Ecology
Ecology
Ecology
The energy flow from one level to another level in a food chain gives the trophic level of an ecosystem. The
producers come at first trophic level followed by herbivores (primary consumers), then small carnivores
(secondary consumers) and large carnivores (tertiary consumers) occupy the fourth trophic level.
• Ecology is the study of the interactions of living things with their
environment. Ecologists ask questions across four levels of biological
organization—organismal, population, community, and ecosystem. At
the organismal level, ecologists study individual organisms and how
they interact with their environments. At the population and
community levels, ecologists explore, respectively, how a population
of organisms changes over time and the ways in which that
population interacts with other species in the community. Ecologists
studying an ecosystem examine the living species (the biotic
components) of the ecosystem as well as the nonliving portions (the
abiotic components), such as air, water, and soil, of the environment.
Ecological Communities: Networks of Interacting
Species
• We wish to learn:
• What is an ecological community and what kinds of interactions take place within it?
• How important are the various categories of species interactions, including mutualisms, commensalisms, competition and predation?
• What kinds of interactions among species become important when many species affect one another?
• What consequences do these interactions have for biodiversity
• Species Interactions, Food Webs, and Ecological Communities
• An ecological community is defined as a group of actually or potentially interacting species living in the same place. A community is bound
together by the network of influences that species have on one another. Inherent in this view is the notion that whatever affects one
species also affects many others -- the "balance of nature". We build an understanding of communities by examining the two-way,
and then the multi-way, interactions involving pairs of species or many species.