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Ecosystems

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Title: Ecosystems


1
Ecosystems
  • Chapter 26

2
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1
  • Define ecology
  • Distinguish among population, community,
    ecosystem, and biosphere

3
KEY TERMS
  • ECOLOGY
  • Discipline of biology that studies interrelations
    between living things and their environments
  • Ecologists study populations, communities,
    ecosystems, and the biosphere

4
KEY TERMS
  • POPULATION
  • A group of organisms of the same species that
    live in a defined geographic area at the same
    time
  • COMMUNITY
  • An association of populations of different
    species living in a defined habitat with some
    degree of interdependence

5
Community A Nurse Log
6
KEY TERMS
  • ECOSYSTEM
  • Interacting system that encompasses a community
    and its nonliving, physical environment
  • BIOSPHERE
  • All of Earths living organisms, collectively

7
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2
  • Explain the difference between J-shaped and
    S-shaped population growth curves

8
Dispersion in Populations
9
(c) Uniform dispersion
(b) Clumped dispersion
(a) Random dispersion
Fig. 26-2, p. 517
10
Intrinsic Rate of Increase
  • The maximum rate at which a population could
    increase in number under ideal conditions

11
Exponential Population Growth
  • J-shaped curve
  • An accelerated pattern of growth exhibited by
    certain populations for a limited period

12
Exponential Population Growth
13
Logistic Population Growth
  • S-shaped curve
  • After accelerated growth, growth rate decreases
  • Natural populations seldom follow the logistic
    growth curve closely

14
Logistic Population Growth and Carrying Capacity
15
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3
  • Summarize the three main types of survivorship
    curves

16
Survivorship
  • The probability that a given individual in a
    population will survive to a particular age

17
3 General Survivorship Curves
  • Type I survivorship
  • Mortality greatest in old age
  • Type II survivorship
  • Mortality spread evenly across all age groups
  • Type III survivorship
  • Mortality greatest among the young

18
Survivorship Curves
19
Experiment Drummond Phlox
20
Metapopulation
21
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4
  • Characterize producers, consumers, and decomposers

22
KEY TERMS
  • PRODUCER
  • An organism that synthesizes organic compounds
    from simple inorganic raw materials

23
KEY TERMS
  • CONSUMER
  • An organism that cannot synthesize its own food
    from inorganic raw materials
  • Must obtain energy and body-building materials
    from other organisms

24
KEY TERMS
  • DECOMPOSER
  • A microorganism that breaks down dead organic
    material and uses the decomposition products as a
    source of energy

25
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5
  • Describe what is meant by an organisms
    ecological niche

26
KEY TERMS
  • ECOLOGICAL NICHE
  • The totality of an organisms adaptations, its
    use of resources, its interactions with other
    organisms, and the lifestyle to which it is
    fitted in its community

27
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6
  • Define competition, predation, and symbiosis
  • Distinguish among mutualism, commensalism, and
    parasitism

28
KEY TERMS
  • COMPETITION
  • Interaction among two or more individuals that
    attempt to use the same essential resource, such
    as food, water, sunlight, or living space

29
KEY TERMS
  • PREDATION
  • A relationship in which one organism (the
    predator) kills and devours another organism (the
    prey)

30
KEY TERMS
  • SYMBIOSIS
  • An intimate relationship between two or more
    organisms of different species
  • Symbiosis includes mutualism, commensalism, and
    parasitism

31
Symbiosis
  • Mutualism
  • Both partners benefit
  • Commensalism
  • One organism benefits
  • Other is unaffected
  • Parasitism
  • One organism (the parasite) benefits
  • Other (the host) is harmed

32
Plant Defense Against Herbivores
33
Mutualism
34
Commensalism
35
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7
  • Define ecological succession
  • Distinguish between primary succession and
    secondary succession

36
KEY TERMS
  • ECOLOGICAL SUCCESSION
  • Sequence of changes in the species composition of
    a community over time

37
Succession
  • Primary succession begins in an area not
    previously inhabited
  • Example bare rock
  • Secondary succession begins in an area where
    there was a preexisting community and a
    well-formed soil
  • Example abandoned farmland

38
Primary Succession
39
Lichens and mosses
Exposed rocks
Balsam fir, paper birch, and white spruce forest
community
Jack pine, black spruce, and aspen
Low shrubs
Ferns, grasses, and herbs
Time
Fig. 26-12, p. 526
40
Secondary Succession
41
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 8
  • Summarize the concept of energy flow through a
    food web

42
KEY TERMS
  • TROPHIC LEVEL
  • Each sequential step in a food chain or food web,
    from producer to primary, secondary, or tertiary
    consumers

43
Energy Flow
  • Energy flows through an ecosystem in one
    direction, from sun to producer to consumer to
    decomposer
  • Energy used for metabolic purposes at a given
    trophic level is unavailable to the next trophic
    level

44
Solar Energy
45
Less than one-billionth of the suns total
energy reaches Earths outer atmosphere.
30 reflected back into space immediately
47 absorbed by the atmosphere
Less than 1 drives the winds and ocean currents
All solar energy is ultimately reradiated to
space as heat
0.02 captured by photosynthesis
Fig. 26-14, p. 528
46
Trophic Levels
47
Fourth trophic level tertiary consumers
Third trophic level secondary consumers
Second trophic level primary consumers
First tropic level producers
Decomposers (saprotrophs)
Energy from sun
Heat
Heat
Heat
Heat
Heat
Fig. 26-15, p. 529
48
Stepped Art
Fig. 26-15, p. 529
49
A Food Web
50
Energy Pyramid
51
Tertiary consumers (21)
Decomposers (5060)
Secondary consumers (383)
Primary consumers (3368)
Producers (20,810)
Fig. 26-17, p. 531
52
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 9
  • Describe the main steps in the carbon, nitrogen,
    and hydrologic cycles

53
KEY TERMS
  • BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLE
  • Process by which matter cycles from the living
    world to the nonliving, physical environment and
    back again

54
The Carbon Cycle
  • Carbon dioxide gas (CO2) enters plants, algae,
    and cyanobacteria
  • Which incorporate it into organic molecules
    through photosynthesis
  • Cellular respiration, combustion, erosion of
    limestone return CO2 to water and atmosphere
  • Making it available to producers again

55
Carbon Cycle
56
Air (CO2)
2
Soil microorganism respiration
1
2
2
Animal and plant respiration
Decomposition
Photosynthesis by land plants
5
Combustion (human and natural)
6
Dissolved CO2 in water
Erosion of limestone to form dissolved CO2
Marine plankton remains
Shells of marine organisms burial and
compaction to form rock (limestone)
Soil
Coal
Partly decomposed plant remains
4
Natural gas
3
7
Coal
Oil
Fig. 26-18, p. 531
57
The Nitrogen Cycle
  • 1. Nitrogen fixation
  • Conversion of nitrogen gas to ammonia
  • 2. Nitrification
  • Conversion of ammonia or ammonium to nitrate
  • 3. Assimilation
  • Conversion of nitrates, ammonia, or ammonium to
    proteins, chlorophyll, and other
    nitrogen-containing compounds by plants

58
The Nitrogen Cycle
  • 4. Ammonification
  • Conversion of organic nitrogen to ammonia and
    ammonium ions
  • 5. Denitrification
  • Conversion of nitrate to nitrogen gas

59
Nitrogen Cycle
60
Atmospheric nitrogen (N2)
1
Nitrogen fixation from human activity
Biological nitrogen fixation (nitrogen-fixing
bacteria in root nodules and soil)
5
Denitrification (denitrifying bacteria)
4
Decomposition (ammonification by ammonifying
bacteria)
Plant and animal proteins
Internal cycling (nitrification,
assimilation, ammonification on land)
Assimilation (nitrates, ammonia, or ammonium
absorbed by roots and used to make organic
compounds)
Ammonia (NH3) and ammonium (NH4)
3
2
Nitrification (Nitrifying bacteria)
Nitrate (NO3-)
Fig. 26-19, p. 532
61
Nitrogen Fixation
62
Nodules
(a) Root nodules of a garden pea (Pisum sativum),
which is a legume. Rhizobium bacteria live in
these nodules and fix nitrogen, some of which is
used by the host plant.
Fig. 26-20a, p. 533
63
Heterocysts
(b) Many cyanobacteria fix nitrogen. Shown is
Anabaena, a cyanobacterium with specialized cells
called heterocysts where nitrogen fixation occurs.
Fig. 26-20b, p. 533
64
The Hydrologic Cycle
  • Exchange of water between land, ocean,
    atmosphere, and organisms
  • Water enters atmosphere by evaporation and
    transpiration
  • Leaves atmosphere as precipitation
  • On land, water filters through the ground or runs
    off to lakes, rivers, and ocean

65
Hydrologic Cycle
66
Movement of moist air
Condensation (cloud formation)
Atmosphere
1
Precipitation to ocean
1
Precipitation on land
2
Evaporation from ocean
2
3
Evaporation from soil, streams, rivers, and lakes
Transpiration from vegetation
4
Runoff to ocean
Percolation through soil and porous rock
5
Ocean
Groundwater
Fig. 26-21, p. 534
67
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 10
  • Distinguish between bottom-up and top-down
    processes

68
Bottom-Up Processes
  • Availability of resources such as minerals
    controls the number of producers (lowest trophic
    level), which in turn controls the number of
    herbivores, which in turn controls the number of
    carnivores

69
Top-Down Processes
  • Regulate ecosystems from the highest trophic
    level (consumers eating producers)
  • An increase in number of top predators cascades
    down the food web through herbivores and
    producers

70
Bottom-Up and Top-Down Processes
71
Carnivores
Carnivores
Herbivores
Herbivores
Producers
Producers
Nutrients
Nutrients
(a) Bottom-up processes
(b) Top-down processes
Fig. 26-22, p. 535
72
Animation Exponential Growth
CLICKTO PLAY
73
Animation Carbon Cycle
CLICKTO PLAY
74
Animation Hydrologic Cycle
CLICKTO PLAY
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