶ Vocabulary consumers, which eat other organisms for food.
microscope, p. 57 Some are decomposers, which break down and
electron microscope, p. 57 consume dead organisms. Microorganisms are
prokaryote, p. 58 an important part of Earth’s ecosystems. They
eukaryote, p. 58 provide larger organisms with some of the food
protist, p. 59 and oxygen they need to survive. They help
enrich the environment by breaking down
-Glossary dead organisms.
@ www.macmillanmh.com
]QcZO`ZS\a
▶ Reading Skill
Classify and Categorize
Compound Microscope

Q]O`aSORXcab[S\b
Y\]P
Reading Diagrams
TW\S
ORXcab[S\b
What parts of the microscope would Y\]P
you use to change the focus?
Clue: Look at the diagram, and read O`[
the labels.

]PXSQbWdSZS\a

abOUSQZW^a

abOUS

RWO^V`OU[

ZWUVb
a]c`QS

POaS

56
EXPLAIN
Studying Microscopic Organisms
A microscope is an instrument
that produces an enlarged image of
an object. Anton van Leeuwenhoek
(AN•ton•vahn•LAY•ven•hook), a Dutch
merchant, used a microscope to study
microscopic organisms in the 1600s.
His tool was very simple, but scientists
today have more-powerful microscopes
that enable them to see microscopic
organisms in much greater detail.
Scientists study living and nonliving
microscopic organisms with an
instrument called a compound light
microscope. A compound light ▲ Scanning electron microscopes produce
microscope uses two or more lenses magnified images, such as this picture
of bacteria found on the human tongue.
and a light source to magnify
objects. The lens on the bottom of
the microscope’s body tube is the
objective lens. The lens at the top source, to magnify samples. Electron
of the body tube, nearest your eye, microscopes cannot be used on living
is called the ocular lens. samples, because the stream of electrons
Samples placed on the stage of the and the preparation process would
microscope are first magnified by the kill them. The most commonly used
objective lens. The image that reaches electron microscope is called a scanning
the ocular lens is then magnified electron microscope, or SEM. The SEM
again. For example, the objective can magnify as much as 300,000 times
lens of a microscope magnifies an (300,000x). It scans the surfaces of
object 200 times (200x) and the nonliving samples and gives detailed
ocular lens magnifies it 10 times three-dimensional images of them.
(10x). If these two magnifications are
multiplied together, then the overall Quick Check
magnification is 2,000 times (2,000x)
(200 × 10 = 2,000). Images begin to Classify and Categorize Describe
get blurry at magnifications higher the different kinds of microscopes.
than 2,000x. Which do scientists use to study
living organisms?
Scientists study very small, nonliving
organisms and other objects with Critical Thinking Explain why
an electron microscope . This is scientists do not use electron
a powerful microscope that uses a microscopes to study human
beam of electrons, rather than a light subjects.

57
EXPLAIN
What are microscopic organisms
that make their own food?
Microscopic organisms are Microscopic organisms that
classified in two ways: by their cell produced the oxygen that first
structure and by what they eat. The made Earth inhabitable for other
cell structure determines whether they living things were prokaryotic
are prokaryotes (pro•KEH•ree•ohtz) producers, such as cyanobacteria
or eukaryotes (yoo•KEH•ree•ohtz). (SIGH•an•oh•bak•teer•ee•uh). They can
Prokaryotes have a simple cell be found in many places, including
structure without a nucleus in each fresh and salt water, hot springs, and
cell. Eukaryotes are more complex the Arctic. Today cyanobacteria and
organisms that do have a nucleus in other photosynthetic microscopic
each cell. Within each of these two producers produce about half of our
groups, there are organisms that eat oxygen supply. Without these
other organisms (consumers) and organisms plants and trees alone
those that can make their own food would not be able to support life
(producers). on Earth.
Producers make food by using the
energy in sunlight for photosynthesis. ▼ Cyanobacteria often form a
Green plants use photosynthesis to chain of cells called a filament.
make their own food and release These chains can produce
oxygen. However, green plants are not different kinds
of algae.
the only organisms that carry out
photosynthesis. Many microscopic
producers make their own food and
give off oxygen.

58
EXPLAIN
diatoms dinoflagellate

Protists
Another kind of microscopic species of dinoflagellates can light up
organism is a protist. A protist is a like fireflies. When stirred up, they give
single-celled, eukaryotic organism that off light and make the ocean appear
cannot be clearly classified as animal to glow in the wakes of passing boats.
or plant. Many protists are capable Most dinoflagellates are photosynthetic
of producing their own food through and make up a significant part of the
photosynthesis, like plants. Others eat phytoplankton, or photosynthetic
microscopic organisms. microorganisms that float in oceans
One example of a photosynthetic and lakes. They are also important
protist is a diatom. Diatoms live in oxygen producers and a major food
either salt water or fresh water. These source.
protists are very small and have
shapes such as straight lines, circles, Quick Check
or squares. Because there are so many Classify and Categorize How
diatoms living in lakes and oceans, do scientists classify microscopic
they are some of the most important organisms that have characteristics
producers of oxygen and are a major of both plants and animals?
food source for many other organisms.
Critical Thinking How are
Another kind of protist is a cyanobacteria different from
dinoflagellate (dighn•uh•FLAJ•uh•luht) . plantlike protists?
A dinoflagellate has characteristics
of both plants and animals. Some

59
EXPLAIN
What are microscopic organisms
that cannot make their own food?
Some microscopic organisms Other Traveling Protists
are not able to make their own food.
Another group of protists has
Instead, they need to find food in
pseudopods (SOO•doh•podz), or “false
their environment. They must be able
feet.” This group of protists includes
to move to where food is. To do this
hundreds of species of amoebas.
they have developed structures on the
Found in fresh water, salt water,
outsides of their cells that help them
and soil, amoebas use their pseudopods
move and eat.
to pull themselves in the direction
One protist of this type is a in which they want to move. They
protozoan. Protozoans have no cell also use their pseudopods to eat. An
walls and can find and eat food. amoeba will extend a false foot and
Examples of protozoans include wrap it around what it wants to eat.
flagellates (FLAJ•uh•latz) and ciliates. When the end of the pseudopod meets
Flagellates are protozoans that have the amoeba’s body, both the foot and
flagella (fluh•JEL•uh), or long, hairlike the food become part of the body.
structures that whip and lash to help Once the food is inside the amoeba,
them swim. Some flagellates live in it gets wrapped in a food vacuole to
ponds and lakes, feeding on smaller be digested.
organisms. Many others are parasites,
which means that they feed off and
harm other organisms.
All protists that have small, hairlike
projections, or cilia, extending from
the outsides of their cells are called
ciliates. These organisms use the cilia
as oars to move themselves through
water. Ciliates also use their cilia to
direct bacteria and other food from
their environment into a food vacuole.
A food vacuole is a structure inside
a cell that stores food.

▶ Scientists use scanning


electron microscopes to
study microorganisms.

60
EXPLAIN
Protozoans

paramecium magnified 100 times

Observing Protists
Slide a metric ruler onto the stage
of your microscope, and focus on
it, using the highest power. Measure
the field of view, and record your
measurement in millimeters.
Obtain a pond-water
sample from your
▲ The most common example of a ciliate
teacher. Put a drop of
is the paramecium. Tiny surface hairs
the water in the center
enable it to move.
of a microscope slide.
Gently place a coverslip
over it.
euglena magnified 130 times
Observe Starting with
the lowest power, focus
the microscope until
you find microorganisms.
Switch to high power, and
focus. Draw what you see.
Measure Estimate how much
area one microorganism you are
observing takes up. Multiply that
number by the size of your field
of view to estimate the size of
▲ A euglena can make its own food or eat the organism in millimeters. For
food from the environment. A flagellum example, 1 × 1 mm = 1 mm.
helps it move. 3 2 6

amoeba magnified 30 times


Quick Check
Classify and Categorize How are
microscopic consumers grouped?
Critical Thinking How do
microscopic consumers get to
their food?

Reading Photos
▲ An amoeba moves by forming thick
extensions, or pseudopods. As a Which protozoan is the smallest?
The largest?
pseudopod is thrust forward, the
rest of the amoeba flows with it. Clue: Read the label that tells
how many times each protozoan
was magnified. 61
EXPLAIN
lake ecosystem

What roles do microscopic


organisms have in ecosystems?
Microscopic producers make their own food through
photosynthesis. As a result of that process, they give
off about half of the oxygen in our atmosphere. However,
microscopic consumers cannot make their own food.
As a result they eat other microscopic organisms. ▼ These mushrooms
Both microscopic producers and microscopic consumers help recycle
are the main food source for larger consumers. There are the log.
also microscopic organisms that feed on dead organisms
of all sizes. These organisms are called decomposers,
and their job is to recycle organic materials back into
the food chain. This cycle of what eats what becomes
the first set of links in a food chain that extends
from the tiniest organisms all the way to humans.

Quick Check
Classify and Categorize What are the
three roles of microscopic organisms?
Critical Thinking What would happen if
all organisms could make their own food?
62
EXPLAIN
Summarize the Main Idea Think, Talk, and Write
Main Idea Matter and
Microscopes are tools
are transferred from one organism
that produce enlarged
to another at the microscopic level.
images of objects.
(pp. 56–57) Vocabulary A(n) produces
an enlarged image of an object.
Classify and Categorize What is the
Microscopic organisms major difference between eukaryotes
that produce food and prokaryotes?
include cyanobacteria,
diatoms, dinoflagellates,
and euglenas.
(pp. 58–61)

Microscopic producers
Critical Thinking Why are protists
form the foundation
hard to identify as plants or animals?
for most food chains
in the oceans and in Test Practice Which organisms use
freshwater ecosystems. pseudopods to move?
(p. 62) A amoebas
B euglenas
C cyanobacteria
Make a D diatoms
Study Guide Test Practice Which organisms live
Make a three-tab book in either salt water or fresh water?
(see pp. 487–490). A flagella
Use the titles shown. B cilia
On the inside of each C diatoms
tab, write several D protozoans
sentences that classify
and categorize each of
the topics.

Writing Link Math Link


Write a Narrative Determine Magnification
Write about one of the microorganisms If the objective lens on a microscope
that you have learned about. Describe magnifies an object 100 times (100x),
what its life is like. What does it look and the ocular lens magnifies it
like? How does it move? Does it have 10 times (10x), what is the overall
any enemies? magnification?

-Review Summaries and quizzes online @ www.macmillanmh.com 63


EVALUATE
What do museums do when their artwork and
other cultural artifacts are being slowly eaten by
organisms they can’t even see? They turn to scientists
like Maria Pia Di Bonaventura at the American
Museum of Natural History. Maria Pia is not a
detective, but she knows how to unlock mysteries like
these, where the main suspects are microorganisms
such as fungi and bacteria.
Maria Pia helped an art museum take a
microscopic look at several paintings. Paintings
made of wood, ink, oils, and canvas can be perfect
environments for some microorganisms to grow in.
You may not be able to
see them with your eyes,
but they give themselves
away by their green, blue,
and yellow tints and the
black markings they leave
behind.

▶ Maria Pia is a microbiologist.


That’s a scientist who
studies microorganisms
and their effects on other
organisms.

ELA R 6.2.3. Connect and clarify main ideas by identifying


64 their relationships to other sources and related topics.
EXTEND
Meet a Scientist

To study the microorganisms


that are making their home in the
art, Maria Pia first takes a sample
of them. Back in the lab, Maria Pia
focuses on the fungi. She grows
them to find out more about their
DNA. The DNA provides the
information that Maria Pia uses to
determine the species of the fungi.
The different species respond to
different treatments, so after she
identifies a species, she can figure
out the best way to protect the
paintings from its damage. ▲ Fungi grew on and damaged
Fungi don’t just live on this artwork.
paintings. They live in all kinds
of environments on our planet,
in the tropical rain forests and species of fungi, and more are
the cold tundras, in the rivers being discovered all the time. In
and the oceans, and even in fact, the world’s largest known
deserts! Maria Pia is interested organism is thought to be a fungus
in investigating their amazing weighing over 100 tons, about the
diversity—there are over 100,000 weight of an adult blue whale!

Write About It
Main Idea
Main Idea
1. Why do museums ask for help ▶ Look for the question or
from scientists like Maria Pia problem being discussed.
Di Bonaventura?
2. How does Maria Pia’s work help protect
▶ Think about how the details
works of art and other artifacts? relate to each other.

-Journal Write about it online


@ www.macmillanmh.com
65
EXTEND
Lesson 4

Earth’s Food
Chains, Webs,
and Pyramids

Whales are among the largest animals ever to have lived


on Earth. What do such large animals eat? Surprisingly,
many of them eat some of the smallest organisms in the
ocean: tiny shrimplike animals called krill. A humpback
whale eats as much as 1,360 kilograms (3,000 pounds)
of krill, plankton, and small fish each day.

6 LS 5.b. Students know matter is transferred over time from one


organism to others in the food web and between organisms and the physical
environment. • 6 LS 5.c. Students know populations of organisms can be
66 categorized by the functions they serve in an ecosystem.
ENGAGE
How can you model a food chain? Materials

Make a Prediction
What would a food chain of 20 organisms look
like? Would it be linear? Write your answer as a
prediction in the form “If 20 animals were made
into a food chain, then it would look like . . .”

Test Your Prediction


Cut construction paper into 20 rectangles. Write
the names of eight producers, six animals that • top half of empty
eat the producers, four animals that eat the plant soda bottle
eaters, and two animals that eat the animals
• yarn
that eat the plant eaters. Make a hole in each
rectangle. • construction
paper
Make a Model Cover the top of the soda
bottle with construction paper. This will be the • hole punch
Sun. Punch eight holes around the rim. Attach • scissors
a piece of yarn to each of the eight producers.
Attach the other ends to the soda bottle. Using Step
yarn, link each plant-eating animal to a producer.
Continue by linking the animals that eat the plant
eaters to the plant-eating animals. Only one animal
may be attached to a food source.

Draw Conclusions
Observe How many levels are in your model?
What happens to the number of organisms in
each level as you move away from the Sun?
Predict What would happen to the number of
plant eaters if a drought destroyed the plants?
What happens to the animal populations?

Explore More
What changes might occur in an ecosystem into
which the predators move? Make a prediction and
test it. Then analyze and present your results.

6 IE 7.d. Communicate the steps and results from an


investigation in written reports and oral presentations.

67
EXPLORE
▶ Main Idea 6 LS 5.b
Energy and matter are
transferred from one
organism to another
in food chains and
food webs.

▶ Vocabulary
producer, p. 69
consumer, p. 69
decomposer, p. 69
food chain, p. 70
primary consumer, p. 71
secondary consumer, p. 71
cattle grazing,
tertiary consumer, p. 71
Big Sur, California
food web, p. 72
herbivore, p. 72
carnivore, p. 72
▲ These cattle get their energy directly from
omnivore, p. 73 the grass, which is a producer. How would
predator, p. 73 you classify the cattle? They are consumers.
prey, p. 73
scavenger, p. 73
energy pyramid, p. 76 What are producers, consumers,
-Glossary and decomposers?
@ www.macmillanmh.com Think about how food is arranged at the
grocery store. There are sections for baked
▶ Reading Skill goods, meats, produce, and dairy products. How
Compare and Contrast
do you think each of the food groups would fit
2WTTS`S\b /ZWYS 2WTTS`S\b into an ecosystem? Energy in many ecosystems
begins with the Sun and is transferred from one
organism to another. Each living thing has a role
in this process.

Producers
Explore food webs
with a park ranger. Think of the last time you went to the grocery
Explore energy store. What did you see in the produce section?
pyramids with
a farmer.
You saw producers—fruits and vegetables. The
grains used to make the bread in the bakery aisle
are producers, too.
68
EXPLAIN
Producers , such as plants and Decomposers
algae, are organisms that use energy
Decomposers break down dead
from the Sun to make their own
organisms into simpler substances.
food. They also produce oxygen
Some of these substances are absorbed
and food that other living things need
by the decomposers. Others are
to survive. Most producers on Earth
returned to the environment. This
live near the surface of the ocean,
is one reason why decomposers are
where tiny photosynthetic organisms
an important part of an ecosystem.
carry out more than 70% of the
photosynthesis that occurs on Earth. Elements that are essential to life,
Green plants are among the producers such as oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon,
that live on land. are building blocks of living things.
When decomposers do their jobs,
Consumers they recycle these and other important
substances back into the environment.
If an organism cannot create In the process they clean up the
its own food, it must directly or environment by ridding it of waste
indirectly consume, or eat, other matter. Earth’s decomposers include
organisms. Consumers get energy worms, bacteria, fungi, and insects.
by feeding directly on producers
or by eating animals that feed on Quick Check
producers. If you eat fish, chicken,
or beef, you are indirectly getting Compare and Contrast What are
energy from a producer. The steer the main differences among producers,
that is now a steak either grazed on consumers, and decomposers?
grass or was fed a mixture of grains. Critical Thinking How do consumers
get the energy they need to survive?
▼ These mushrooms are
returning important
substances to the
environment by
breaking down
the stump of
a maple tree.

69
EXPLAIN
What is a food chain?
A food chain shows how energy
flows from one organism to another in
an ecosystem. In a food chain, producers
absorb the Sun’s energy before passing
it on to consumers and decomposers.
The path by which the energy travels can
be short and simple or long and complicated.
What does a food chain look like? Is it arranged
by size, from the largest organism to the smallest?
Do larger organisms always consume organisms of
▲ The zebra and
a slightly smaller size? This is not always the case. the lion are part
Remember the humpback whale? It eats krill, some of a food chain.
of the smallest animals in the sea. Cougars, on the
other hand, sometimes prefer to prey on animals
larger than themselves, such as moose and elk.

Forest Food Chain

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Reading Diagrams

What is the path of energy


in this forest food chain?
Clue: Follow the arrows.
70
EXPLAIN
Your Food Chain
Keep a log of everything you eat
for one day.
Classify For each food, determine
whether it is a producer or a
consumer.
Classify Which foods did you list
as producers?
Classify Which foods did you list
as consumers?
Links in the Food Chain
Communicate Select two foods
Consumers can be classified by from the consumer group, and
where they fall on the food chain. draw a possible food chain for
Primary consumers , which are each. Do not forget to include
organisms that eat producers, are the yourself. Did you include
second link in a food chain after decomposers in your food
chain? Where do they fit?
producers. On land, primary consumers
include insects, mice, rabbits, horses,
and elephants. The size of the animal
does not always determine its diet or
its location on the food chain.
The organisms that get their energy
by eating primary consumers are The remains of these plants and
called secondary consumers . animals break down into nutrients that
Secondary consumers make up the producers use. This completes the cycle
third link in a food chain. Many birds, and allows another food chain to begin.
for example, are secondary consumers, The amount of energy present decreases
because they eat insects that feed on as it travels through each organism, but
plants. A snake that eats such a bird it never completely disappears. Some of
is a tertiary consumer . A tertiary the energy is used for life processes, and
consumer is usually the top predator some is given off as heat, but it never
in a food chain. There are usually many completely disappears.
producers and few tertiary consumers.
What happens to an organism Quick Check
that is not eaten? If an organism
Compare and Contrast How do
is not eaten, it will eventually die.
people fit into the food chain?
Decomposers are present throughout
the food chain to break down the Critical Thinking Compare primary,
remains of dead plants and animals. secondary, and tertiary consumers.
71
EXPLAIN
What is a land food web? of their mouths for tearing plant
material. Their flattened back teeth
Do you eat only one kind of food? are perfect for grinding the plants
If you are like most people, you enjoy to a pulp. Many ocean-dwelling
a variety of foods. In nature most animals are filter feeders. Some filter
organisms would not survive if they feeders use modified teeth, called
fed on only one type of food. baleen, to filter out small organisms
A food chain represents only one from huge mouthfuls of water.
thing that each consumer may eat. It
shows only one path that the energy Carnivores
follows from the Sun through the food
Carnivores are secondary and
chain. A food web shows all the food
chains in an ecosystem and shows how tertiary consumers, animals that eat
they overlap. Food webs also show the other animals. Some carnivores rip
roles and relationships among all the into prey with their sharp incisors
species in an ecosystem. and canine teeth or with their beaks.
They typically eat more than one kind
of animal. For example, coyotes eat
Herbivores a variety of small mammals as well as
Just like food chains, all food webs birds and snakes. Cats will eat fish and
begin with producers. Herbivores are other animals. The golden eagle preys
primary consumers, or animals that upon a variety of animals, including
eat producers. On land, herbivores prairie dogs, rabbits, and ground
have flat-edged teeth in the fronts squirrels.

Land Food Web

A food web is a series of overlapping


food chains. It is a more accurate
representation of the feeding
relationships in an ecosystem
than a food chain,
because most
animals eat more
than one thing.

72
EXPLAIN
Omnivores
Animals that eat both producers
and consumers are omnivores . Many
animals, including humans, are
omnivores. Raccoons will eat fruits,
nuts, grains, birds’ eggs, young rabbits,
rodents, fish, turtles, and even scraps
from your garbage.

Predators
Living things that hunt and kill other
living things for food are predators .
The animals they hunt are prey . Most
animals, at one time or another, will be
both predator and prey. A snake can eat
a mouse one day and find itself as prey
for a hawk the next day.

Reading Diagrams
▲ The California condor
Which of these animals are
is a large scavenger.
predators? Which are prey?
Clue: Follow the arrows on Scavengers
the diagram to see which
animals prey on others. Have you ever been on a scavenger
hunt? It is a game in which you have to
find items. In the same way, scavengers
seek out the remains of dead animals
to eat. They eat meat without hunting
or killing the prey. Jackals, vultures,
and crows are scavengers. Fungi are
another type of scavenger. Fungi such
as mushrooms get their energy from
decaying plants and animals.

Quick Check
Compare and Contrast What
is the difference between a food
chain and a food web?
Critical Thinking Which roles in
a food web could people play?
73
EXPLAIN
What is a marine food web?
Just like land food webs, marine by changes in high and low tides.
food webs begin with producers. Despite the harsh conditions found at
In the ocean, phytoplankton are the ocean’s edge, the intertidal zone
the primary producers. Because supports a variety of living things. Each
phytoplankton depend on sunlight time the tide comes in, the plants and
to carry out photosynthesis, the size animals that live there are submerged in
of their populations depends on the water. At low tide they are exposed to
amount of sunlight that penetrates air and sunlight.
the water. Oceans are divided into
different areas depending on the Some parts of the intertidal zone
amount of sunlight they receive are covered by water only during the
and the temperature of the water. highest tides. Only a few species of
algae and mollusks are found there.
Areas that are underwater during high
Intertidal Zone tide contain algae and animals such as
The intertidal (in•tur•TIGH•duhl) snails, crabs, sea stars, and small fish.
zone is the area of the ocean at the These are food sources for many land
edge of the land. This area is affected and sea creatures as well as shorebirds.

red knots

74
EXPLAIN
Ocean Zones
From just beyond the low-tide
line to the point where the open
ocean begins is an area where
sunlight penetrates and waters are
calmer. There you will find
some of the world’s most
magnificent underwater
habitats. For example,
the giant kelp forests
off the California coast
provide food and shelter
to hundreds of species
of fish, invertebrates,
marine birds, and marine
mammals. This is a region
of complex food webs with
predators such as sea lions and
harbor seals and many types of
prey at every feeding level.
In the open ocean, most organisms
live in three main zones. The top, or
sunlight, zone reaches from the surface
down to about 200 meters (656 feet).
Plankton live near the surface, where
the sunlight penetrates the water.
Squid, octopuses, whales, fish, and
many other organisms feed on the
▲ Sea otters find shelter and food in
plankton. the diverse kelp-forest community.
Between about 200 meters (656
feet) and 1,000 meters (3,280 feet)
there is little light. This zone, the
twilight zone, is dark and cold, with Quick Check
little food available. Animals that live
Compare and Contrast What are
in this zone have adaptations for these
the differences among the three
harsh conditions. The third zone down
main zones in the open ocean?
has no light and is called the midnight
zone. No photosynthetic organisms Critical Thinking What do land
grow here, and some animals are food webs and marine food webs
eyeless. have in common?

75
EXPLAIN
How are populations Anything that happens in an
ecosystem can upset the balance of
connected? food and energy. As long as populations
Food chains and food webs in a community can obtain the food,
show how energy flows through an water, and shelter they need, they can
ecosystem. What they do not show reproduce and grow as a species. If
is how energy is lost as it passes something happens to decrease any
from producers to consumers to of these resources, competition may
decomposers. Energy pyramids are increase within the community. This
models that show how energy moves can cause the population of a species
through a food chain. Producers always to decrease or even to become extinct.
make up the base of the pyramid. On the other hand, the species might
At each feeding level above the base, adapt to change or migrate to new
energy is lost. When animals eat, they areas. Knowing about food chains and
cannot absorb all the energy their food food webs helps scientists predict how
contains. Organisms also lose energy communities will be affected by change.
when they perform their daily activities.
Think about the energy you use each Quick Check
day. As energy is used, it is transferred
to the environment as heat. Compare and Contrast What do the
layers of an energy pyramid show?
Energy decreases from the base
of the pyramid to the top. About Critical Thinking What would
10% of the energy at one level can happen if resources decreased
be used by animals at the next level. in a location?
With less and less energy available at
higher levels, fewer animals can survive.
Are there more producers or consumers
in the world? The decrease in energy
limits the number of consumers on the
food chain, so there are more producers.

▶ ocean energy pyramid

76
EXPLAIN
Summarize the Main Idea Think, Talk, and Write
Producers use energy
Main Idea Food chains show how
and are
from the Sun to
transferred.
make their own food.
Consumers get their Vocabulary A(n) eats
energy from producers. the remains of dead animals it finds.
(pp. 68–69)
Compare and Contrast How is a
A food chain shows the scavenger different from a decomposer?
flow of energy from 2WTTS`S\b /ZWYS 2WTTS`S\b
one organism to
another in an ecosystem.
(pp. 70–71)

A food web shows all


the food chains in an Critical Thinking Explain why a food
ecosystem and how web tells us more about an ecosystem
they overlap. than a food chain.
(pp. 72–75)
Test Practice Which of the following
is not a group into which organisms
are classified in an ecosystem?
Make a A producers
Study Guide B decomposers
Make a three-tab book C consumers
(see pp. 487–490). D energy pyramids
Use the titles shown. Test Practice What are living things
On the inside of each that hunt and kill other living things
tab, compare and for food?
contrast the role of A herbivores
each topic with others B predators
in the lesson. C fungi
D scavengers

Writing Link Math Link


Persuasive Writing Use Percents
Research an issue that affects Earth’s An energy pyramid shows that
ecosystems. Then write and record a 90% of the energy is lost from one
public-service announcement to state level to the next. If you start with
your position on the issue. 100,000 units of energy, how much
energy does the next level get?

-Review Summaries and quizzes online @ www.macmillanmh.com 77


EVALUATE
Why Are They
at the Top
of Their
Food Chain?
Have you ever seen an eagle, a hawk, or an owl swoop
down and capture its food? These birds of prey, or
raptors, are at the top of their food chain, because they
have few predators. Their bodies are amazing flying
machines that enable them to attack quickly and fly
away with their prey.
Raptors have strong, sharp beaks and
large wings. Their wings help them soar Finding ratios
and swoop down on their prey, which they To find the ratio of body
capture in their talons, or claws. Raptors’ length to wingspan,
wingspans (the distance from the tip of one
▶ divide the body length
extended wing to the tip of the other) are far
by the wingspan.
longer than their bodies.
The table on the next page shows the bald eagle: 80 ÷ 200 = 0.40
lengths of some raptors’ bodies and their
(expressed as a fraction:
corresponding wingspans. Look at the data,
80
and complete the table by finding the ratio = 8 =2
200 20 5
of body length to wingspan in decimal form.
expressed as a percent:
Then place these decimals on a number line
40%)
to determine which bird has the smallest
body in relation to its wingspan.

78
EXTEND
Body length Wingspan Ratio of body
Bird
(in centimeters) (in centimeters) to wingspan

Bald eagle 80 200 0.40

White-tailed hawk 50 120 0.44

Gray hawk 38 89

Swainson’s hawk 46 124

Sharp-shinned hawk 27 54 0.50

Long-eared owl 33 99

Golden eagle 81 198

Cooper’s hawk 39 71 0.55

Number Line

0.30 0.40 0.50 0.60

Solve It
1. Which bird’s body length is half of its wingspan?
2. If a raptor’s wingspan were 112 centimeters, how long
would its body have to be for it to have a body-to-
wingspan ratio of 0.45?
3. Use a tape measure to determine the ratio of your arm
span to your body length. Will everyone in your class
have the same ratio? Why or why not?

MA NS 6.1.2. Interpret and use ratios in different contexts (e.g.,


batting averages, miles per hour) to show the relative sizes of
two quantities, using appropriate notations (a/b, a to b, a:b).

79
EXTEND
Lesson 5

Earth’s Cycles
for Life

Water covers about 75% of Earth’s surface.


Did you ever wonder where all this water comes
from? Could the water in your shower be from
the same stream that a lion once drank from?

6 LS 5.b. Students know matter is transferred over time from one organism to
80 others in the food web and between organisms and the physical environment.
ENGAGE
How does water recycle itself? Materials

Make a Prediction
All living things rely on water, yet there is a limited
supply of water on Earth. Water is recycled so that it
can be used again and again. What will happen to soil
if it is moistened with water and then placed under a
heat source? Write your answer as a prediction in the
form “If moistened soil is allowed to sit under a heat
source, then the water in the soil will . . .” • empty soda bottle
with cap (cut into
Test Your Prediction halves)

Place about 4 inches of soil in the bottom half • soil


of the soda bottle. • water spray bottle
Spray the soil with water so that it is moist • lamp or window
but not wet. with sunlight

Secure the top half of the soda bottle over


Step
the bottom half. Use tape if necessary.
Observe Place the bottle under a lamp or in
direct sunlight. Observe it every 10 minutes for
a class period. Write down your observations.
Observe the bottle again on the second day.
Write down your observations.

Draw Conclusions
What did you see the first day? What did you
see the second day?
Infer What was the source of the water? What Step
was the source of the energy that caused
changes in the bottle?
Observe What happened to the water?

Explore More
What might happen if you added some small plants to
the bottle? Some small rocks? What might happen if
you added more heat or placed the bottle in the shade?

6 IE 7.e. Recognize whether evidence is consistent with a proposed explanation.

81
EXPLORE
▶ Main Idea 6 LS 5.b
Earth recycles water and
other substances, such as
carbon and nitrogen.

▶ Vocabulary precipitation

water cycle, p. 83
evaporation, p. 83
condensation, p. 83
precipitation, p. 83
carbon cycle, p. 84
How does Earth have enough
nitrogen cycle, p. 86 air and water to keep us alive?
nitrate, p. 87
You know that people recycle bottles, cans,
nitrite, p. 87
and newspapers to help the environment. Did you
composting, p. 88
know that the environment recycles itself, too?
The air people breathe and the water people
-Glossary drink do not run out, because the planet is
@ www.macmillanmh.com
always recycling them.
▶ Reading Skill
Main Idea The Water Cycle
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82
EXPLAIN
Golden Gate Bridge, San Francisco, California

condensation

The Water Cycle to Earth’s surface. Precipitation is


A cycle is a series of events that any form of water—rain, snow, sleet,
happen one after another, in the same or hail—that falls to Earth.
order, over and over again. Think When water hits Earth’s surface,
about a bicycle. Why do you think it it may soak into the ground and be
is called that? It has two wheels (bi-) stored as groundwater, in a process
that go around and around (-cycle). called collection. It may also run across
The water cycle is the continuous the surface and be collected in streams,
movement of water between Earth’s ponds, lakes, oceans, or other bodies
surface and the air. The water cycle of water. Some of this collected water
works because water can change evaporates back into the atmosphere.
from a solid to a liquid to a gas and About 85% of the water that
back again. The energy from the Sun evaporates on Earth comes from the
powers the water cycle. ocean. Most of this water quickly
The Sun heats the water in oceans, condenses and falls back into the
lakes, rivers, ponds, and puddles. This ocean. Water evaporates from both
causes evaporation , the process in freshwater and saltwater sources.
which a liquid changes into a gas. As However, all of the precipitation that
the water vapor moves higher into the falls on Earth is fresh water. The salt is
atmosphere, it cools and condenses left behind when salt water evaporates.
into tiny water droplets. Condensation
is the process in which a gas changes Quick Check
into a liquid. Condensation causes
Main Idea What form of water does
water to form on the outside of a cold
glass of lemonade on a hot day. condensation produce, a liquid,
a solid, or a gas?
Droplets of condensed water
accumulate in clouds. When the Critical Thinking What is the order
droplets become too heavy, they fall of the four parts of the water cycle?

83
EXPLAIN
What is the carbon cycle?
Carbon is one of the elements that make up all living
things. Plants and animals (including people) need carbon
to live. There is not a lot of carbon in the atmosphere,
so it must be recycled. Otherwise it would be used up too
quickly. The process in which carbon is recycled between
the atmosphere and living things is called the carbon cycle .
There is evidence that a buildup of gases such as carbon
dioxide, nitric oxide, and methane trap heat that normally
would escape from Earth’s atmosphere. Called the greenhouse
effect, this buildup raises temperatures and leads to global
warming.
Since 1850 the average temperature on Earth has risen
about 1.8°F (1°C ). Some scientists predict it will rise 3.5°F
(2°C) by the year 2100. They believe this rise will lead to
many problems, such as the melting of the polar ice caps,
which would cause sea levels to rise and flood coastal areas.

The Carbon Cycle

Carbon enters the air in three ways: when plants


and animals decay; when animals breathe out
(exhale); and when fossil fuels such as coal, oil,
gasoline, and natural gas are burned.

Plants During photosynthesis,


plants use the carbon from carbon
dioxide to make sugars, starches,
and proteins. They also give off
oxygen, which is used by animals.

Death and decay When living things


die, the carbon in them goes into the
air and the ground. Some of it is turned
into carbon dioxide by the organisms
that feed on dead organisms.

84
EXPLAIN
Carbon and Life
Carbon is stored in molecules of the molecules during respiration. The
living and dead organisms, in organic final products are energy, water, and
matter in soil, in the air as carbon carbon dioxide. The carbon dioxide is
dioxide, and in fossil fuels. Dissolved returned to the atmosphere, continuing
carbon dioxide is also found in the the cycle.
ocean and in the shells of some marine
organisms. Quick Check
Plants and other photosynthetic Main Idea Why is the carbon
organisms take in carbon dioxide cycle important to living things?
and water and use them to make
food. During this process, oxygen is Critical Thinking Where does
released into the atmosphere as a waste the carbon that has been stored
product. When living things need to in an animal’s body go when the
use the energy that has been stored in animal dies?
food, they use oxygen to break apart

Reading Diagrams

What happens to carbon when


living things die?
Clue: Read the text boxes.

Storage Some carbon is


stored as fossil fuels. This Animals Animals eat plant
is the carbon left behind sugars, starches, proteins, and
by certain organisms that other substances. The animals
died millions of years ago. use the carbon in these foods to
make their own body chemicals.

85
EXPLAIN
The Nitrogen Cycle

nitrogen gas

nitrites with
nitrates nitrites
ammonia

What is the nitrogen cycle?


All living things must have nitrogen from nitrogen compounds in the soil
to develop and grow. Nitrogen is that have been made usable. Animals
needed to make proteins, which are then get nitrogen in the same way they
the building materials for muscles, get energy—by eating plants or by
skin, bones, blood, plants’ cell walls, eating the animals that eat the plants
and internal organs. Just like water that absorb the nitrogen.
and carbon, nitrogen is cycled through
the environment.
Uses of Nitrogen
The nitrogen cycle is the
continuous trapping of nitrogen gas Lightning can change the nitrogen
into compounds in the soil and the found in the atmosphere into a water-
returning of nitrogen gas to the air. soluble compound that dissolves in
Earth’s atmosphere is 78% nitrogen. rainwater to form nitric acid. A small
You would think this would be amount of nitrogen is absorbed into
enough to supply living things with soil this way.
the nitrogen they need. However, The rest of the nitrogen in soil
plants and animals cannot use nitrogen comes from bacteria. Certain bacteria,
in this form. Plants must get nitrogen called nitrogen-fixing bacteria, live in
86
EXPLAIN
Fertilizers
Fill two plastic cups with pond
water or water from an aquarium.
Add a few water plants, such as
elodea, to each cup.
Add a teaspoon of houseplant
food to one cup, and label the
cup. Be Careful. Always wear
protective gloves when handling
plant foods.
nitrogen compounds Observe Place both cups in a
sunny window, and observe them
each day for a week. Record your
observations.
Interpret Data What effect did
the plant food have on the plant
growth in the cups? What is the
Reading Diagrams
independent variable in this lab?
What role do decomposers What is the dependent variable?
play in the nitrogen cycle?
Clue: Where do plants
obtain nitrogen from?

the roots of beans, peas, and peanuts


and can extract nitrogen from the air.
Other bacteria convert this nitrogen
into usable compounds called nitrates
and nitrites . Plants absorb the nitrates
and nitrites and use them to make
proteins. These proteins are passed
along when animals eat plants and
one another.
When plants and animals die, Quick Check
nitrogen from their remains returns
Main Idea What is the nitrogen
to the soil when bacteria break it down
cycle?
into nitrogen gas. These bacteria return
about the same amount of nitrogen to Critical Thinking Why do some
the air as other bacteria take from the people use manure, or raw animal
air, keeping nature in balance. wastes, in their gardens?
87
EXPLAIN
How are plants recycled?
Plants are necessary to each
of nature’s cycles. Plants continue
their work even after they die. Think
of a giant tree falling in a forest.
Right away it becomes a habitat for
many different animals, including
birds, frogs, and insects. Soon after
it falls, the tree begins to break down.
Decomposers are organisms that
break down dead plants and animals
into useful things such as minerals composting
and rich soils. Plants need these in
order to grow. As you can see, each
kind of organism has a role that Composting
helps others survive. Worms, crickets,
What happened to the fallen tree
cockroaches, bacteria, and fungi are
also applies to your yard and some
decomposers. These organisms help
of the food scraps around your home.
plants survive.
Certain kinds of scraps from the food
you eat or cuttings from your yard still
contain nutrients and other substances
that can be recycled. Composting is
▼ The yellow coral the process in which decomposers
fungus helps break break down organic matter so it can
down this fallen tree. be used as a natural fertilizer for
gardening or farming. You can make
compost by mixing three parts dry
leaves and plant material, one part
fresh grass clippings, and one part
vegetable food scraps. Decomposers
soon go to work, breaking down these
materials into nitrogen and other
elements that make the soil rich.

Quick Check
Main Idea What is the role of
decomposers in an ecosystem?
Critical Thinking What is the
first thing that happens when
a tree dies and falls down?
88
EXPLAIN
Summarize the Main Idea Think, Talk, and Write
Main Idea Earth water,
The water cycle is the
carbon, and nitrogen.
continuous movement
of water between Vocabulary The process in which a
Earth’s surface and gas changes into a liquid is .
the atmosphere.
Main Idea What happens to the
(pp. 82–83)
nitrogen compounds that are not
The carbon cycle is absorbed by plants?
the process in which
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carbon moves between
the atmosphere and
living things.
(pp. 84–85)
Critical Thinking What would happen
The nitrogen cycle
if Earth became much warmer?
is the movement of
nitrogen among air, soil, Test Practice Which of the following
plants, and animals. objects would most likely take the
(pp. 86–87) longest to decompose?
A plastic bottle
B eggshell
C paper bag
Make a D schoolbook
Study Guide
Test Practice What is the process
Make a three-tab folded book (see in which a liquid changes into a gas?
pp. 487–490). Use the titles shown. A precipitation
On the inside of each tab, write two B evaporation
sentences about C condensation
the main idea of D collection
the topic.

Writing Link Math Link


Expository Writing Estimate Fresh Water
Research a local environmental Of Earth’s fresh water, 69% is polar
problem that is related to water or air. ice, 30% is groundwater, and 0.9%
How does this problem result from is permafrost. What percent of
human activities? Earth’s fresh water is available for
use by people?

-Review Summaries and quizzes online @ www.macmillanmh.com 89


EVALUATE
Inquiry Structured
Materials
What factors affect the carbon,
water, and nitrogen cycles?
Form a Hypothesis
small cup The carbon cycle is a series of events that recycles carbon through
the environment. Carbon exists in many forms and can be found
in the air and in plants and animals. Plants take in carbon dioxide
from the air and convert it into food and oxygen. The amount
of carbon found in the air is affected by air pollution, especially
pollution from the burning of fossil fuels. What role do plants play
in the carbon cycle? Write your answer as a hypothesis in the form
bromothymol
blue “If carbon dioxide is added to a system containing a plant, then . . .”
Be Careful. Wash your hands with soap and water after the
investigation. Immediately wash any area of skin that comes in
contact with bromothymol blue.

elodea
Test Your Hypothesis Step

Use a straw to blow slowly into a small


cup of bromothymol blue. Record
your observations in your journal.
test tube Be Careful. Be sure to breathe out
with cap through the straw. Do not breathe in.
Do not drink the liquid in the cup.
Measure Pour 10 milliliters of Step
bromothymol blue into a test tube.
Record the color of the liquid in
straw your journal.
Experiment Use a straw to blow
gently into the test tube until the
liquid turns light green. Place one
piece of elodea in the test tube, and
put the cap on the tube. Step
Place the test tube in a rack near a
window, and check the color of the
graduated bromothymol blue every 30 minutes
cylinder
for 2 hours. Record the color of the
liquid at each interval.

90 6 IE 7.a. Develop a hypothesis.


EXTEND
Draw Conclusions
Explain What made the bromothymol blue change color
in step 1?
Analyze If you had continued blowing into the test tube
instead of capping it, what do you think would have happened
during the 2-hour experiment?
Infer What part of the carbon cycle did you represent when
you blew into the test tube?

Inquiry Guided

What factors affect the water cycle?


Form a Hypothesis
Does temperature affect the water cycle? Write your answer as
a hypothesis in the form “If the average air temperature changes
over a long period of time, then the water cycle will . . .”

Test Your Hypothesis


Design an experiment to investigate how temperature affects the
water cycle. Write out the materials you need and the steps you
will follow. Record your results and observations.

Draw Conclusions
Did your results support your hypothesis? Why or why not? What
do you think would happen to the water cycle in a large land area
if volcanic ash blocked the Sun’s rays for a few months?

Inquiry Open

What can you learn about the nitrogen cycle? For Remember to follow the
example, does pollution affect it? Come up with a steps of the scientific process.
question to investigate. Then design an experiment to
answer your question, and carry out your experiment. Ask a Question
Organize your experiment to test only one variable,
or one item being changed. Write down the steps so Form a Hypothesis
that another group could complete the experiment by
following your instructions.
Test Your Hypothesis

Draw Conclusions

91
EXTEND
CHAPTER 1 Review
Fill each blank with the best term
Summarize the Main Ideas from the list.
An ecosystem consists of
the living and nonliving abiotic factor, p. 27 nitrogen cycle, p. 86
things in an area that energy omnivore, p. 73
interact with each other.
pyramid, p. 76
(pp. 24–37) transpiration, p. 48
eukaryote, p. 58
water cycle, p. 83
Photosynthesis is the niche, p. 36
process of making food
by using sunlight. 1. Energy from sunlight is a(n)
(pp. 40–51)
. 6 LS 5.e

2. Everything an organism does


Microscopic producers, and everything it needs make up its
consumers, and . 6 LS 5.e
decomposers are parts
of the food chain. 3. A complex organism that has
(pp. 54–63) a nucleus in each cell would be
classified as a(n) . 6 LS 5.b

Food chains, webs, 4. A(n) would eat both


and pyramids show producers and consumers. 6 LS 5.b, c
how energy flows
within an ecosystem. 5. The term describes the
(pp. 66–77) loss of water from leaves. 6 LS 5.a

6. A model showing how energy


Water, carbon, and
moves through a food chain is
nitrogen cycle through
a(n) . 6 LS 5.b
the living and nonliving
parts of the environment.
7. Evaporation, condensation, and
(pp. 80–89)
precipitation are parts of the
. 6 LS 5.b
Make a 8. Denitrifying bacteria are an important
Study Guide part of the . 6 LS 5.b
Take a sheet of paper
and tape your lesson
study guides as
shown. Use the study
guides to answer the
questions on these
pages.

92 -Review Summaries and quizzes online @ www.macmillanmh.com


Answer each of the following
in complete sentences.
Save the Trees
Suppose a kind of insect is destroying all
9. Cause and Effect What effect would the Joshua trees. Your goal is to convince
over-logging of trees have on the state officials that funding must be made
amount of carbon dioxide in the available to save the Joshua trees.
atmosphere? 6 LS 5.a
What to Do
10. Critical Thinking How does the 1. Find out what niche the Joshua
angle at which the Sun’s rays strike trees occupy. In what ways do
Earth affect the number and types other organisms living in the same
of organisms found in different areas ecosystem depend on these trees?
of the world? 6 LS 5.b, e
2. Prepare a display to show officials
11. Predict What two effects might how the destruction of the Joshua
occur if most of the phytoplankton trees could disrupt the food chains
living in the world’s oceans were in the ecosystem.
destroyed? 6 LS 5.a

12. Infer Explain why Earth is probably Analyze Your Results


the only planet in our solar system ▶ Explain how a disruption in one
that has soil. 6 LS 5.b part of an ecosystem can have
far-reaching effects.
13. Explanatory Writing Be a teacher
▶ Would the benefits of saving the
for the day. How would you explain
Joshua tree outweigh the risks of
the nitrogen cycle to your students?
spraying to prevent insect damage?
6 LS 5.b

How do organisms exchange


energy and nutrients in an
ecosystem?

16/>B3@

93
1 What do microscopic organisms 4 4 What is the role of a decomposer
provide to larger organisms? 6 LS 5.b when plants die? 6 LS 5.b
A fresh water A to eat the bacteria in the soil
B composing organisms B to store carbon for the plants
C increased sunlight C to break down plant proteins
D food D to turn nitrates into nitrogen gas

2 Which of the following types of 5 5 Why are organisms such as


organisms turns energy from the earthworms and fungi called
Sun into chemical energy? 6 LS 5.a decomposers? 6 LS 5.c
A producers A They break down very quickly
B consumers after they die.
C decomposers B They break down other organisms
D composers into simpler substances.
C They are the only organisms that
3 Look at the table below. cannot make their own food.
D They break down carbon dioxide
Category A Category B
into oxygen through respiration.
tomato plant elephant
fern panther
6 Which of the following best
cyanobacteria humpback whale
describes the role of roots
and stems in a plant? 6 LS 5.a
willow tree field mouse
grass hawk
A Roots and stems transport water
and minerals to the leaves so that
photosynthesis can occur.
These organisms are grouped B Roots and stems help the plant
into 6 LS 5.c move and keep cool in hot weather.
A decomposers and tertiary C Roots and stems transport water
consumers. and minerals to the flowers to
B primary consumers and attract bees so that pollination
scavengers. can occur.
C producers and consumers. D Roots and stems are where
D omnivores and producers. photosynthesis takes place.

94
7 The diagram below shows an 10 0 The energy in a community
ocean energy pyramid. flows from producer to primary
consumer and from primary
consumer to 6 LS 5.c
A tertiary consumer.
B decomposer.
C secondary consumer.
D top predator.

11 1 A scientist observes a crow eating


both insects and grass. What can
she conclude about crows? 6 IE 7.e
A Crows will never eat higher-level
consumers.
B The crow will always eat only
insects or grasses.
Which organism in the C The crow is the only organism
energy pyramid is a secondary that eats insects and grasses.
consumer? 6 LS 5.b D Crows will eat both insects
A seal and grasses.
B penguin
C fish 12 2 Some populations occupy niches
D plant of such importance that many other
organisms depend on them. These
8 8 What adaptations do plants have to populations are called keystone
live in desert environments? 6 LS 5.e species. Which of the following
A They reflect light from the Sun. is an example of a keystone
B They migrate during the day to species? 6 LS 5.e
cooler areas. A Venus’s-flytraps catching flies
C They store water in spongy tissues. in the garden
D They do not grow in desert B moles digging in the soil, creating
environments. long tunnels under grass
C beavers building a dam, creating
9 9 Microscopic organisms that recycle a valuable wetland
organic materials back into the food D birds building a nest high up
chain are 6 LS 5.b in a tree
A producers.
B decomposers.
C users.
D consumers.

Materials prepared by PASS at 95

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