1. Ecology is the study of the relationships of organisms and their
environment. It is a vast field with many facets. 2. Regional ecological issues include acid deposition, water contamination,
wetlands, and hazardous waste. 3. Global ecological subjects include populations, communities, ecosystems,
interactions between organisms, loss of biodiversity, and the nitrogen and carbon
cycles. 4. Acid deposition damages or kills living organisms; it is produced
when sulphur and nitrogen compounds released by the burning of fossil fuels
are converted to nitric acid and sulphur dioxide by sunlight and rain. 5. Water contamination occurs when toxic wastes, pesticides, septic
tanks, and fertilizers wash or leach into surface and ground water. Bacteria
may in the future be used to break down various contaminants. 6. Wetlands were once considered wastelands. They have been drained
but now increasingly are being protected. 7. Hazardous waste sites are gradually being detoxified, but progress
is slow. 8. Populations vary in numbers, density, and in the total mass of individuals.
Populations of one community may also occur in another community, and ecotypes
may be specifically adapted to a single community. 9. Precipitation, temperature, soils, and biotic factors play roles
in determining the distributions of plant species in an ecosystem. 10. Xerophytes and hydrophytes have modifications of leaves and other
organs. 11. Species distribution is influenced by soil mineral content and biotic
factors, such as competition for light, nutrients, and water. 12. Ecosystems sustain themselves through photosynthetic activity, energy
flow through food chains, and the recycling of nutrients. Producers carry on
photosynthesis; consumers feed on producers. Primary consumers feed directly
on producers, and secondary consumers feed on primary consumers. 13. Decomposers break down organic materials to forms that can be reassimilated
by the producers. In any ecosystem, the producers and consumers comprise food
chains that determine the flow of energy through the different levels. Food
chains vary in length and intricacy and, because of their interconnections,
form food webs. 14. Energy itself is not recycled in an ecosystem; it escapes in the
form of heat as it passes from one level to another. In a long food chain, the
final consumer gains only a tiny fraction of the energy originally captured
by the producer at the bottom of the chain. 15. When producers increase the amount of food available, consumers
may increase correspondingly and compete for the food; this reduces what is
available, resulting in a self-maintaining ecosystem. The composition of an
ecosystem may be influenced by its living components through the secretion of
growth-inhibiting and growth-promoting substances. 16. Some nitrogen from the air is fixed by the nitrogen-fixing bacteria
found in legumes and other plants. In the nitrogen cycle, there is a constant
flow of nitrogen from dead plant and animal tissues into the soil and from the
soil back to the plants. 17. Water leaches nitrogen from the soil and carries it away when erosion
occurs. Other nitrogen is lost from harvesting crops, but the loss can be reduced
if wastes are decomposed and annually returned to the soil. Fire also causes
nitrogen loss. 18. Replacement of nitrogen loss by the application of chemical fertilizers
may eventually create hardpan by altering the soil structure. 19. Bacteria also recycle carbon and other substances, such as water and
phosphorus. 20. Succession occurs whenever there has been a disturbance of natural
areas on land or in water. 21. Primary succession involves the formation of soil in the beginning
stages, while secondary succession takes place in areas previously covered with
vegetation. A xerosere is a primary succession in which bare rock or lava is
converted to soil through the activities of lichens, plants, and physical forces
in an orderly progression of events over a period of time. 22. Climax vegetation becomes established at the conclusion of succession
and remains until or unless a disturbance disrupts it. 23. A hydrosere is initiated in a wet habitat and culminates in a climax
vegetation. As a lake or other body of water is filled in with silt and debris,
eutrophication facilitating the growth of algae and other organisms occurs. 24. Secondary succession, which proceeds more rapidly than primary succession,
may take place if soil is present. It may occur after fires. 25. A global rise in temperature due to carbon dioxide, methane, and
other gases preventing the sun's radiant heat from escaping back into space
is referred to as the greenhouse effect. 26. The carbon dioxide and methane levels in the earth's atmosphere
and the earth's temperature have been rising. It is predicted that polar ice
will, as a result, melt, and flooding of low-lying coastal areas will occur. 27. In the stratosphere, sunlight converts methane, chlorofluorocarbons,
and halons into active compounds that destroy the ozone shield that protects
us from intense ultraviolet radiation. 28. Loss of biodiversity has serious consequences, including the potential
loss of means with which to combat crop diseases. |