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ECOSYSTEMS AND HOW THEY WORK

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Biomes are large terrestrial regions characterized by distinct climate ... Aquatic life zones (like biomes) consist of freshwater and marine life zones ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ECOSYSTEMS AND HOW THEY WORK


1
CHAPTER 4
  • ECOSYSTEMS AND HOW THEY WORK

2
Ecology and Life
  • Ecology is study of how organisms interact with
    one another and with their nonliving environment
  • A species consists of all organisms -living
    things-which can reproduce living offspring
  • Populations consist of organisms of same species
    living in same place at same time
  • Genetically diverse organisms contribute genes to
    the populations gene pool

3
Ecology and Life -2
  • Several interacting populations occupying the
    same habitat form a community
  • An ecosystem is the communities and their
    nonliving environment all Earths ecosystems
    form the ecosphere
  • What are 6 characteristics of living things that
    enable growth, survival and reproduction?

4
Reproduction and Evolution
  • While asexual reproduction can produce new
    offspring - they are all identical
  • Sexual reproduction produces organisms have new
    combinations of parental traits.
  • Traits which offer a better chance of survival
    are adaptive and lead to evolution
  • Biodiversity refers to all of the variety of
    living organisms and their traits

5
Earths Life-support Systems
  • Atmosphere consists of inner trophosphere and
    outer stratosphere
  • Hydrosphere is liquid, solid gaseous water
  • Lithosphere is crust and upper mantle
  • Ecosphere is portion of earth where organisms
    interact (atmosphere, hydrosphere, and upper
    lithosphere)

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7
Sustaining Life on Earth
  • Interconnected factors include
  • one-way flow of high quality energy from sun
  • What is the path?
  • Cycling of matter or nutrients through ecosphere
  • Gravity permits earth to hold onto all parts of
    ecosphere

8
Life is Sustained by Sun
  • Sunlight supplies energy for photosynthesis
  • Solar energy powers cycling of matter
  • Solar energy drives climate and weather systems
  • Hydrogen and helium nuclei fuse releasing solar
    energy

9
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10
Effects of Solar Radiation
  • Solar energy reaching earth is either reflected
    (28) or absorbed (28)
  • Absorbed radiation warms, evaporated, cycles, and
    generates winds.
  • Less than 1 is captured for photosynthesis these
    reactions produce all organic compounds required
    for all living organisms
  • Greenhouse effect - ultimate change of all solar
    radiation to heat (infrared radiation)

11
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12
Ecosystem Concepts
  • Biomes are large terrestrial regions
    characterized by distinct climate and specific
    life forms.
  • Climate is weather - over the long term it
    determines type of life forms in biomes
  • Biomes contain many ecosystems
  • Aquatic life zones (like biomes) consist of
    freshwater and marine life zones

13
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14
Major Components of Ecosystems
  • Abiotic - nonliving water, air, nutrients and
    solar energy
  • physical factors affecting terrestrial ecosystems
  • What are the six factors listed?
  • Physical factors affecting aquatic ecosystems
  • What are three factors listed?
  • Biotic - living components
  • Observe how abiotic and biotic components
    interact (fig. 4.9 and 4.10)

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17
Tolerance
  • Each population has range of variations in
    environmental factors that it can tolerate the
    extremes of the range of tolerance are tolerance
    limits.
  • Within this range of tolerance are variety of
    conditions which are optimal for success.
  • State the law of tolerance
  • Some factors limit population growth more than
    others - Name limiting factors in terrestrial and
    aquatic ecosystems

18
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19
Biotic Components of Ecosystem
  • Producers (autotrophs) transform solar energy
    into chemical energy of bonds of organic
    molecules - Photo (chemo)synthesis
  • green plants and aquatic phytoplankton
  • Consumers (heterotrophs) cannot synthesize
    organic molecules from scratch - they can
    convert organic molecules from food to other
    organic molecules needed

20
Consumers
  • Consumers (heterotrophs) obtain energy and
    nutrients from other organisms
  • Herbivores - primary consumers
  • Secondary tertiary consumers may be
  • carnivores - meat-eaters
  • omnivores - plant and meat eaters
  • scavengers and detritus feeders feed on animals
    already killed or remains of such
  • Decomposers - recycle organic molecules and
    release inorganic molecules - biodegradation

21
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22
One-way Flow of Energy
  • Respiration is release of energy from chemical
    bonds of organic molecules
  • Aerobic (w/oxygen) respiration --gt complete
    breakdown of glucose to CO2 water energy
  • Anaerobic (w/out oxygen) respiration (also called
    fermentation) --gt incomplete breakdown of glucose
    --gt methane, alcohol or acetic acid
  • One-way flow of energy through organisms
  • Matter energy recycles through ecosystems

23
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24
Food Chains
  • Food chain - how nutrients and energy move
    through organisms in ecosystem - who eats who
    (Fig. 4-14)
  • trophic levels begin with producers and end with
    decomposers
  • Be sure you can identify types of organisms at
    each trophic level, I.e. producers, primary,
    secondary, and tertiary consumers

25
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26
Food Webs
  • Food web - network of interconnected food chains
    more complex because one organism is never eaten
    by only one other
  • Identify the various trophic levels shown in Fig.
    4.15

27
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28
Energy flow and Biomass storage
  • Biomass (dry weight of organic matter) is
    transferred between trophic levels - but at each
    level some biomass changes to energy and is lost
  • Ecological efficiency compares biomass
    transferred to that converted and lost
  • Pyramid of energy flow shows that first trophic
    level has greatest amount of energy - some is
    transferred and some is lost at each level

29
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30
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31
Pyramid of Biomass
  • This pyramid demonstrates the total amount of
    biomass at each trophic level
  • Why is biomass of producers less than that of
    primary consumers in ocean ecosystem?

32
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33
Pyramid of Numbers
  • The actual number of organisms at each trophic
    level - regardless of size (amount of energy or
    biomass contained)
  • Numbers of organisms at first level often
    greatest and fourth level often has least number
    of organisms - unless the producers individually
    contain more biomass

34
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35
Primary Productivity
  • Gross Primary productivity - rate at which
    producers convert solar energy into chemical
    energy
  • Net Primary productivity - accounts for energy
    that produces use for their own respiration -
    biomass lost - so this rate is always less
  • Net primary productivity determines carrying
    capacity of species in ecosystems

36
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37
Comparisons of net productivity
  • Which life zones have the greatest net
    productivity? Why zones have the least?
  • Though tropical rain forest have high
    productivity for natural plants, the productivity
    when cleared is much less.
  • What effect have humans had on the earths net
    productivity?

38
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39
Matter Cycling in Ecosystems
  • Nutrients are any atoms, ions or molecules needed
    by organisms to live, grow or reproduce.
  • Nutrient cycles (biogeochemical cycles) show how
    elements needed in greatest amounts travel
    through ecosystems

40
Hydrologic (water) Cycle
  • Main processes
  • evaporation -liquid water to water vapor
  • transpiration - evaporation from plants
  • condensation - water vapor to liquid water
  • precipitation - water from air goes to land
  • infiltration - water moves into soil
  • percolation - water flows downward through soil
  • runoff - water flows downward across surface

41
Hydrologic Cycle -2
  • Cycle powered by solar energy and gravity
  • Water vapor measurements absolute vs. relative
    humidity
  • Condensation requires condensation nuclei and
    occurs at dew point
  • How does surface runoff affect lithosphere?
  • Name three ways Man has intervened in water
    cycle.

42
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43
Carbon Cycle
  • Earths temperature varies with changes in carbon
    dioxide in atmosphere and water
  • Producers use CO2 from atmosphere for
    photosynthesis
  • Consumers release CO2 to atmosphere
  • Carbon of buried organisms may become fossil
    fuels
  • Most carbon stored as limestone and in water -
    How has Man disturbed carbon cycle?

44
Nitrogen Cycles
  • Most is in gas form in atmosphere
  • Gaseous nitrogen must be fixed to form ammonia
    or nitrates for plant assimilation
  • Plants synthesize nitrogen-containing organic
    molecules - proteins nucleic acids
  • Ammonia and nitrates converted back to gas which
    reenters atmosphere
  • How has Man intervened in nitrogen cycle?

45
Phosphorus Cycle
  • There is no gaseous phase for phosphorus
  • Phosphorus circulates through water, earths
    crust and living organisms
  • Phosphorus is added to land naturally by guano
    and artificially by fertilizer
  • Phosphorus is limiting factor in growth of many
    organisms
  • How has Man intervened in phosphorus cycle?

46
Sulfur Cycle
  • Much sulfur stored underground in rocks and
    minerals
  • Sulfur enters atmosphere as hydrogen sulfide,
    sulfur dioxide and sulfates
  • Water combines with sulfur dioxide to form acid
    rain
  • How has Man increased the atmospheric phase of
    the sulfur cycle?

47
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48
Ecological Research
  • Field research - dirty, difficult and expensive,
    but important new technologies
  • Laboratory research - set up model ecosystems
    with controlled variables easier but must be
    coupled with field research
  • Systems analysis - computer simulations used to
    make prediction accuracy depends on input

49
Ecosystem Services and Sustainability
  • Ecosystem services constitute earths natural
    capital one is biological diversity
  • genetic diversity - individuals in species vary
    in genetic makeup
  • species diversity - habitats contain wide variety
    of different species
  • ecological diversity - ecosystems contain wide
    variety of communities

50
Ecosystem Services and Sustainability -2
  • Ecosystem services provide recycling,
    purification and natural pest control
  • Each species results from many adaptations
  • Each species provides raw material for future
    adaptation
  • Two basic principles of natural ecosystem
    sustainability use renewable solar energy
  • and recycle nutrients efficiently
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