Ecology
What ecology focuses on
Organisms – plants, animals, microbes
Environment – air, water, soil, climate
Interactions – who eats whom, competition, cooperation, and adaptation
Levels of ecological study
Individual – how a single organism survives
Population – members of the same species in an area
Community – different species living together
Ecosystem – living organisms + non-living factors
Biome – large regions like deserts, forests, tundra
Biosphere – all life on Earth
Key concepts
Food chains & food webs – energy transfer
Producers, consumers, decomposers
Energy flow & nutrient cycles (carbon, nitrogen, water)
Habitat & niche
Biodiversity
Ecological balance
🔹 Branches of Ecology
AutecologyStudy of a single species and its relationship with the environment.
SynecologyStudy of groups of species (communities) living together.
Population EcologyDeals with population size, density, growth, dispersion, and regulation.
Community EcologyFocuses on interactions like predation, competition, parasitism, mutualism.
Ecosystem EcologyStudies energy flow and nutrient cycling between living and non-living components.
Landscape EcologyExamines spatial patterns and human impact on ecosystems.
Global EcologyStudies biosphere-level processes like climate change.
🔹 Components of an Ecosystem
1. Abiotic (Non-living)
Light
Temperature
Water
Soil
Air
Minerals
2. Biotic (Living)
Producers – Green plants, algae
Consumers – Herbivores, carnivores, omnivores
Decomposers – Bacteria, fungi
🔹 Energy Flow
Energy enters as sunlight
Flows one-way
Follows the 10% law (only ~10% energy passes to next trophic level)
Sun → Plants → Herbivores → Carnivores → Decomposers
🔹 Biogeochemical Cycles
Carbon Cycle
Nitrogen Cycle
Water Cycle
Phosphorus Cycle
They recycle nutrients and maintain life balance.
🔹 Succession
Succession is the gradual and orderly change in the species composition of an area over time.
Primary succession – bare land (lava, rocks)
Secondary succession – after disturbance (fire, flood)
🔹 Human Impact on Ecology
Deforestation
Pollution
Climate change
Overpopulation
Habitat destruction
🔹 Conservation
Wildlife sanctuaries
National parks
Biosphere reserves
Sustainable resource use
🔹 Ecological Pyramids
Ecological pyramids are graphical representations that show the relationship between organisms
Types
Pyramid of Numbers – shows the number of organisms at each level
Pyramid of Biomass – shows the total mass of organisms
Pyramid of Energy – shows the energy flow





