- Ecology and grouping organisms - Ecosystems, classification or organisms, species definition. Two levels of quiz at the end.
- Primary succession on a glacial moraine - Nice description of how primary succession occurs after a glacial retreat.Watch the narrated animation.
- Coastal succession interactive - Interactive explains succession as the sea level falls.
- Mutualism interactive - Two examples of mutualistic relationships.
- Predator-prey cycles interactive - Have a play to see what happens to predator and prey population sizes when you fiddle with their reproductive rates and how many prey get eaten by each predator.
- Competition interactive - Gauses’ principle of competitive exclusion leads to zonation of barnacles on a rocky shore.
- Structure of the forest - A pdf document (so you need Adobe Acrobat reader) about the stratification in beech forest at Arthur’s pass. Text only. Boring!
- S-cool: Ecology - Ecology revision pages. Click through to the next topic. Covers: Who's Eating Who?; Populations; Adapting to Survive; Cycling Through Nature (including carbon and nitrogen). Has animations.
- Interpreting ecological data - Some graphs and tables etc. No answers.
- Predator prey interactions: graphing - Investigating and graphing patterns of deer populations, and changes with predator and prey. Don’t draw the graph; just look at the data and answer the questions.
- BBC Science: Biology: Populations and Pyramids - Food chains, pyramids, efficiency or production, competition, predator-prey cycles. Revision and a test at the end.
- BBC Science: Adapt to fit - Adaptations. Overly simple for this level.
There are now over seven billion people on Earth. I think the other organisms are more interesting.
Thursday, 17 November 2011
Year 12 Ecology
Haven't found much!
Labels:
12BIO,
ecology,
mutualism,
populations,
predator,
prey,
pyramid,
succession,
zonation
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hi miss
ReplyDeletei have a totally off topic question
why does avocado go bright green when i toast it?
for that matter why does avocado pulp have chloroplasts at all?
cheers Sam T
btw bio exam went well-ish
I haven't yet had the chance to look at the exam papers!
ReplyDeleteI'm not sure why the interior of any fruit would have colour, but look up chromoplasts e.g. http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclopedia/C/chromoplast.html
I wonder if they have all the enzymes and internal structures of a chloroplast?