Title: Ecosystems: Components, Energy Flow, and Matter Cycling
1Ecosystems Components, Energy Flow, and Matter
Cycling
- Ch. 4 APES Notes
- Mrs. Sealy
2Organisms and SpeciesÂ
- Ecology study of connections in nature.Â
- 1. cell basic unit of life in organisms.
- a. prokaryotic  no organelles, no membrane
bound nucleus - b. eukaryotic nucleus contained in a
membrane - Â
3Organism any form of life.Â
- species groups of organisms that can mate and
produce fertile offspring (5 to 100 million on
earth).Â
4Reproduction production of offspring
- a. Sexual two different parents
- b. Asexual no mixing of genes, offspring are
identical
5Population members of the same species that
occupy a given area.
- Can Change
- a. size
- b. age distribution
- c.  Density
- d. genetic composition (genetic diversity)
- Â
- COMMUNITY populations of all different species
occupying a given area (plants, animals,
decomposers, etc). - Â
- ECOSYSTEM-a community plus the nonliving factors
that surround them (plants, animals, soil, water,
weather, etc.)
6Biosphere
Biosphere
Ecosystems
Communities
Populations
Organisms
Fig. 4.2, p. 72
7II. Earths Life Support Systems
- Â
- BIOSPHERE portion of earth where life exists.
- Â Â
- ATMOSPHERE thin envelope of air surrounding the
planet. - 1.     troposphere inner (78 N, 21 O)
- 2.     stratosphere outer (contains ozone)
- Â
- HYDROSPHERE earths water.
- a.      liquid (surface, underground)
- b.     ice (polar, icebergs, soil)
- c.      water vapor (atmosphere)
- Â
- LITHOSPHERE earths land
- a.      crust (fossil fuels, minerals)
- b.     upper mantle
- Â
8Atmosphere
Vegetation and animals
Biosphere
Soil
Crust
Rock
core
Mantle
Lithosphere
Crust (soil and rock)
Crust
Biosphere (Living and dead organisms)
Atmosphere (air)
Hydrosphere (water)
Lithosphere (crust, top of upper mantle)
Fig. 4.6, p. 74
9Factors Sustaining Life On Earth
- 1. One way flow of high quality energy
- a. Through food webs
- b. Into the environment from organisms
- c. Back into space as heat
- 2. Cycling of MatterÂ
- 3. Gravity
 Â
10Biosphere
Carbon cycle
Phosphorus cycle
Nitrogen cycle
Water cycle
Oxygen cycle
Heat in the environment
Heat
Heat
Heat
Fig. 4.7, p. 75
11(No Transcript)
12Importance of the Sun
- Â
- 1. Lights and warms planet
- 2. Supports Photosynthesis (provides all food)
- 3. Powers matter cycling
- 4. Drives climate and weather systems
13Natural Greenhouse Effect
- greenhouse gases such as water vapor, carbon
dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, and ozone trap
heat in earths atmosphere.
14Solar radiation
Energy in Energy out
Reflected by atmosphere (34)
Radiated by atmosphere as heat (66)
UV radiation
Lower Stratosphere (ozone layer)
Visible light
Greenhouse effect
Troposphere
Absorbed by ozone
Heat
Absorbed by the earth
Heat radiated by the earth
Earth
Fig. 4.8, p. 75
15III.  Ecosystem Concepts and Components
- Biomes large regions characterized by distinct
climate and specific life forms, especially
vegetation adapted to it (grasslands, forests,
deserts, etc.) - climate long term patterns of weather.
16Coastal chaparral and scrub
Desert
Coniferous forest
Coniferous forest
Prairie grassland
Deciduous forest
Appalachian Mountains
Mississippi River Valley
Great Plains
Rocky Mountains
Great American Desert
Sierra Nevada Mountain
Coastal mountain ranges
15,000 ft
10,000 ft
Average annual precipitaion
5,000 ft
100-125 cm (40-50 in.)
75-100 cm (30-40 in.)
50-75 cm (20-30 in.)
25-50 cm (10-20 in.)
below 25 cm (0-10 in.)
Fig. 4.9, p. 76
17Aquatic Life Zones biomes in water.Â
- a. freshwater life zones (lakes, rivers)
- b. ocean or marine life zones (estuaries,
coastlines, coral reefs, deep oceans) - Â
18Terrestrial Ecosystems
Aquatic Life Zones
Sunlight Temperature Precipitation Wind
Latitude (distance from equator) Altitude
(distance above sea level) Fire frequency Soil
Light penetration Water currents Dissolved
nutrient concentrations (especially N and P)
Suspended solids
Fig. 4.13, p. 79
19Land zone
Transition zone
Aquatic zone
ecotone transitional zone between ecosystems,
contains a mixture of species from connecting
ecosystems.
Fig. 4.10, p. 77
20Components of Ecosystems
- A.    Biotic living parts of ecosystems
(plants, animals, and microorganisms) biota. - Â
- 1. Producers or Autotrophs (photosynthesis and
chemosynthesis) - 2. Consumers or Heterotrophs
- Â
- a. Herbivores
- b.  Carnivores (secondary or tertiary
consumers) - c.  Omnivores
- d.  Scavengers
21e. detritovores feed on dead organisms or
waste. f. Detritus feeders extract nutrients
from partly decomposed organic mater in leaf
litter, plant debris, and animal dung. (crabs,
termites, earthworms) G decomposers recycle
organic matter in ecosystems (bacteria and
fungi)
22Detritus feeders
Decomposers
Bark beetle engraving
Carpenter ant galleries
Termite and carpenter ant work
Long-horned beetle holes
Dry rot fungus
Wood reduced to powder
Mushroom
Powder broken down by decomposers into plant
nutrients in soil
Time progression
Fig. 4.15, p. 81
23Sun
Producers (rooted plants)
Producers (phytoplankton)
Primary consumers (zooplankton)
Secondary consumer (fish)
Dissolved chemicals
Tertiary consumer (turtle)
Sediment
Decomposers (bacteria and fungi)
Fig. 4.11, p. 78
24Sun
Oxygen (O2)
Producer
Carbon dioxide (rabbit)
Secondary consumer (fox)
Primary consumer (rabbit)
Producers
Falling leaves and twigs
Precipitation
Soil decomposers
Water
Soluble mineral nutrients
Fig. 4.12, p. 78
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9/quickflicks/
253.     Important Biotic Processes
- Â
- a.     Aerobic Respiration removes oxygen from
the environment and adds carbon dioxide and
water. - b.     Anaerobic Respiration can add methane
gas, ethyl alcohol, acetic acid, and hydrogen
sulfide to the environment. - c.      Photosynthesis removes carbon dioxide
and water from the environment and adds oxygen
and water. - Â
- Â
264.   Abiotic nonliving parts of ecosystems
(water, air, nutrients, solar energy)
- A.  Range of Tolerance range of physical and
chemical environments in which a species can
survive. - a.  Law of Tolerance the abundance of organisms
is determined by whether physical and chemical
factors fall within the range of tolerance - b. Tolerance Limits limits for conditions beyond
which no organisms can survive - Â
27Fig. 4.14, p. 79
28Limiting Factor abiotic factors that can
limit or prevent the growth of a population.Â
-      a.      Limiting Factor Principle too
much or too little of any abiotic factor can
limit or prevent the growth of a population. - Â
- Ex. Desert plants (water), Corn (phosphorus).
- Ex. Aquatic Ecosystems (temp, light, dissolved
oxygen, nutrient availability, salinity) - Â
29Biodiversity
- -the different life forms and life sustaining
processes that can survive the variety of
conditions currently found on earth. Gives food,
wood, fibers, energy, raw materials, industrial
chemicals, and medicines. Provides free
recycling, purification, natural pest control. - 1.     Genetic diversity variety of genes
- 2.     Species diversity variety of animals
- 3.     Ecological diversity variety of
ecosystem - 4.     Functional diversity variety of niches
30IV. Food Webs and Energy Flow In EcosystemsÂ
- Food chain- order of feeding levels in an
ecosystem (plantgtgtcowgtgthumangtgtdecomposer),
determines how energy and nutrients move from one
organism to another in an ecosystem. - Food Web - interconnected food chains, more
realistic since consumers generally feed on more
than one type of organism in an ecosystem. - Trophic Levels - feeding levels.
- A.    first trophic level producers
- B.    second trophic level herbivores
- C.    third trophic level carnivores,
omnivores, scavengers (secondary consumers) - D.   fourth trophic level carnivores,
omnivores, scavengers (tertiary consumers) - Â
31Abiotic chemicals (carbon dioxide, oxygen,
nitrogen, minerals)
Solar energy
Producers (plants)
Decomposers (bacteria, fungus)
Consumers (herbivores, carnivores)
Fig. 4.16, p. 82
32First Trophic Level
Second Trophic Level
Third Trophic Level
Fourth Trophic Level
Producers (plants)
Primary consumers (herbivores)
Tertiary consumers (top carnivores)
Secondary consumers (carnivores)
Heat
Heat
Heat
Heat
Solar energy
Heat
Heat
Heat
Detritvores (decomposers and detritus feeders)
Fig. 4.18, p. 83
33Humans
Blue whale
Sperm whale
Killer whale
Elephant seal
Crabeater seal
Leopard seal
Emperor penguin
Adélie penguins
Petrel
Squid
Fish
Carnivorous plankton
Herbivorous zooplankton
Krill
Fig. 4.19, p. 84
Phytoplankton
34Pyramids of Energy Flow
- Â
- Biomass the dry weight of all organic matter
contained in organisms. - Â
- Ecological Efficiency the percentage of useable
energy transferred as biomass from one trophic
level to the next. - Â
- Second Law of Thermodynamics (10 Law) only
about 10 of useable energy is transferred as
biomass from on trophic level to the next. The
rest is lost to the environment as low quality
heat. - Â
- Pyramid of Energy Flow - explain why earth can
support more people if they eat at lower trophic
levels (assume 90 energy loss with each transfer
from one trophic level to the next) figure 4-20
35Tertiary consumers (human)
Decomposers
10
Secondary consumers (perch)
100
Primary consumers (zooplankton)
1,000
10,000 Usable energy Available at Each tropic
level (in kilocalories)
Producers (phytoplankton)
Fig. 4.20, p. 85
36- Pyramid of Biomass represents the storage of
biomass at various trophic levels in an
ecosystem. figure 4-22
37Abandoned Field
Ocean
Fig. 4.22, p. 86
38- Pyramid of Numbers represents the estimated
numbers of organisms at each trophic level..
figure 4-23
39Grassland (summer)
Temperate Forest (summer)
Fig. 4.23, p. 86
40Primary Productivity of Ecosystems
- Â
- Gross primary productivity the rate at which an
ecosystems producers convert solar energy into
chemical energy as biomass in an ecosystem. - Â
- High GPP Low GPP
- Shallow waters near Open ocean
continents Deserts - Forests Polar regions
- Coral reefÂ
41- Net Primary Prodcutivity what is left of GPP
after it is used by an ecosystems producers to
stay alive, grow and reproduce. This is the
energy or biomass available to consumers in an
ecosystem. - Â
- High NPP Low NPP
- estuaries Open ocean
- Swamps and marshes Tundra
- Tropical rain forests DesertÂ
42Fig. 4.24, p. 87
43Net Primary Productivity
- The earths net primary productivity is the upper
limit determining the planets carrying capacity
for all consumer species. - Â Our Share of Earths NPP
- 1)Â Â We use, waste or destroy about 27 of earths
NPP - 2)Â Â We use, waste or destroy about 40 of the
NPP of terrestrial ecosystems
44Estuaries
Swamps and marshes
Tropical rain forest
Temperate forest
Northern coniferous forest (taiga)
Savanna
Agricultural land
Woodland and shrubland
Temperate grassland
Lakes and streams
Continental shelf
Open ocean
Tundra (arctic and alpine)
Desert scrub
Extreme desert
800
1,600
2,400
3,200
4,000
4,800
5,600
6,400
7,200
8,000
8,800
9,600
Average net primary productivity (kcal/m2/yr)
Fig. 4.25, p. 88
4563 Not used by Humans
3 Used Directly
16 Altered by Human Activity
8 Lost or Degrades Land
Fig. 4.26, p. 88
46VI. Matter Cycling in Ecosystems
- Â
- A nutrient is any atom, ion, that an organism
needs to live, grow, or reproduce. - 1.     Water
- 2.     Carbon
- 3.     Nitrogen
- 4.     Phosphorus
- 5.     Sulfur
- 6.     Calcium
47- Biogeochemical Cycles nutrients we need are
cycles continuously from the nonliving
environment (air, water, soil, rock) to living
organisms and then back again. - 1. Hydrologic most of the nutrient exists as
water in some form (water cycle). - 2. Atmospheric most of the nutrient exists in
gaseous form in the atmosphere (Nitrogen and
carbon cycles) - 3. Sedimentary nutrients that do not have a
gaseous phase, or its gaseous compounds do not
make up a significant portion of its supply
(phosphorus and sulfur cycles). - Â
48Water Cycle
- Â
- Â
- Absolute Humidity amount of water vapor found
in a certain mass in air (g/kg) - Â
- Relative Humidity amount of water air can hold
at a given temperature (), colder air can hold
less water. - Â
- Condensation Nuclei tiny particles on which
water droplets can collect. - Â
- Dew Point temperature at which condensation
occurs
49Condensation
Rain clouds
Transpiration from plants
Transpiration
Precipitation
Precipitation
Evaporation
Precipitation to ocean
Evaporation From ocean
Infiltration and Percolation
Surface runoff (rapid)
Groundwater movement (slow)
Ocean storage
Groundwater movement (slow)
Fig. 4.28, p. 90
50Human Activities and the Hydrologic Cycle
- 1.     Over-consumption of surface and
groundwater lead to groundwater depletion and
saltwater intrusion into groundwater supplies. - 2.     Clearing vegetation from land leads to
increased runoff, decreased infiltration to
replenish groundwater, increases risk of floods,
and accelerates soil erosion and landslides. - 3.     Adding nutrients and pollutants to water
diminishes the ability of humans and other
species to use it and interferes with natural
purification.Â
51Carbon Cycle (atmospheric cycle) Â
diffusion between atmosphere and ocean
combustion of fossil fuels
Carbon dioxide dissolved in ocean water
photosynthesis
aerobic respiration
Marine food webs producers, consumers,
decomposers, detritivores
uplifting over geologic time
incorporation into sediments
death, sedimentation
sedimentation
Marine sediments, including formations with
fossil fuels
Fig. 4.29a, p. 92
52Atmosphere (mainly carbon dioxide)
volcanic action
combustion of wood (for clearing land or for fuel
photosynthesis
aerobic respiration
Terrestrial rocks
sedimentation
weathering
Land food webs producers, consumers, decomposers,
detritivores
Soil water (dissolved carbon)
Peat, fossil fuels
death, burial, compaction over geologic time
leaching runoff
Fig. 4.29b, p. 93
53Human impacts on the Carbon Cycle
- 1.     Clearing trees and other plants that
absorb carbon dioxide by photosynthesis - 2.     Adding large amounts of carbon dioxide to
the atmosphere by burning fossil fuels and wood. - Â
54GASEOUS NITROGEN (N2) IN ATMOSPHERE
NITROGEN FIXATION by industry for agriculture
FOOD WEBS ON LAND
uptake by autotrophs
excretion, death, decomposition
uptake by autotrophs
FERTILIZERS
NO3- IN SOIL
NITROGEN FIXATION bacteria convert to ammonia
(NH3) this dissolves to form ammonium (NH4)
NITROGENOUS WASTES, REMAINS IN SOIL
DENTRIFICATION by bacteria
2. NITRIFICATION bacteria convert NO2- to nitrate
(NO3-)
AMMONIFICATION bacteria, fungi convert the
residues to NH3 , this dissolves to form NH4
NH3, NH4 IN SOIL
1. NITRIFICATION bacteria convert NH4 to nitrate
(NO2-)
NO2- IN SOIL
loss by leaching
loss by leaching
  Nitrogen Cycle (atmospheric cycle)
Fig. 4.30, p. 94
55Nitrogen Cycle (atmospheric cycle)
- Â
- Nitrogen Fixation conversion of atmospheric
nitrogen to ammonia that can be used by plants ( - a.      Cyanobacteria in soil and water
- b.     rhizobium bacteria in the nodules
(swellings) of the roots in leguminous plants. - Â
- Nitrification conversion of ammonia in soil to
nitrite ions then to nitrate ions that are easily
used by plants (aerobic bacteria) - Â
- Assimilation absorption of ammonia, ammonium
ions, and nitrate ions into plant roots from soil
and water. - Â
- Ammonification conversion of nitrogen rich
organic compounds from organisms into ammonia and
ammonium ions. - Denitrification conversion of ammonia and
ammonium ions to nitrate and nitrite ions and
then back into nitrogen gas and nitrous oxide gas.
56Human Impact on the Nitrogen Cycle
- 1)Â Â Â Â Â Adding Nitric Oxide gas to the atmosphere
when we burn fuel gtgt Acid Precipitation - Â
- 2)Â Â Â Â Â Adding Nitrous Oxide Gas to the
atmosphere through anaerobic bacterias action on
livestock waste and commercial waste leads to
ozone depletion and the greenhouse effect. - Â
- 3)Â Â Â Â Â Removing nitrogen from earths crust and
soil through mining activities - Â
- 4)Â Â Â Â Â Removing nitrogen from topsoil
- a.      harvesting nitrogen rich crops
- b.     irrigating crops
- c.      burning or clearing grasslands and
forests before planting crops - Â
- 5)Â Â Â Â Â Adding nitrogen to aquatic ecosystems
depletes dissolved oxygen killing some aerobic
aquatic organisms - a.      agricultural runoff
- b.     municipal sewage
- Â
- 6)Â Â Â Â Â Accelerating deposition of acidic
nitrogen compounds from the atmosphere onto
terrestrial ecosystems. - a.      stimulates growth of weedy plant species
- b.     crowd out species that cannot assimilate
nitrogen as efficientlyÂ
57FERTILIZER
GUANO
agriculture
weathering
uptake by autotrophs
uptake by autotrophs
weathering
LAND FOOD WEBS
DISSOLVED IN OCEAN WATER
MARINE FOOD WEBS
DISSOLVED IN SOILWATER, LAKES, RIVERS
death, decomposition
death, decomposition
settling out
leaching, runoff
sedimentation
ROCKS
MARINE SEDIMENTS
Fig. 4.32, p. 96
58Phosphorus Cycle (sedimentary cycle)
- Â
- Human impacts on the Phosphorus CycleÂ
- 1. Mining large quantities of phosphate rock for
use as - a.  inorganic fertilizers
- b..  detergents
- Â
- 2. Reducing available phosphate in tropical
forests through slash and burn agriculture. - a.  phosphate is washed away by heavy rains.
- Â
- 3. Adding excess phosphate to aquatic ecosystems
depletes dissolved oxygen and disrupts aquatic
ecosystems - a.   runoff from animal wastes
- b.  runoff of commercial inorganic fertilizers
from cropland - c.  discharge of municipal sewage
- Â
59Hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
Oxygen (O2)
Atmosphere
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) and Sulfur trioxide (SO3)
- Sulfur Cycle
- (atmospheric cycle) (figure 4-33)
Water (H2O)
Dimethl (DMS)
Industries
Sulfuric acid (H2SO4)
Volcanoes and hot springs
Ammonia (NH2)
Oceans
Fog and precipitation (rain, snow)
Ammonium sulfate (NH4)2SO4
Animals
Plants
Sulfate salts (SO42-)
Aerobic conditions in soil and water
Decaying organisms
Sulfur (S)
Anaerobic conditions in soil and water
Fig. 4.33, p. 97
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S)
60Sulfur Cycle (atmospheric cycle) (figure 4-33)
- Â
- Human Impacts on the Sulfur Cycle
- Â
- 1. Burning sulfur containing coal and oil to
produce electric power - a.  produces sulfur dioxidegtgtacid rain
- Â
- 2.  refining petroleumgtgtsulfur dioxidegtgtacid rain
- Â
- 3.  smelting to convert sulfur compounds of
metallic minerals into free metals such as
copper, lead and zinc. - a.  produces sulfur dioxide and trioxidegtgtacid
rain
61VII.  Ecologists Methods of Ecosystem Study
- Â
- Field Research getting into nature to observe
and measure the structure of ecosystems and what
happens in them. Most of what we know about
ecosystems come from field research.
62Technology of Field Research
- Â
- 1.     Remote Sensing from aircraft and
satellites (reflected light, infrared radiation,
microwave energy) - 2.     Geographic Information Systems (GISs)
information gathered from broad geographic
regions is stored in spatial databases. Then
computers analyze and manipulate data to produce
computerized maps of - a.      forest cover and health
- b.     Water resources
- c.      air pollution emissions
- d.     coastal changes
- e.      relationships between cancer and other
health effects and pollution - f.       changes in global sea temperature
- g.      map topography of ocean floor
63Critical nesting site locations
USDA Forrest Service
USDA Forest Service
Private owner 1
Private owner 2
Topography
Habitat type
Forest
Lake
Wetland
Grassland
Real world
Fig. 4.34, p. 98
64Define objectives
Systems Measurement
Identify and inventory variables
Obtain baseline data on variables
Make statistical analysis of relationships among
variables
Data Analysis
Determine significant interactions
System Modeling
Construct mathematical model describing
interactions among variables
System Simulation
Run the model on a computer, with values entered
for different variables
System Optimization
Evaluate best ways to achieve objectives
Fig. 4.35, p. 98
65- System Analysis used to set up observe and make
measurements of model ecosystems and populations
under laboratory conditions. Quicker and cheaper
than similar experiments in the field. Must be
supported by field research due to unknown
complexity of natural ecosystems.
66Solar Capital
Air resources and purification
Climate control
Recycling vital chemicals
Water resources and purification
Renewable energy resources
Soil formation and renewal
Natural Capital
Nonrenewable energy resources
Waste removal and detoxification
Nonrenewable mineral resources
Natural pest and disease control
Potentially renewable matter resources
Biodiversity and gene pool
Fig. 4.36, p. 99