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How Ecosystems Work

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How Ecosystems Work Energy flow Cycling of materials How ecosystems change The nitrogen cycle: Plants obtain nitrogen from the soil Animal obtain nitrogen from eating ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How Ecosystems Work


1
How Ecosystems Work
  • Energy flow
  • Cycling of materials
  • How ecosystems change

2
Energy Flow
  • All living things have a different job in the
    ecosystem. Each does their job and interacts with
    other organisms and the environment.

3
This decides their roles in the ecosystem.
4
Energy
  • Living organisms need to get energy to run their
    body functions. Each gets energy from the
    environment but from different ways.

5
Energy
  • The ultimate source of energy is the sun.

6
Producers
  • Organisms that make their own food.
  • Also called autotrophs.
  • Use photosynthesis to make sugars. (chemical
    energy)

7
Producers
  • Some use sources other than the sun.
    (chemotrophs)
  • Examples plants, algae, some bacteria,
    aquatic organisms.

8
Consumers
  • Cannot make their own food. They must eat to
    obtain energy.

9
Consumers
  • Also called heterotrophs.
  • Use cellular respiration to break down sugars
    into useful energy.

10
Decomposers
  • Cannot make their own food.
  • Eat dead organisms and waste products.
  • Return atoms to the soil to be reused.
  • Examples fungi bacteria

11
Roles Within an Ecosystem
CARNIVORE!
12
Levels of Organization
In the food chain there are organisms that make
food and those that eat food. These levels are
called trophic levels
13
Food Chain
  • Sequence in which energy is transferred from one
    organism to the next.

14
Food Web
  • Shows many feeding relationships within an
    ecosystem.

15
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16
Energy Pyramid
  • Shows how energy is lost from one trophic level
    to the next.

ENERGY DECREASES
17
Energy Pyramid
Trophic Levels
Secondary consumers
Primary consumers
Producers
18
Levels of Organization
  • Producers are always at the bottom of the food
    chain or pyramid. Able to produce their own food.
  • Example plants

19
Levels of Organization cont.
  • Primary Consumer eats producers.
  • Also known as herbivores.
  • Body designed to gather, grind and digest plants.
  • Example insects, birds and cows (grazers)

20
Levels of Organization cont.
  • Secondary consumer- eats primary consumers
  • Also known as a carnivore (meat- eater)

21
Levels of Organization cont.
  • Body designed to hunt and catch prey. (sharp
    fangs and incisors to cut and rip meat claws)
  • Examples dogs, eagles, lion

22
Levels of Organization cont.
  • Tertiary consumer eats a secondary consumer. A
    carnivore that eats carnivores.
  • Examples Eagles, Tigers

23
Levels of Organization cont.
  • Omnivore eats both producers and consumers.
  • Examples
  • humans,
  • chimpanzees,
  • bears.

24
Levels of Organization cont.
  • Scavenger (decomposer) do not hunt living prey.
    Consume dead and decaying matter.

Example Vultures and Hyenas
25
Cycles in Our Environment
  • There are many cycles that create the ideal
    conditions for living and non living things
    within our biosphere.

26
The water cycle
  • Broken down during photosynthesis
  • Created during respiration
  • Energy that runs the cycle is provided by the sun

27
The water cycle
  • Water is evaporated from the surface of the earth
    and accumulates in the atmosphere.
  • Water vapor condenses and is released back to the
    earths surface as precipitation.

28
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29
The carbon cycle
  • Carbon is a necessary component for all life.
    (Fats, carbohydrates and proteins)
  • Enters the ecosystem through photosynthesis

30
The carbon cycle
  • Consumers obtain carbon by eating producers
  • Carbon is released back into the atmosphere via
    carbon dioxide.

31
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32
The nitrogen cycle
  • Used to produce proteins
  • Makes up approx. 78 of the atmosphere

33
The nitrogen cycle
  • Very few species can use the nitrogen directly
    from the atmosphere. (Nitrogen- fixing bacteria
    fungi)

34
The nitrogen cycle
  • Plants obtain nitrogen from the soil
  • Animal obtain nitrogen from eating plants and
    other animals

35
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36
Changes Within an Ecosystem
  • Ecological succession changes within an
    environment over a period of time. It can be
    changes in the organisms, changes in the habitat
    or plant life.

37
Primary Succession
  • Occurs in two stages
  • Pioneer Communities are the first communities to
    colonize a new habitat.
  • Example Lichen

38
Primary Succession
  • Begins in areas where there is no life. The first
    step in primary succession is the formation of
    soil and other organic materials form rock and
    soil.

39
Primary Succession
  • Climax Communities are the final stages of a
    habitat.
  • Usually diverse and stable.
  • Will not undergo changes unless it is disturbed.
  • Some communities never reach a climax because
    they are constantly undergoing change.

40
Secondary Succession
  • Occurs where a community has been cleared by a
    disturbance that does not destroy the soil.

41
Secondary Succession
  • Usually beings as a result of a natural disaster
    like fire or human activity.
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