Title: Ecosystems
1Ecosystems
- Starr/Taggarts
- Biology
- The Unity and Diversity of Life, 9e
- Chapter 49
2Key Concepts
- An ecosystem is an association of organisms and
their environment - Every ecosystem has inputs and outputs of both
energy and nutrients - Energy flows in only one direction through an
ecosystem - Autotrophs are primary producer organisms for the
ecosystem
3Key Concepts
- The food web extends from producers through
consumers, decomposers, and detritivores - Water, carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus have
biogeochemical cycles that are global in scale - Each substance moves through a hydrologic,
atmospheric, or sedimentary cycle
4The Nature of Ecosystems
- Primary producers
- Consumers
- Decomposers
- Detritivores
5fruits
insects
rodents, rabbits
birds
fruits
rodents, rabbits
insects
birds
fruits
rodents, rabbits
insects
birds
fruits
insects
rodents, rabbits
birds
6Structure of Ecosystems
- Trophic Levels
- 1st - Primary producers
- Autotrophs
- 2nd - Primary consumers
- Herbivores, Decomposers, Detritivores
- 3rd - Secondary consumers
- Primary carnivores
- 4th - Tertiary consumers
- Secondary carnivores and parasites
7MARSH HAWK
UPLAND SANDPIPER
GARTER SNAKE
CUTWORM
PLANTS
8MARSH HAWK
CROW
HIGHER TROPHIC LEVELS Complex array of
carnivores, omnivores and other consumers. Many
feed at more than one trophic level continually,
seasonally, or when an oppportunity presents
itself
UPLAND SANDPIPER
GARTER SNAKE
FROG
WEASEL
BADGER
COYOTE
SPIDER
SECOND TROPHIC LEVEL Primary consumers (e.g.,
herbivores)
CLAY-COLORED SPARROW
EARTHWORMS, INSECTS (E.G., GRASSHOPPPERS,
CUTWORMS)
GROUND SQUIRREL
POCKET GOPHER
PRAIRIE VOLE
FIRST TROPHIC LEVEL Primary producers
9Food Webs
- Network of crossing, interlinked food chains
involving primary producers, consumers, and
decomposers
10Major Pathways of Energy Flow
- Primary source
- Grazing food webs
- Photosynthetic organisms to herbivores
- Detrital food webs
- Photosynthetic organisms to detritivores and
decomposers
11Food Webs
12Ecological Pyramids
Decomposers
Top carnivores
Primary carnivores
Herbivores
Primary Producers
13Energy Flow
- Energy loss with each trophic level
14Biogeochemical Cycles
15Hydrologic Cycle
- Rain and snow returns water to land
- Ocean currents and winds
- Evaporation
- Watershed
16ATMOSPERE
precipitation onto land 111,000
wind driven water vapor 40,000
evaporation from land plants (evapotranspiration)
71,000
evaporation from ocean 425,000
precipitation into ocean 385,000
surface and groudwater flow 40,000
LAND
OCEAN
17Experimental Watershed
- Deforested area had greater calcium loss than
undisturbed area
18Carbon Cycle
- Aerobic respiration ------gt CO2
- Fossil fuel burning
- Volcanic eruptions
- Atmosphere, soils, plant biomass
- Largest holding stations for Carbon
- CO2 - fixation
- Photosynthetic autotrophs
19Greenhouse Gases and a Warmer Planet
- Greenhouse effect
- CO2, Ozone, Methane, Nitrous oxide, CFCs
20Global Warming
- Atmospheric CO2
- Glaciation and Interglacial Periods
21Greenhouse Gases
Fossil Fuel burning Deforestation
22Nitrogen Cycle
- N2 gases converted to usable forms
- Bacteria Volcanic action Lightning
23Human Intervention in the Nitrogen Cycle
- Decline of spruce forests
- Nutrient imbalances
24Sedimentary Cycle
- Phosphorus Cycle
- From land to sediments at bottom of the sea then
back to land - Earths Crust
- Largest reservoir of phosphorus
25Eutrophication
- Activities that increase the concentration of
dissolved nutrients - Nutrient enrichment of any aquatic ecosystem
- Most minerals enter sedimentary cycles
- Fertilizers use phosphates
- Dense algae blooms
26Ecosystem Modeling
- Prediction of unforeseen effects of disturbance
- Computer programs and models
- Case Study
- DDT - mosquito control
- Biological magnification
- Higher trophic organisms have higher
concentrations
27In Conclusion
- An ecosystem is an array of producers, consumers,
detritivores and decomposers and their
environment - There is a one-way flow of energy into and out
from an ecosystem and cycling of materials - Primary producers are mainly photoautotrophs
28In Conclusion
- The rate at which primary producers capture and
store energy is the primary productivity - Energy fixed by photosynthesizers passes through
grazing food webs and detrital food webs - Food webs lose energy due to metabolic activities
of organisms in ecosystems
29In Conclusion
- The availability of water and nutrients
contribute to primary productivity - Various cycles occur which move substances like
ions, water, and nutrients from the atmosphere to
land, animals, and back to the atmosphere - Fossil fuel burning and deforestation contribute
to increases in global warming
30In Conclusion
- Nitrogen availability is a limiting factor for
the total net primary productivity of land
ecosystems - Phosphorus and other minerals enter sedimentary
cycles - Disturbances of an ecosystem can have unexpected
effects - Computer modeling helps identify ecosystem
relationships and can incorporate them into
models - developed by M. Roig