1 / 22

Unit 1 Ecosystems and Energy

Unit 1 Ecosystems and Energy. Overview . Ecology Energy First Law of Thermodynamics Second Law of Thermodynamics Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration Flow of Energy Through Ecosystems Producers, Consumers & Decomposers Ecological Pyramid Ecosystem Productivity. Ecology. Ecology

conan
Download Presentation

Unit 1 Ecosystems and Energy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Unit 1Ecosystems and Energy

  2. Overview • Ecology • Energy • First Law of Thermodynamics • Second Law of Thermodynamics • Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration • Flow of Energy Through Ecosystems • Producers, Consumers & Decomposers • Ecological Pyramid • Ecosystem Productivity

  3. Ecology • Ecology • “eco” house & “logy” study of • The study of interactions among and between organisms in their abiotic environment • Broadest field in biology • Biotic- living environment • Includes all organisms • Abiotic- non living or physical environment • Includes living space, sunlight, soil, precipitation, etc.

  4. Ecology • Biology is very organized • Ecologists are interested in the levels of life above that of organism

  5. Ecology Definitions • Species • A group of similar organisms whose members freely interbreed • Population • A group of organisms of the same species that occupy that live in the same area at the same time • Community • Al the populations of different species that live and interact in the same area at the same time • Ecosystem • A community and its physical (abiotic) environment • Landscape • Several interacting ecosystems

  6. Ecology • Biosphere contains earth’s communities, ecosystems and landscapes, and includes: • Atmosphere- gaseous envelope surrounding earth • Hydrosphere- earth’s supply of water • Lithosphere- soil and rock of the earth’s crust

  7. Energy • The ability or capacity to do work • Chemical, radiant, thermal, mechanical, nuclear, electrical • Energy exists as: • Stored energy (potential energy) • Kinetic energy (energy of motion)

  8. Thermodynamics • Study of energy and its transformations • System- the object being studied • Closed System- Does not exchange energy with surroundings (rare in nature) • Open System- exchanges energy with surroundings

  9. Laws of Thermodynamics • First Law of Thermodynamics • Energy cannot be created or destroyed; it can change from one form to another • Ex: organisms cannot create energy they need to survive- they must capture it from another source • Focus is on quantity • Second Law of Thermodynamics • When energy is converted form one form to another, some of it is degraded to heat • Heat is highly entropic (disorganized) • Focus is on quality

  10. C6H12O6 + 6 H2O + 6 O2 Photosynthesis • Biological process by which energy from the sun (radiant energy) is transformed into chemical energy of sugar molecules • Energy captured by plants via photosynthesis is transferred to the organisms that eat the plants 6 CO2 + 12 H2O + radiant energy

  11. Cellular Respiration • The process where the chemical energy captured in photosynthesis is released within cells of plants and animals • This energy is then used for biological work • Creating new cells, reproduction, movement, etc. C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6 H2O 6 CO2 + 12 H2O + energy

  12. Energy Flow • Passage of energy in a one-way direction through an ecosystem • Producers • Primary consumers • Secondary consumers • Decomposers

  13. Food Chains- The Path of Energy Flow • Energy from food passes from one organisms to another • Each “link” is called a trophic level

  14. Food webs represent interlocking food chains that connect all organisms in an ecosystem

  15. Ecological Pyramids • Graphically represent the relative energy value of each trophic level • Important feature is that large amount of energy are lost between trophic levels to heat • Three main types • Pyramid of numbers • Pyramid of biomass • Pyramid of energy

  16. Pyramid of Numbers • Illustrates the number of organisms at each trophic level • Usually, organisms at the base of the pyramid are more numerous • Fewer organisms occupy each successive level • Do not indicate the biomass of the organisms at each level or the amount of energy transferred between levels

  17. Pyramid of Biomass • Illustrates the total biomass at each successive trophic level • Biomass: measure of the total amt of living material • Biomass indicates the amount of fixed energy at a given time • Illustrates a progressive reduction in biomass through trophic levels

  18. Pyramid of Energy • Illustrates how much energy is present at each trophic level and how much is transferred to the next level • Most energy dissipates between trophic levels • Explains why there are so few trophic levels • Energy levels get too low to support life

  19. Ecosystem Productivity • Gross Primary Productivity (GPP) • Total amount of energy that plants capture and assimilate in a given period of time • Net Primary Productivity (NPP) • Plant growth per unit area per time • Represents the rate at which organic material is actually incorporated into the plant tissue for growth • GPP – cellular respiration = NPP • Only NPP is available as food to organisms

  20. Variation in NPP by Ecosystem

  21. Human Impact on NPP • Humans consume more of earth’s resources that any other animal • Humans represent 0.5% of land-based biomass • Humans use 32% of land-based NPP! • This may contribute to loss of species (extinction) • Humans’ high consumption represents a threat to planet’s ability to support both human and non-human inhabitants

More Related