Title: Chapter 4: Ecosystems: Components, Energy Flow, and Matter Cycling
1Chapter 4Ecosystems Components, Energy Flow,
and Matter Cycling
The Earths thin film of living matter is
sustained by grand-scale cycles of energy and
chemical elements.G. Evelyn Hutchinson
2What Is Ecology
- The study of how organisms interact with one
another and with their nonliving environment. - Connections in nature
3Important Terminology (Biology Review)
- Organism
- Any form of life
- Cell
- Eukaryotic cell
- Prokaryotic cell
- Species
- Groups of organisms
- Population
- Group of interacting individuals of the same
species that occupy a specific area at the same
time - Genetic Diversity
- Variance in genetic makeup of populations
- Habitat
- Where a population normally lives
4Levels Of Organization
5Earths Systems
- Atmosphere
- Troposphere/Stratosphere
- Hydrosphere
- Liquid water
- Ice, icebergs, frozen soil layers
- Water vapor
- Lithosphere
- Crust and upper mantle
- Biosphere
- Where living organisms exist
6Life On Earth
- Life depends on three interconnected factors
- 1. One-way flow of high-quality energy from the
sun - 2. Cycling of Matter
- 3. Gravity
7Interconnected Factors
8Ecosystem Concepts and Biomes
- Terrestrial portion of the biosphere has been
classified into biomes. - These biomes are characterized by
- Distinct climate
- Long-term patters of weather
- Specific landforms
9Characteristics of Ecosystems
- No distinct boundaries nor self-contained
- Abiotic Factors
- Range of tolerance
- Limiting factor
- Biotic Factors
- Producers autotrophs
- Consumers - heterotrophs
- Herbivores Carnivores
- Omnivores Scavengers
- decomposers
10Food Webs and Energy Flow
11Pyramids of Energy Flow
12Biogeochemical Cycles
- Nutrient cycles the nutrient atoms, ions, and
molecules that organisms need to live, grow, and
reproduce are continuously cycled from the
nonliving environment and then back again.
13Water Cycle
14Water Cycle Human Impacts
- Withdrawing large quantities of fresh water from
streams, lakes, and underground sources. - Clearing vegetation from land for agriculture,
mining, road and building construction, and other
activities. - Modifying water quality
15Carbon Cycle
16Carbon Cycle Human Impacts
- Clearing trees and other plants that absorb CO2
through photosynthesis - Adding large amounts of CO2 by burning fossil
fuels and wood
17Nitrogen Cycle
18Nitrogen Cycle Human Impacts
- Adding large amounts of nitric acid into the
atmosphere when we burn any fuel. - Adding nitrous oxide to the atmosphere through
the action of anaerobic bacteria on livestock
wastes and commercial inorganic fertilizers - Removing nitrogen from topsoil
19Phosphorous Cycle
20Phosphorous Cycle Human Impacts
- Mining large quantities of phosphate rock for use
in commercial inorganic fertilizers and
detergents - Reducing the available phosphate in tropical
forests by removing trees. - Adding excess phosphate to aquatic ecosystems
- Runoff of animal wastes
- Runoff of commercial phosphate
- Discharge of municipal sewage
21Sulfur Cycle
22Sulfur Cycle Human Impact
- Burning sulfur-containing coal and oil
- Refining sulfur-containing petroleum
- Using smelting to convert sulfur compounds of
metallic minerals
23Ecosystem Services
All things come from earth, and to earth they
all return. Menander (342-290 B.C.)