Ecosystems and changes in ecosystems

Science - Fourth Grade

What are Ecosystems?

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Food Web Balance

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What are Ecosystems?

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Explore

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What are Ecosystems?

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Exploring Ecosystems

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Living or Nonliving?

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Matching Parts of the Ecosystem

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Living Organisms Sorting

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Adaptation Interactive Matching Activity

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Ecosystems and changes in ecosystems

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Ecosystems and changes in ecosystems

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Ecosystems and changes in ecosystems

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Environment

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Exploring Ecosystems

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Parts of an Ecosystem

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How does an ecosystem work?

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Kinds of Ecosystems

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Changes in Ecosystems

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Study Guide Ecosystems and changes in ecosystems

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ECOSYSTEMS AND CHANGES IN ECOSYSTEMS What is an Ecosystem? An ecosystem is the living and nonliving components of an environment and the way they interact with each other and their environment. There are several different ecosystems on the Earth. What are the living components of an ecosystem? Plants, trees, and animals are all living components important to an ecosystem. How can something nonliving be helpful in an ecosystem? Water, soil, and sunlight are nonliving components important to an ecosystem. Many parts of an ecosystem work together to keep the ecosystem running properly. Ecosystems can be as large as an ocean or as small as a puddle. Lesson Checkpoint: What is an ecosystem? Ecosystem Populations There are many individuals, families, and groups that live in an ecosystem: A population is a group of organisms of the same species living in the same area. So a population of birds might live in a rain forest. © Copyright NewPath Learning. All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted for the purchaser to print copies for non-commercial educational purposes only. Visit us at www.NewPathLearning.com.
A community is different populations of plants and animals living and interacting with one another in a particular area. An example would be the community of living things in and around an oasis in the desert. Each organism has its own special places to live in an ecosystem. A habitat is the place where an organism lives within an ecosystem. Each organism has its own special roles and jobs in an ecosystem. A niche is the specific role an organism has in its habitat. A niche includes several things such as what an organism eats, how it gets its food, and what other animals eat it. Organisms can only live in an environment where ALL of their needs are met. Some organisms can only survive in certain ecosystems. Lesson Checkpoint: What is a community? © Copyright NewPath Learning. All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted for the purchaser to print copies for non-commercial educational purposes only. Visit us at www.NewPathLearning.com.
Effects of Changes in an Ecosystem Many things can affect an ecosystem, in some good ways and in some harmful ways. These effects can be sudden or they can happen over a long period of time. Strong, damaging wind, heavy rains and flooding, such as those that happen in a hurricane, would be an example of a sudden change. Drastic temperature changes over a period of time in an ecosystem can cause some plants and animals to die, but can also provide just the right climate for other plants and animals to live. Soil erosion, the wearing away of soil and rock, is an example of a way an ecosystem can be affected over a long period of time. Fires can rapidly cause destruction in an ecosystem by destroying habitats. Fires can also be helpful to an ecosystem by making way for new plants to grow. Pollution, which includes trash and chemicals in water, can kill fish, plant life, and other animals that live near the polluted waters. Pollution can happen quickly, as in an oil spill in the ocean, or it can happen over time, when a chemical seeps into the ground from a building. Lesson Checkpoint: What is an example of a sudden change that can affect an ecosystem? Too Many in One Place If an ecosystem becomes overpopulated, there are too many of a certain kind of animals and there aren’t enough resources for all their needs to be met in that environment. Animals compete for resources in an ecosystem. Animals compete for food, water, and space. One way animals can avoid competition is by hunting for the same food at different times or by hunting together and sharing what they find. Lesson Checkpoint: What happens when an ecosystem becomes overpopulated? © Copyright NewPath Learning. All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted for the purchaser to print copies for non-commercial educational purposes only. Visit us at www.NewPathLearning.com.
Ecosystems of the World Taiga is an ecosystem of a moist forest that has mostly cone-producing trees, such as pine and fir trees. Grassland is a region of land covered in many types of grasses. A temperate (mild) forest is an ecosystem that has different kinds of trees and the climate changes a lot from summer to winter. © Copyright NewPath Learning. All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted for the purchaser to print copies for non-commercial educational purposes only. Visit us at www.NewPathLearning.com.
A desert is the driest of all ecosystems and where there are few plants and very small amounts. Tropical rainforests are always wet. Thousands of species of plants and animals live in this type of ecosystem. The temperature almost never changes; it is always warm and humid. Tundra is an ecosystem consisting of land that has frozen soil at all times and no trees. Lesson Checkpoint: What is an example of an ecosystem? © Copyright NewPath Learning. All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted for the purchaser to print copies for non-commercial educational purposes only. Visit us at www.NewPathLearning.com.
Water Ecosystems Many different plants and animals live in water ecosystems. Many organisms have to become adapted to different conditions in order to survive in a water ecosystem. For example, organisms that live on salt water shorelines have to become adapted to exposure to waves and air. Water ecosystems are of many different sizes. Some are salt water and some are freshwater. Freshwater Ecosystems: A river ecosystem includes the river and the land around the river. A river and surrounding land provide wide ranges of habitat for plants, fish, birds, and other wildlife. Rivers are made of freshwater. A lake is a large body of freshwater. A pond is a body of freshwater shallow enough for plants with roots to grow. This body of water’s temperature is often the nearly the same at the top and bottom and changes with air temperature. Saltwater Ecosystems: The oceans are salt water ecosystems. There are different layers of the ocean. Most ocean life lives near the ocean’s surface because the water here is warm, sunny, and moves constantly. As you go deeper into the ocean, there is no sunlight, which means no plants can grow there, the water is colder, and few organism live there. Lesson Checkpoint: What type of water makes up a river? © Copyright NewPath Learning. All Rights Reserved. Permission is granted for the purchaser to print copies for non-commercial educational purposes only. Visit us at www.NewPathLearning.com.

Table Of Contents: What are Ecosystems?

1. Lesson Objectives

2.1. What are Ecosystems?

2. Engage

3.1. A Nature Walk
3.2. Living and Nonliving Things
3.3. Nature Sounds
3.4. Environment
Everything that you could see, hear, feel, touch and smell all around you was your environment.

3. Explore

4.1. A Small Pond
4.2. A Pond Through a Magnifying Glass
Many things live in the water, even very small organisms (called microorganisms) which you cannot see without a magnifying glass or a microscope.
4.3. What Microorganisms Do You See?

4. Explain

5.1. Environment
How is the place where a fish lives different from a place where a bird lives? Each kind of living organism needs a certain environment to survive. An organism's environment is everything around it. It is made up of all living and nonliving things in an area.
5.2. Living and Nonliving Things
The living things in an environment include plants, animals and microorganisms. Nonliving things include air, water, nutrients, soil and climate.
5.3. Living or Nonliving?
5.4. What is an Ecosystem?
Everything in nature is connected. An ecosystem is made of all living and nonliving things in an environment that interact with each other. An ecosystem may be as large as a pond or as small as the area under a log in the forest.
5.5. An Organism's Habitat and Niche
Every organism in an ecosystem has a niche and a habitat. A habitat is the place where an organism lives. It provides food, water and shelter for the organism to survive. A niche is the role that an organism has in an ecosystem.
5.6. Population and Community
Ecosystems contain populations and communities. A group of living organisms of the same kind living in the same place makes up a population. An ecosystem may include many different populations. All of the populations work together and form a community. The community of living things interacts with the non-living world around it to form an ecosystem.
5.7. Parts of an Ecosystem
An ecosystem includes soil, atmosphere, heat and light from the Sun, water and living organisms. Soil provides nutrients for the plants. The atmosphere provides oxygen and carbon dioxide for both plants and animals. The Sun provides heat for plants and animals, and light for plants to make food. Water is part of all living organisms; without water there would be no life.
5.8. How does an Ecosystem Work?
The living organisms in an ecosystem depend on other living organisms but also on nonliving things for survival. For example, in a pond ecosystem, the Sun light helps algae grow. Algae make oxygen for the fish and also provide food for tiny pond organisms. The fish eat the tiny pond organisms, use the oxygen, and give out carbon dioxide which plants need to grow.
5.9. Matching Parts of the Ecosystem
5.10. Kinds of Ecosystems
There are many kinds of ecosystems. Each ecosystem has its own unique group of living and nonliving things. Examples of different kinds of ecosystems include wetlands, coral reefs, prairies, and deserts. Many factors, such as climate, soil and type of water, determine the kinds of plants and animals that can live there.
5.11. Energy in an Ecosystem
The energy cycle within an ecosystem determines which populations survive and which die. All living things need energy. Ultimately, the Sun is the source of all energy in an ecosystem. Energy flows from the Sun, to producers, then to consumers and finally to decomposers.
5.12. Producers, Consumers & Decomposers
The living organisms in an ecosystem can be divided into three groups: producer, consumers and decomposers. Producers are living things that make their own food using light energy from the Sun. Consumers are animals that get their energy by eating other organisms. Decomposers are organisms that get their energy by breaking down dead plant and animal matter. Examples of decomposers include mushrooms, bacteria and earthworms.
5.13. Living Organisms Sorting
5.14. How Do Ecosystems Change?
Ecosystems are always changing. Some changes are so big that an ecosystem can die or change into another kind of ecosystem. For example, if a fire burns most of a forest, its plant life will have to start over again. New growth will start with grass, wildflowers and small shrubs. Soon young trees, or saplings, will sprout, but it will be many years before there will be tall, strong trees standing in that place again.
5.15. An Ecosystem After a Fire
Another change that may happen because of a forest fire is that certain populations of animals will leave the area to find food and shelter elsewhere. Other populations that depend on those animals for food will also leave or die out. For example, when trees burn, squirrels and birds leave, and foxes and coyotes follow. When the plants start growing back, animals that eat them will start to return to the forest. Over time, if left alone, the forest ecosystem will come back. Life goes on, only now it's in a new kind of environment!
5.16. What are Ecosystems?

5. Elaborate

6.1. Exploring Ecosystems

6. Evaluate

7.1. What are Ecosystems?

7. Lesson Summary

8.1. What are Ecosystems?