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ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE. Chapter 5 How Ecosystems Work 5.1 Energy Flow in Ecosystems. 5.1 Energy Flow in Ecosystems Objectives. Describe how energy is transferred from the sun to producers and then to consumers. Describe one way in which consumers depend on producers.

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ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE

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  1. ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE Chapter 5 How Ecosystems Work 5.1 Energy Flow in Ecosystems

  2. 5.1 Energy Flow in Ecosystems Objectives • Describe how energy is transferred from the sun to producers and then to consumers. • Describe one way in which consumers depend on producers. • List two types of consumers. • Explain how energy transfer in a food web is more complex than energy transfer in a food chain. • Explain why an energy pyramid is a representation of trophic levels.

  3. Life Depends on the Sun • The ultimate source of energy for almost all organisms is the sun. • Energy from the sun enters an ecosystem when a plant undergoes photosynthesis – the process used by plants to convert simple inorganic molecules into more complex organic molecules via solar energy. • Solar energy drives a series of chemical reactions that require carbon dioxide and water resulting in the production of carbohydrates. • Carbohydrates are a form of chemical energy. • When an animal eats a plant, some energy is transferred from the plant to the animal.

  4. http://thoughtchalk.com/2011/07/01/genetic-engineering-and-photosynthesis-in-animals/http://thoughtchalk.com/2011/07/01/genetic-engineering-and-photosynthesis-in-animals/

  5. http://bioweb.uwlax.edu/bio203/2011/klees_ther/nutrition.htm

  6. Life Depends on the Sun • A producer (a.k.a. autotroph) is an organism that makes its own food. • Consumers are organisms that get their energy by eating other organisms. • Consumers are a type of heterotroph – an organism that has to get its organic material from an outside source. • Producers get their energy directly from the sun. • Consumers get their energy indirectly from the sun by consuming producers or consumers.

  7. http://www.propane.pro/category/lpg/ http://www.heraldsun.com.au/opinion/tricky-path-for-premier-ted-baillieu-on-grazing/story-e6frfhqf-1225971227522

  8. Life Depends on the Sun • Thermal vent communities are an exception to the norm of solar dependence. • Thermal vent communities exist in the total darkness of the deep ocean and bacteria are the producers using hydrogen sulfide as the energy source. • Hydrogen sulfide is present in the hot water that escapes from the cracks in the ocean floor. • The use of hydrogen sulfide instead of light energy is called chemosynthesis.

  9. http://deepseanews.com/2012/02/the-marine-biology-bucket-list/http://deepseanews.com/2012/02/the-marine-biology-bucket-list/ http://www.marinebio.net/marinescience/04benthon/dsvents.htm

  10. What Eats What • Herbivores (deer and cows) are consumers that only eat producers. • Carnivores (lions and hawks) are consumers that eat only other consumers. • Omnivores (humans and raccoons) eat both plant and animal matter. • Decomposers (for example, many bacteria and fungi) are consumers that get their food by breaking down dead organisms. • Decomposers are essential for recycling of nutrients.

  11. Cellular Respiration: Burning the Fuel • Cellular respiration is the process of breaking down food to yield energy. • Cells absorb oxygen and use it to release energy from food. • The equation for cellular respiration is essentially the opposite as that for photosynthesis. http://bhavanajagat.com/2012/05/25/spiritualism-the-science-of-matter-energy-life-and-spirituality/

  12. Energy Transfer • Each time one organism eats another organism, a transfer of energy takes place. • Food chains, food webs, and trophic pyramids may be used to study the transfer of energy through an ecosystem. • A food chain is a simple sequence in which energy is transferred from one organism to another. • A food web is an illustration that shows the many possible feeding relationships in an ecosystem with arrows going from what is consumed to what may consume the item. • Each step in the transfer of energy through a food chain or food web in an ecosystem is known as a trophic level.

  13. http://www.tutorvista.com/content/biology/biology-ii/environment-and-environmental-problems/ecological-balance.phphttp://www.tutorvista.com/content/biology/biology-ii/environment-and-environmental-problems/ecological-balance.php http://www.pride2.org/NewPrideSite/Asia/Lesson7/FoodWebs.html

  14. Energy Transfer • Each time energy is transferred from one organism to another, some energy is lost as heat and less energy is available to organisms at the next trophic level. • Some energy is lost during cellular respiration. • About 90% of energy at each trophic level is used to maintain life functions. • The remaining 10% of energy becomes part of the organism’s body and is stored in its molecules to be passed on to the next trophic level.

  15. Energy Transfer • Energy pyramids illustrate the relative amount of energy or biomass at each trophic level in an ecosystem. • The lowest trophic level, containing the most energy/biomass, is the producer level. • Producers are consumed by primary consumers (a.k.a. herbivores). • Primary consumers are consumed by secondary consumers. • Tertiary consumers consume secondary or other tertiary consumers. • Because so much energy is lost at each level, the number of trophic levels for any given ecosystem is fairly low.

  16. http://bio1152.nicerweb.com/Locked/media/ch55/pyramid-production.htmlhttp://bio1152.nicerweb.com/Locked/media/ch55/pyramid-production.html

  17. http://legacy.owensboro.kctcs.edu/gcaplan/eco/Note%20Withgott/ECO%20NOTE%20K%20Species%20Interaction.htmhttp://legacy.owensboro.kctcs.edu/gcaplan/eco/Note%20Withgott/ECO%20NOTE%20K%20Species%20Interaction.htm

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