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1a4 Functional Groups

Functional Groups Species Roles in an Ecosystem

1a4 Functional Groups
1a4 Functional Groups

Functional Groups Objectives

  • Provide the functional classification of various animals.
  • Describe structures animals use for feeding and how they relate to functional groups.

Taxonomic classification groups organisms by structural and evolutionary relatedness. 

Functional classification groups organisms based on their role in their ecosystem.

Functional Groups

1a4 Functional Groups

Producers

Produce & consume their own sugars.
Examples: plants, algae, cyanobacteria
1a4 Functional Groups

Consumers

Consume other organisms for nutrients and energy.
Examples: animals and some protists (protozoa)
1a4 Functional Groups

Decomposers

Break down the remains of dead organisms into nutrient form.
Examples: fungi, some bacteria
1a4 Functional Groups
Animals need to consume other consumers for nutrients and energy:
Herbivore consumers eat producers
Carnivore consumers eat other consumers, or their recently dead remains (scavengers)
Omnivores can eat producers and consumers

Animals do not choose their functional group, they have digestive organs, feeding structures, dietary requirements, and behaviors that obligate them to eat certain foods.

Of the different consumer functional groups, which has the most potential flexibility in diet?

Answer: omnivores like humans, foxes and crows can live off different foods in a variety of habitats
Vertebrate feeding structures indicate functional roles.
Other feeding structures include whale baleen and snail radulas.
Whale baleen is made of keratin protein, the same protein found in human fingernails.  The brush-like baleen filters massive amounts of small organisms out of the water or sand.
Snail radulas are like sandpaper “tongues” that scrape algae off of rocks.  Radulas are made of chitin, a tough sugar, strong enough to take paint off of underwater surfaces.
In the Willamette Valley, turkey vultures are large scavenger consumers.
Vultures primarily live off of carrion, dead animals found along roads and in newly dug fields.
Turkey vultures have excellent vision and a strong sense of smell used to detect food.
1a4 Functional Groups
The turkey vulture beak enables it to gouge and tear tissue.
1a4 Functional Groups

Turkey vultures are sometimes confused with wild turkeys.  Both have red heads, but the difference in beaks indicates different functional roles.

1a4 Functional Groups
Turkeys are omnivores and their beaks enable then to crack over large seeds and catch small animal prey.

Wild turkeys are not native to Oregon, they were introduced as a game bird in 1961.  Now they are frequent visitors to our fields.

Throughout this course you will be introduced to animals you are likely to encounter in your field work.  They fill a variety of functional roles in their ecosystems and have diverse feeding structures and behaviors suited for survival in unique habitats.
1a4 Functional Groups

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This is the end of the Knowledge Lecture Guide.  The material from this Guide and the next Research Lecture Guide is assessed on the Canvas Quiz due by Sunday.
1a4 Functional Groups
Check your knowledge.  Can you:
  • provide the functional classification of various animals?
  • describe structures animals use for feeding and how they relate to functional groups?
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