Eco-Eia: Part 1-Ecology Part 2 - Environmental Impact Assessment
Eco-Eia: Part 1-Ecology Part 2 - Environmental Impact Assessment
Eco-Eia: Part 1-Ecology Part 2 - Environmental Impact Assessment
1. PART 1- ECOLOGY
2. PART 2- ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACT
ASSESSMENT
1. PHILIPPINE EIS SYSTEM
2. CASE STUDIES
OUTCOME BASE EDUCATION
Lectures
Group Discussion/Presentation
Case Studies
What is Ecology?
The science of ecology includes
everything from global processes
(above), the study of various marine
and terrestrial habitats (middle) to
individual interspecific interactions
like predation and pollination
(below).
Ecology is…
Animalia
Plantae
Fungi
Protista
Eubacteria
Archeobacteria
Abiotic and Biotic factors are
intimately intertwined….
Geographic location (latitude and
longitude) determines abiotic
factors such as temperature and
climate….which in turn, dictates or
forces a certain type of ecosystem to
exist.
Levels of
Organization
studied in
Ecology…
Habitat: the actual place an
organism lives
Niche: both living and non-
living parts of an ecosystem
that determines an organism’s
role in the ecosystem.
If two species share the same
niche, they will have various
interactions.
How can species interact?
These relationships are complex. Each population
of species interacts with other species, or biotic
factors, as well as with the all of the abiotic
factors.
The niche of an organism and it’s interactions is
determined by where it stands in the ecological
structure of the ecosystem.
-Producers
-Consumers
-Decomposers
-Scavengers
Producers are autotrophic
organisms that make their
own food.
Phototrophic organisms use
photosynthesis and contain
chlorophyll
(Carbon Dioxide + Water +
Sunlight =Sugar +
Oxygen)
Chemotrophic organisms use
chemicals other than H20,
such as H2S
PRODUCERS!!!
Consumers are heterotrophic organisms that cannot
make their own food. They must ingest (eat) other
organisms.
-Herbivores feed on vegetation (producers).
-Carnivores feed on herbivores or on other
carnivores.
Secondary carnivores feed on herbivores,
Tertiary consumers feed on other carnivores
-Omnivores feed on both producers and consumers
-Scavengers feed on dead or decaying organisms
CONSUMERS!!!
Scavengers feed on CARRION (dead or injured
animal corpses) and dead plant biomass.
Scavengers reduce the size of dead organic
matter…Decomposers will finish the job!
DECOMPOSERS are heterotrophs that recycle small,
often microscopic bits of dead organic matter into
inorganic nutrients availbe for plants to take up from the
soil. Decomposers RECYCLE nutrients!
10 PERCENT
LAW!!
Heat and Movement
Not Digested
Waste
Not Consumed
Decomposers
As the living
organisms eats more,
the concentration of
these substances
increases as they pass
from one trophic level
to the next.
The day it Rained
cats…
A bizarre case of ecological damage from DDT
occurred in Borneo after the World Health
Organization sprayed huge amounts of the
pesticide. The area's geckos, or lizards, feasted on
the houseflies that had been killed by DDT. The
geckos, in turn, were devoured by local cats.
Unhappily, the cats perished in such large numbers
from DDT poisoning that the rats they once kept in
check began overrunning whole villages. Alarmed
by the threat of plague, WHO officials were forced
to replenish Borneo's supply of cats by parachute.
Predator/Prey: One organism (predator) will
actively hunt and consume another (prey).
their prey.
Plants and insects represent a classic case of coevolution — one that is
often, but not always, mutualistic. Many plants and their pollinators are so
reliant on one another and their relationships are so exclusive that biologists
have good reason to think that the “ match” between the two is the result of
a coevolutionary process.