• 2.1 Introduction to Biodiversity

     
     2.1 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Ecosystems have structure and diversity that change over time.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVE ERT-2.A Explain levels of biodiversity and their importance to ecosystems.

    ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE:

    • Biodiversity in an ecosystem includes genetic, species, and habitat diversity.
    • The more genetically diverse a population is, the better it can respond to environmental stressors. Additionally, a population bottleneck can lead to a loss of genetic diversity.
    • Ecosystems that have a larger number of species are more likely to recover from disruptions.
    • Loss of habitat leads to a loss of specialist species, followed by a loss of generalist species. It also leads to reduced numbers of species that have large territorial requirements.
    • Species richness refers to the number of different species found in an ecosystem.
     
     
    HOW WHALES CHANGE THE CLIMATE
     

     

     
    BOZEMAN VIDEO - BIODIVERSITY
     
     
     
    BOZEMAN VIDEO - ECOSYSTEM DIVERSITY
     

     

     
    BOZEMAN VIDEO - LOSS OF DIVERSITY
     
     
     

    2.2 Ecosystem Services

     

    2.2 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Ecosystems have structure and diversity that change over time.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVE ERT-2.B Describe ecosystem services. ERT-2.C Describe the results of human disruptions to ecosystem services.

    ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE:

    • There are four categories of ecosystem services: provisioning, regulating, cultural, and supporting.
    • Anthropogenic activities can disrupt ecosystem services, potentially resulting in economic and ecological consequences.
     
     

     

     

     

     
     
     

    2.3 Island Biogeography

     

    2.3 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Ecosystems have structure and diversity that change over time.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVE ERT-2.D Describe island biogeography. ERT-2.E Describe the role of island biogeography in evolution.

    ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE:

    • Island biogeography is the study of the ecological relationships and distribution of organisms on islands, and of these organisms’ community structures.
    • Islands have been colonized in the past by new species arriving from elsewhere.
    • Many island species have evolved to be specialists versus generalists because of the limited resources, such as food and territory, on most islands. The long-term survival of specialists may be jeopardized if and when invasive species, typically generalists, are introduced and outcompete the specialists.
     
     
    BIOGEOGRAPHY
     
     
    ISLAND BIOGEOGRAPHY
     
     

     

     
     

    2.4 Ecological Tolerance

     

    2.4 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Ecosystems have structure and diversity that change over time.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVE ERT-2.F Describe ecological tolerance.

    ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE:

    • Ecological tolerance refers to the range of conditions, such as temperature, salinity, flow rate, and sunlight that an organism can endure before injury or death results.
    • Ecological tolerance can apply to individuals and to species.
     
     
     
     

    2.5 Natural Disruptions to Ecosystems

     

    2.5 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Ecosystems have structure and diversity that change over time.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVE ERT-2.G Explain how natural disruptions, both short and long-term, impact an ecosystem.

    ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE:

    • Natural disruptions to ecosystems have environmental consequences that may, for a given occurrence, be as great as, or greater than, many human-made disruptions.
    • Earth system processes operate on a range of scales in terms of time. Processes can be periodic, episodic, or random.
    • Earth’s climate has changed over geological time for many reasons.
    • Sea level has varied significantly as a result of changes in the amount of glacial ice on Earth over geological time.
    • Major environmental change or upheaval commonly results in large swathes of habitat changes.
    • Wildlife engages in both short- and long-term migration for a variety of reasons, including natural disruptions.
     
     
     
     
     
     

    2.6 Adaptations

     

    2.6 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Ecosystems have structure and diversity that change over time.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVE ERT-2.H Describe how organisms adapt to their environment.

    • Organisms adapt to their environment over time, both in short- and long-term scales, via incremental changes at the genetic level.
    • Environmental changes, either sudden or gradual, may threaten a species’ survival, requiring individuals to alter behaviors, move, or perish.
     
     

     

     
    BOZEMAN ADAPTATIONS
     
     
     
     

    2.7 Ecological Succession

     

    2.7 ENDURING UNDERSTANDING: Ecosystems have structure and diversity that change over time.

    LEARNING OBJECTIVE ERT-2.I Describe ecological succession. ERT-2.J Describe the effect of ecological succession on ecosystems.

    • There are two main types of ecological succession: primary and secondary succession.
    • A keystone species in an ecosystem is a species whose activities have a particularly significant role in determining community structure.
    • An indicator species is a plant or animal that, by its presence, abundance, scarcity, or chemical composition, demonstrates that some distinctive aspect of the character or quality of an ecosystem is present.
    • Pioneer members of an early successional species commonly move into unoccupied habitat and over time adapt to its particular conditions, which may result in the origin of new species.
    • Succession in a disturbed ecosystem will affect the total biomass, species richness, and net productivity over time.
     
     
    BOZEMAN: ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION
     
     
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