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Behavior

2.C.2:a
Organismschangetheirbehavioralandpsychologicalmechanismsinresponseto
environmentalchanges

2.E.2:b
Internalandexternalsignalsinanimalsregulatepsychologicalresponsesthatmatch
upwithenvironmentalcycles

2.E.3:a.1,a.2,b.3,b.4
Innatebehaviorsareinheritedbehaviorslearningtakeplacethrough
interactingwithotherorganismsandtheenvironmentbehaviorsarecausedbyenvironmental
cuesandarenecessarybeabletoreproduceandsurviveBehavingcooperativelywithinor
betweenotherpopulationscontributestothepopulationssurviving.

3.E.1:a,b.2,c.1,c.2
Behaviorcanchangeduetointernalandexternalchangesrespondingto
otherorganismsAnimalsusemanydifferenttechniquestoindicatedominance,findfood,
establishterritory,andensurereproductivesuccessinnateandlearnedbehaviorsthatincrease
survivalandreproductivityarefavoredbynaturalselectionthefinesofanindividualandthe
survivalofthepopulationareincreasedbycooperativebehavior.

Ecology

1.C.1:
bMoreanimalsgoextinctwhenthereisecologicalstress

2.A.1:d.2,e,f
Reproductionrequiresmoreenergythanthenormalroutineofanimalsdifferent
organismsdoitdifferentlytohavetheenergyChangesinenergychangethepopulation
changesinenergycandisrupttheecosystem

2.A.2:a.1
photosyntheticorganismscapturesunenergy

2.A.3:a.1,a.2,a.3
Carbonintheenvironmentmovestoorganismswhereitturnsintocarbs
andproteinsNitrogenmovestoorganismswhereitturnsintocarbsandproteins,phosphorus
turnsintonucleicanacidsandlipidslivingsystemsdependonwateranditspolarity.

2.D.1:a,b,c
AbioticandBioticfactorsaffectcellsabioticandbioticfactorsaffectanimals
Stabilityisaffectedbybioticandabioticfactors

2.D.3:
theenvironmentisaffectedbytheirhomeostasisbeingdisrupted

3.E.1:b.1
organismshavevaryingcausesthatproducetheirbehaviortochangeandchange
theirreproductivesuccess


4.A.5:allstandards
acommunityismeasuredanddescribedintermsofspeciesdiversityand
compositioncomputermodelsareusedtorepresentdataofpopulationsandenvironmental
impactmodelsandgroansrepresentpopulationgrowthandinteractionsreproductionwithout
limitsresultsinexponentialgrowthpopulationcanexceedthecarryingcapacityaslimitsof
factorsareimposedon,logisticgrowthhappensdemographicsbasedonageandbeusedfor
humans

4.A.6:allstandards
Matterisrecycled,whileenergyflowsPrimaryproductivityisinfluencedby
regionalandglobalclimateandatmosphericcompositionorganisminfoodwebsandfood
chainsinteractfoodwebsandchainsrelyonprimaryproductivitythelogisticmodelis
representedbycompetitionforresourcesandlimitedgrowthIndensitydependentpopulations
thereiscompetition,predation,accumulationofwaste,etcAsthehumanracegrowsour
impactonhabitatsforotherspecieshasincreasedincreasinghumanpopulationhasresultedin
thedestructionofhabitatsandextinctionofsomespeciesadaptationsoforganismsaresimilar
togettingandusingenergyandmatter.

4.B.2:a.3
Interactionsofsinglecelledorganismscanbesimilartothoseofmulticellularorganisms

4.B.3:allstandards
InteractionsbetweenpopulationsaffectsdistributionsApopulationoforganismshavedifferent
propertiesthantheindividualsinthepopulationCatastrophesandhumaninteractionaffect
distributionandabundance

4.B.4:allstandards
humanactivitiessuchasslashandburnagriculture,logging,andcitybuildingaffectthe
environmentonalocalandgloballevelGlobalandmeteorologicaleventsimpactecosystem
distribution

4.C.2:a,b
molecularclassescanprovidecellswithdifferentfunctions,andgeneduplicationcanprovidea
cellwithmanynewphenotypes

4.C.3:a,b
geneticscontrolhoworganismsreacttoenvironmentalchanges.Populationsthathavelittleto
nogeneticdiversitytendtobecomeendangered/goextinct

4.C.4:a,b
EcosystemswithlesscomponentsarelessresilienttochangeKeystonespeciescontributeto
thediversityofecosystems,iftheyareremovedtheecosystemcollapses.

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