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Matter and Energy

Matter and Energy. In Ecosystems. 3 Ecosystem Necessities. Recycling of Matter (nutrient cycles). Flow of Energy (food chain). Gravity (keeps everything here). Matter. Anything that has mass and takes up space. Examples: solids (nutrients), liquids, gases. Energy.

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Matter and Energy

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  1. Matter and Energy In Ecosystems

  2. 3 Ecosystem Necessities • Recycling of Matter (nutrient cycles). • Flow of Energy (food chain). • Gravity (keeps everything here).

  3. Matter • Anything that has mass and takes up space. • Examples: solids (nutrients), liquids, gases.

  4. Energy • The ability to do work. • Potential energy- stored energy. Ex. food, gasoline.

  5. Kinetic energy- movement. Ex. exercise, a car rolling.

  6. High quality energy • Organized, concentrated. • Ex. Petroleum, electricity, nuclear fission, food.

  7. Low quality energy • Disorganized, not concentrated. • Ex. Low temperature heat, dispersed geothermal energy.

  8. Laws of Thermodynamics 1st law- conservation of energy. Energy input always equals energy output.

  9. 2nd law- energy degrades as it is changed from one form to another.

  10. Energy Chain fuelheatsteamkinetic energyelectricity falling waterkinetic energyelectricitylightheat windkinetic energyelectricitylightheat sunlightplant tissuekinetic energyheat

  11. Energy In Ecosystems

  12. Energy in Ecosystems • Food Chains- show the movement of energy from one feeding level (trophic level) to the next.

  13. Food Web- interlocked food chains.

  14. Trophic levels • Producers- harness energy from the sun to produce their own food. Ex. plants, phytoplankton.

  15. Primary consumers- eat producers harnessing their energy (biomass). Herbivores.

  16. Secondary consumers- eat primary consumers. Primary carnivores.

  17. Tertiary consumers- eat secondary consumers. Secondary carnivores.

  18. Decomposers- break down dead matter and waste from the other levels. Bacteria and fungi.

  19. Ecological Pyramids • Pyramid of numbers- counting the number of organisms at each trophic level to yield information about the ecosystem.

  20. Pyramid of biomass- measures the dried weight of all organisms at each trophic level.

  21. Pyramid of energy flow- measures the amount of usable energy at each trophic level.

  22. 10% Rule Only 10% of the biomass at one level is available to the next level. 90% is used for energy, to build more biomass, or is lost as waste.

  23. Ecosystem Productivity

  24. Gross Primary Productivity • Rate at which producers capture and store energy as biomass.

  25. Net primary productivity • Gross productivity minus the rate at which biomass energy is used during aerobic respiration. • Income available to other trophic levels.

  26. High production ecosystems • Marshes • Swamps • Estuaries • Trop. Rain Forest

  27. Low productivity ecosystem • Open ocean • Tundra • Deserts

  28. Matter in Ecosystems

  29. Biogeochemical Cycles • Show the movement of nutrients through the biotic and abiotic components of an ecosystem.

  30. Gaseous Cycle • Nutrient time predominates in the atmosphere • Ex. Hydrological, carbon, nitrogen, etc.

  31. Sedimentary cycle • Nutrient time predominates in rock. • Ex. Phosphorus, sulfur.

  32. Law of the Conservation of Matter • Matter cannot be destroyed, only rearranged.

  33. High Quality Matter • Concentrated and refined. • Ex. Aluminum can, gasoline.

  34. Low Quality Matter • Disorganized, unconcentrated. • Ex. Aluminum ore, crude oil.

  35. Organic compounds • Contain carbon and hydrogen and form living tissue. • CHONPS- most common atoms in life (macronutrients).

  36. Inorganic Compounds • Do not contain C and H bonded. Make up non-living matter.

  37. Carbon Cycle • Process driven (photosynthesis and cellular respiration). • Gaseous cycle.

  38. Importance of Carbon • Is a key component of organic molecules. • Is an ingredient of photosynthesis. • Is part of the greenhouse layer.

  39. Human caused problems • Burning fossil fuels releases stored carbon gases increasing the greenhouse effect.

  40. Nitrogen Cycle • Process driven (decomposition, nitrification, denitrif., ammonification). • Gaseous cycle.

  41. Importance of nitrogen • Important molecular component (DNA and RNA). • Important for plant growth.

  42. Human caused problems • Burning fossil fuels releases nitrogen gases which can become acid rain… also a green house gas.

  43. Nitrogen fertilizer runoff can cause fish kills.

  44. Phosphorus cycle • Process driven (weathering, decomposition). • Sedimentary Cycle.

  45. Importance of Phosphorus • Important cellular component (DNA and RNA). • Plant growth and development.

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