1 / 23

Ecosystems

Ecosystems. Studying organisms in their environment. biosphere. ecosystem. community. population. organism. Essential questions. What limits the production in ecosystems? How do nutrients move in the ecosystem? How does energy move through the ecosystem?. Ecosystem.

Download Presentation

Ecosystems

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. Ecosystems

  2. Studying organisms in their environment biosphere ecosystem community population organism

  3. Essential questions • What limits the production in ecosystems? • How do nutrients move in the ecosystem? • How does energy move through the ecosystem?

  4. Ecosystem • All the organisms in a community plus abiotic factors • ecosystems are transformers of energy& processors of matter • Ecosystems are self-sustaining • what is needed? • capture energy • transfer energy • cycle nutrients

  5. Ecosystem inputs biosphere constant inputof energy energy flowsthrough nutrients cycle Don’t forgetthe laws of Physics! Matter cannot be created ordestroyed nutrients can only cycle inputs • energy • nutrients

  6. Decompositionconnects all trophic levels Generalized Nutrient cycling consumers consumers producers consumers decomposers decomposers nutrientsENTER FOOD CHAIN= made availableto producers nutrientsmade availableto producers return toabioticreservoir abioticreservoir abioticreservoir geologicprocesses geologicprocesses

  7. CO2 in atmosphere Combustion of fuels Industry and home Photosynthesis Diffusion Respiration Plants Animals Dissolved CO2 Bicarbonates Photosynthesis Deposition of dead material Animals Plants and algae Fossil fuels (oil, gas, coal) Deposition of dead material Carbonates in sediment abiotic reservoir: • CO2 in atmosphere enter food chain: • photosynthesis = carbon fixation in Calvin cycle recycle: return to abiotic: • respiration • combustion Carbon cycle

  8. abiotic reservoir: • N in atmosphere enter food chain: • nitrogen fixation by soil & aquatic bacteria recycle: • decomposing & nitrifying bacteria return to abiotic: • denitrifying bacteria Nitrogen cycle Atmospheric nitrogen Carnivores Herbivores Birds Plants Plankton with nitrogen-fixing bacteria Death, excretion, feces Nitrogen-fixing bacteria (plant roots) Fish Decomposing bacteria amino acids excretion Nitrogen-fixing bacteria (soil) Ammonifying bacteria loss to deep sediments Nitrifying bacteria Denitrifying bacteria soil nitrates

  9. abiotic reservoir: • rocks, minerals, soil enter food chain: • erosion releases soluble phosphate • uptake by plants recycle: • decomposing bacteria & fungi return to abiotic: • loss to ocean sediment Phosphorus cycle Land animals Plants Animal tissue and feces Urine Soluble soil phosphate Decomposers (bacteria and fungi) Loss in drainage Rocks and minerals Phosphates in solution Decomposers (bacteria & fungi) Animal tissue and feces Plants and algae Aquatic animals Precipitates Loss to deep sediment

  10. abiotic reservoir: • surface & atmospheric water enter food chain: • precipitation & plant uptake recycle: • transpiration return to abiotic: • evaporation & runoff Water cycle Solar energy Transpiration Water vapor Evaporation Precipitation Oceans Runoff Lakes Percolation in soil Aquifer Groundwater

  11. Transpiration Remembertranspiration?

  12. Breaking the water cycle • Deforestation breaks the water cycle • groundwater is not transpired to the atmosphere, so precipitation is not created forest  desert desertification

  13. Wangari Maathai Repairing the damage • The Greenbelt Movement • planting trees in Kenya • restoring a sustainable ecosystem • establishing democracy • empowering women Nobel Peace prize 2004

  14. 7800 acres Studying ecosystems 38 acre deforestation Hubbard Brook Experimental Forest

  15. Effects of deforestation 40% increase in runoff • loss of water • 60x loss in nitrogen • 10x loss in calcium loss into surface water nitrate levels in runoff 80 40 loss out of ecosystem! Concentration of nitrate (mg/l ) 4 Deforestation 2 Why isnitrogen soimportant? 0 1965 1966 1967 1968 Year

  16. Ecosystem inputs biosphere energy flowsthrough nutrients cycle inputs • energy • nutrients

  17. loss of energy loss of energy Energy flows through ecosystems sun secondary consumers (carnivores) primary consumers (herbivores) producers (plants)

  18. sun Level 4 Tertiary consumer Food chains • Trophic levels • feeding relationships • start with energy from the sun • captured byplants • 1st level of all food chains • food chains usually go up only 4 or 5 levels • inefficiency of energy transfer • all levels connect to decomposers top carnivore Level 3 Secondary consumer carnivore Level 2 Primary consumer heterotrophs herbivore Level 1 Producer autotrophs Fungi Decomposers Bacteria

  19. sun energy lost todaily living energy lost todaily living Inefficiency of energy transfer • Loss of energy between levels of food chain • To where is the energy lost? The cost of living! 17% growth only this energymoves on to the next level in the food chain 33% cellular respiration 50% waste (feces)

  20. sun Ecological pyramid • Loss of energy between levels of food chain • can feed fewer animals in each level 1 100 100,000 1,000,000,000

  21. Humans in food chains • Dynamics of energy through ecosystems have important implications for human populations • how much energy does it take to feed a human? • if we are meat eaters? • if we are vegetarian? What is yourecological footprint?!

  22. Food webs • Food chains are linked together into food webs • Who eats whom? • a species may weave into web at more than one level • bears • humans • eating meat? • eating plants?

  23. Any Questions??We’re workingon a lotof them!

More Related