Title: Ecosystems
1Chapter 54
2What is an Ecosystem?
- All organisms living in an area plus the abiotic
factors - Energy machines and matter processors
- Energy flows through and matter cycles
3Trophic Relationships
- Primary producers
- Ultimately support all trophic levels
- Autotrophic organisms
- Organisms above producers
- Heterotrophic
- Depend on photosynthetic output of producers
- Decomposers
- Get energy from detritus (nonliving organic
material) - Play a central role in material cycling
4Decompositions Role
- Decomposers link all trophic levels
- Re-supply ecosystems with organic material
- Liberate otherwise unusable material
- Earthworms eat soil and extract nutrients and
birds eat worms - Worms cant eat dirt
5Laws of Physics and Chemistry
- First law of thermodynamics
- Energy is neither created nor destroyed, only
transformed - Second law of thermodynamics
- Energy is lost when it changes states
- Chemistry laws
- Energy moves through an ecosystem
- Nutrients cycle through an ecosystem
6Primary Producers
- Organisms that convert energy from the sun into
chemical energy (stored in bonds of sugars) - Primary producers provide all the energy for a
given ecosystem - Lots of plants means lots of energy
7Global Energy Budget
- Each day Earth receives 1022joules of solar
radiation - Equivalent of 100 million atomic bombs
- Most of that energy is reflected by the
atmosphere, or absorbed by water or the ground - Plants only use the part of solar radiation we
call visible light - Of visible light only 1 is converted to organic
matter - But producers generate 170 billion tons of
organic matter a year
8Gross and Net Primary Production
- Gross Primary Production
- Amount of light energy converted to chemical
energy by photosynthesis per unit of time - Not all of this production is stored as organic
material because the plants use some molecules as
fuel for respiration - Net Primary Production
- Amount of chemical energy available to the next
trophic level - NPP GPP R (respiration)
9Net Primary Production
- Measurement of most interest to ecologists
- Primary production can be expressed as biomass
(weight of vegetation added to ecosystem per area
per time or g/m2/yr) or energy per area per unit
time or (J/m2/yr)
10Earths Ecosystems and Biomass
11Production in Marine Ecosystems
- Limiting factors in Marine Ecosystems
- Light more than half the light is absorbed in
the first meter of water - Even clear water at 20 m only 5-10 of the light
is available - We should then see an increase in production from
poles toward the equator but we dont - Its actually nutrients that are more limiting in
marine ecosystems than light -
12Production in Marine Ecosystems
- Limiting nutrient
- Nutrients that must be added for production to
increase - In marine ecosystems nitrogen and phosphorus are
limiting - Iron is also limiting in parts of the ocean
- Iron is supplied by wind blown dust
- Where iron is abundant so is nitrogen
- Cyanobacteria need iron to fix atmospheric
nitrogen into a useable form
13Production in Freshwater Ecosystems
- Limiting factors
- Light
- Temperature
- Nutrients unlike marine ecosystems, phosphorus
is the main limiting factor
14Terrestrial Ecosystems
- Main factors are
- Water
- Temperature
- Nutrients
15Secondary Production in Ecosystems
- Amount of chemical energy in food converted into
organic matter - Cow eats grass secondary production is the
amount of grass that is converted into cow - The cow does not use the entire grass, some of it
passes through the digestive system
16Production Efficiency
- Example of a caterpillar
- Eats 200 J of plant material
- 33 J is used for growth
- 100 J passes through the caterpillar as feces
- Not lost energy because decomposers will use this
energy - 67 J is used for cellular respiration
- This energy is lost as heat
- Efficiency measure
- Production efficiency net secondary production
/ assimilation of primary production - Fraction of food energy that is not used for
respiration, or energy that is not lost to the
environment - Our example production efficiency 33 J (growth)
/ 33 67 J (energy used for assimilation, feces
dont count) 33 - Birds and mammals average 1-3
- Fish average 10
- Insects average 40
17Efficiency of Energy Transfer
18Trophic Efficiency and Ecological Pyramids
- Trophic efficiency percentage of production
transferred from trophic level to the next - Generally only 10 of the total energy at one
level is available for use at the next level
19Energy efficiency of trophic levels
20Pyramids of numbers
21Green World Hypothesis
- With so many primary consumers (herbivores) why
is everything still so green - Herbivores actually consume very little plant
biomass because they are held in check by several
factors - Total of 830,000,000,000 metric tons of carbon in
plants - 50,000,000,000 tons is added each year
- Herbivores only consume 17 of this biomass every
year so they are just really a nuisance to plants - Factors that keep herbivores in check
- Plant defenses
- Nutrients, not energy supply, limit herbivores
- Abiotic factors
- Intraspecific competition
- Interspecific interactions
22Cycling of Elements
- Solar energy is replenished daily
- Carbon, Nitrogen, Phosphorus, etc. are not
replenished (at all) - Earth relies on the cycling of these nutrients.
23Biological and Geological Processes That Drive
Nutrient Cycling
- Biogeochemical cycles nutrient pathways that
involve both living and nonliving processes - Two general paths for chemicals
- Global gaseous forms of chemicals that can move
through the atmosphere (N, C, O, S) - Atmosphere is the main reservoir
- Local less mobile in the environment (P, K, and
Ca) - Soil is the main reservoir
24General Model of Chemical Cycling
- Shows the main reservoirs and general processes
that involve moving chemicals from one reservoir
to the next - Most nutrients accumulate in 4 reservoirs defined
by two characteristics - Whether it contains organic or inorganic material
- Whether it is available for use or not
- Cycling of water does not fit this model well
25Water Cycle
26Nitrogen Cycle
27Nitrogen Cycle
- Earths atmosphere is about 80 nitrogen
- It is in an unusable form (N2)
- Usable nitrogen (NH4 or NO3enters ecosystems two
ways (depends on the ecosystem) - Atmospheric deposition (5-10)
- Added by being dissolved in rain or settling as
fine dust - Nitrogen fixation
- Only certain bacteria can fix atmospheric
nitrogen into usable form - Bacteria are either free living or part of
symbiotic relationship (Rhizobium) - One unnatural way is through the use of
fertilizers by humans - Runoff from fields
28Carbon Cycle
29Phosphorus Cycle
- Organisms require phosphorus for DNA, ATP, and
phospholipids (cell membranes) - Does not include the atmosphere
- No significant phosphorus containing gases
- Usable form is PO43- which plants can absorb
- Main reservoir is rock
30Phosphorus Cycle
31Decomposition and Nutrient Cycling
- Different ecosystems cycle nutrients at different
rates - Depends on rate of decomposition
- Tropical rain forest few months to few years
- Temperate forests 4 to 6 years
- Tundra 50 years
- Temperature and oxygen play vital roles
- Tropical rain forests phosphorus occurs in the
soil at levels far below that of a temperate
forest - why?
- Nutrients are taken up as soon as they are
available - Rain forest soil is very poor
32Human Impact on Ecosystems and Biosphere
- Disruption of chemical cycles
- Depletion of soil nutrients in one area, and
excess in another - Food crops
- Addition of new toxins to an area
- Agricultural effects on nutrient cycling
- An area is cleared for farming, and nutrients
exist in the soil - The crop is grown, but the nutrients the crop
took from the soil is transported elsewhere - Nutrients must be added back to the soil
- Nitrogen is a big limiting factor
33Critical Load and Nutrient Cycles
- Excess nitrogen minerals in the soil are leaking
into rivers, and eventually the ocean - This does have positive effects for some forests
- Nitrogen runoff fertilizes forests
- Critical Load amount of nutrients that begins
to have negative affects
34Accelerated Eutrophication of Lakes
- Eutrophic lake high in nutrients
- Oligotrophic low in nutrients
- Sewage and factory runoff adds nutrients to lakes
- Results in explosive increase of phytoplankton
- Banks become choked with weeds
- Algae blooms deplete oxygen content
- Results in fish death
35Combustion of Fossil Fuels and Acid Rain
- Burning wood, coal, and oil results in release of
oxides of sulfur and nitrogen that react with
water to form sulfuric and nitric acid - These fall back to the earth as acid
precipitation - pH less than 5.6
- Some parts of Europe receive rain with a pH of
3.0 - Acid rain causes leaching of nitrogen and
phosphorus from the soil - Lakes and streams are heavily damaged due to slow
buffering capacity - Results in predator death and replacement with
acid tolerant species which affects the food web
36Acid Precipitation
37Toxins
- Synthetic materials that become concentrated in
ecosystems due to the inability of organisms to
break it down - Mercury in waters
- Becomes part of fish tissue and humans can die
from eating these fish - DDT and biological magnification
- Top level carnivores are the most severely
affected by these toxins
38Biological Magnification
39Climate Change
- Rising CO2 levels in the atmosphere
- Caused by combustion of fossil fuels and wood
from deforestation - CO2 concentration before 1850 274 ppm
- 1958 316 ppm
- Today 370 ppm
- Greenhouse effect
- CO2 and water vapor absorb and reflect much of
the solar radiation that reaches Earth - Increase CO2 means more absorption
- Its like thickening the glass of a greenhouse, it
will raise the temperature
40(No Transcript)
41Global Warming
- Hard to understand due to all the abiotic and
biotic factors - Predictions and estimations
- End of 21st century CO2 concentrations double and
average global increase of 2 C - Increase of 1.3 C would make the world warmer
than any time in the past 100,000 years - Polar ice would melt and raise the sea level by
100 m (New York, Miami, and LA would be under
water) - Central US would be much drier
42Ozone Depletion
- Ozone protects us from harmful UV radiation
- Ozone is O3 it absorbs UV rays
- been gradually thinning since 1975
- Due to increase of CFCs (use in refrigeration)
- May cause increase of skin cancer and cataracts
43Ozone Depletion