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Ecosystems and Sustainability

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Title: Ecosystems and Sustainability


1
Ecosystems and Sustainability
  • Unit 1
  • Communication, Homeostasis and Energy

2
Ecosystems
  • Module 3 Ecosystems and Sustainability

3
Learning outcomes
  • Define the term ecosystem.
  • State that ecosystems are dynamic systems.
  • Define the terms biotic factor and abiotic
    factor, using named examples.
  • Define the terms producer, consumer, decomposer
    and trophic level.
  • Describe how energy is transferred though
    ecosystems.

4
Keywords
  • Ecology
  • The study of how whole communities of living
    organisms interact with each other and with their
    environment.
  • Ecosystem
  • A relatively self-contained, interacting
    community of organisms, and the environment in
    which they live and with which they interact.
  • Habitat
  • The place where an organism lives

5
Keywords
  • Population
  • The number of individuals of the same species,
    living in the same place at the same time.
  • Community
  • All the organisms, of all the different species
    living in a habitat.
  • Niche
  • The role of an organism in the ecosystem.

6
Themes of ecological systems
  • Flow of energy
  • Energy flows
  • into an ecosystem from outside
  • through an organism in the ecosystem
  • leaves the ecosystem
  • Recycling of materials
  • Matter cycles round an ecosystem, where some
    atoms are reused over and over again by different
    organisms.

7
Biotic factors
  • Biotic factors involve other living organisms
  • Feeding of herbivores on plants
  • Predation
  • Parasitism
  • Mutualism
  • competition

8
Abiotic Factors
  • Abiotic factors involve the non living components
    of the environment
  • Temperature
  • Light intensity
  • Oxygen concentration
  • Carbon dioxide concentration
  • Water supply
  • pH
  • Availability of inorganic ions
  • Edaphic features
  • Atmospheric humidity
  • Wind speed

9
Energy Flow in Ecosystem
  • Living organisms need a constant supply of energy
    to drive metabolic reactions and to stay alive.

10
Food Chains and Food Webs
  • A food chain shows the way in which energy flows
    from producer to consumers
  • Arrows indicate the direction that the energy
    flows
  • Oak tree? caterpillar ? great tit ? sparrowhawk
  • Each position along the food chain is called a
    trophic level

11
Food Web
  • A food web shows all the different
    interrelationships between many food chains.

12
Decomposers
  • The role of decomposers in the ecosystem is to
    feed on detritus
  • Detritus is organic matter in dead organisms and
    waste material
  • Decomposers include
  • Bacteria
  • Fungi
  • Detritivores
  • Earthworms etc

13
Energy Losses along the food chain
  • When energy is transferred from one form to
    another, some energy is always lost as heat

14
Photosynthetic efficiency
  • Less than 3 of sunlight is converted to chemical
    energy
  • Sunlight missing leaves
  • Reflection of light
  • Transmission of light
  • Not all the light absorbed is used for
    photosynthesis

15
productivity
1o primary
  • Productivity
  • rate at which the plant converts light energy
    into chemical potential energy
  • Gross 1o Productivity (GPP)
  • total quantity of energy converted by plants in
    this way
  • Net 1o Productivity (NPP)
  • energy which remains as chemical energy after
    plants have supplied their own needs in
    respiration

16
Losses between plants and primary consumers
  • Only about 10 of the energy in plants gets
    passed on to the animals that eat them.
  • half of the chemical energy in plants is used by
    the plants themselves (respiration)
  • not all the parts of the plants are eaten
  • not all the parts eaten are digestible
  • energy loss as heat from digestive system as food
    is digested

17
Question time!!
  • Classify each of these features as biotic or
    abiotic
  • The speed of water flow in a river
  • The density of seaweed growing in a rock pool
  • The oxygen availability on a high altitude
    mountainside
  • Energy losses from mammals and birds tend to be
    significantly greater than from other organisms.
    Suggest why this is.

18
Learning Outcomes
  • Outline how energy transfers between trophic
    levels can be measured.
  • Discuss the efficiency of energy transfers
    between trophic levels.
  • Explain how human activities can manipulate the
    flow of energy through ecosystems.

19
Measuring Energy Transfer
  • Pyramid of biomass
  • Area of the bars is proportional to the dry mass
    of all the organisms at that trophic level
  • Pyramid of energy
  • Bars represent energy available
  • Organisms are burned in a calorimeter and the
    amount of heat energy released per gram is worked
    out.

20
Manipulating energy transfer
  • Net Primary productivity (NPP) is the difference
    between primary productivity and respiratory head
    (R)
  • NPP is the rate of production of biomass
    available for heterotrophs
  • By manipulating environmental factors, humans can
    increase NPP.

21
Increasing NPP
  • Increasing light levels
  • Increase water availability
  • Maintain a constant temperature
  • Provide the correct nutrients required for
    photosynthesis and growth
  • Pest control
  • Disease control
  • Remove competition

22
Improving secondary productivity
  • Manipulating the energy from producer to consumer
  • Harvest animals before adulthood
  • Treat with steroids
  • Selective breeding
  • Treat with antibiotics
  • Maintain constant temperature
  • Limit movement
  • Supply food
  • A balance needs to lie between animal welfare and
    efficient food production.

23
Succession
  • Gradual change in a community over a period of
    time

24
Learning outcomes
  • Describe one example of primary succession
    resulting in a climax community.

25
Keywords
  • Succession
  • Pioneer community
  • Climax community
  • Seral stages
  • Sere

26
Succession
  • Succession
  • Gradual directional change in a community of
    organisms over time
  • its unidirectional
  • Primary succession
  • Original area has no soil or living organisms
    present
  • Secondary succession
  • Following disturbance of the area, soil is
    present.

27
Succession
  • New land is formed on the Earths surface at
    river deltas, at sand dunes and from cooled
    volcanic lava.
  • When new land is exposed it is invaded and
    colonised by plants, a sequence of communities
    develops over time by Primary succession
  • Secondary succession is the colonisation of an
    area that has been previously occupied and become
    barren.

28
Succession - definition
  • The gradual replacement of one plant community by
    another over a period of time, through a series
    of seral stages, starting with the pioneer
    community and ending with a climax community.

29
The pioneer community
  • The first plants to colonise an area are pioneer
    plants, which are adapted to survive in difficult
    conditions.
  • These are usually mosses or grass
  • As they grow these plants change the
    environmental conditions until they are no longer
    the best suited.
  • Better adapted plants start to colonise.

30
Look at the photographs
31
Question
  • Suggest and explain what happens to each of the
    following during the process of succession.
  • The number of different species in the community
  • The quantity of biomass per unit area

32
Summary
  • Plants colonise an area, they change it in such a
    way that they are no longer the best adapted to
    survive there and are out competed, new plants
    then colonise the area.

Pioneer community
Climax community
33
  • In the early stages of succession, abiotic
    factors are important in determing what can
    survive.
  • Availability of water
  • Availability of nutrients in the soil
  • Wind exposure

34
Primary Succession
35
Human Intervention
  • Clearing of deciduous woodland for
  • Agriculture
  • Conifer forestry
  • Human settlement
  • Intensive grazing by sheep can deflect succession
    from a forest climax community to grassland.
  • A deflected climax community is known as a
    plagioclimax

36
Learning Outcomes
  • Describe how the distribution and abundance of
    organisms can be measured, using line transects,
    belt transects, quadrats and point quadrats.

37
Studying Succession
  • We can use the distribution of the communities in
    space on the ground to show us what they look
    like at different times during a succession
  • Examples
  • Retreating glacier (Glacier Bay, Alaska)
  • Sand dunes

38
Sampling
  • Plant and animal communities can be sampled using
  • Point quadrats
  • Quadrats
  • Transects
  • Transects are the best way showing succession

39
Using transects to study succession
  • Line transect
  • Record what is touching the tape
  • Belt transect
  • Quadrats are placed alongside the tape
  • Continuous belt transect
  • Record along the whole length of the tape
  • Interrupted belt transect
  • Record at intervals along the tape

40
Measuring Species
  • Distribution
  • Presence or absence of each species
  • Abundance
  • Estimate or count the number of individuals
  • Percentage cover

41
Estimating population size
Mean number of individuals of the species in each
quadrat
Population size of a species

Fraction of the total habitat area covered by a
quadrat
42
Nutrient Cycling
43
Learning outcomes
  • Describe the role of decomposers in the
    decomposition of organic material.
  • Describe how micro-organisms recycle nitrogen
    within ecosystems

44
  • Nutrient cycling
  • Provides elements for
  • metabolic processes
  • Constructing organic molecules
  • Decomposition
  • Provides mineral and nutrients for metabolism

45
Decomposers and Detritivores
  • Decomposers
  • Bacteria and fungi
  • Absorb organic nutrients from dead organisms and
    waste from living organisms, converting them into
    inorganic molecules
  • Detritivores
  • Organisms living in or on the soil that feed and
    gain nutrients from detritus.

46
Decomposition
  • Breakdown of dead organic matter with release of
    inorganic nutrients into surrounding soil

decomposition
Litter
Humus
47
Rate of decomposition
  • Factors
  • Type of organic matter present
  • Number and types of decomposers and detritivores
  • Environmental conditions
  • Temperature
  • O2 content
  • moisture

48
Nutrient cycling
Nutrients in environment
photosynthesis
decomposition
producers
decomposers
feeding
decomposition
consumers
49
The carbon cycle
Carbon dioxide In the air (CO2)
photosynthesis
respiration
Combustion (burning)
feeding
Carbon compounds in plants
Carbon compounds in animals
Fossil fuels Coal, oil, gas, peat
decay
50
The Nitrogen Cycle
51
The Nitrogen Cycle
  • Most nutrient cycles have two components
  • Geochemical
  • Biological
  • Cycling of Nitrogen
  • Nitrogen fixation
  • Assimilation
  • Ammonification
  • Nitrification
  • denitrification

52
Nitrogen Fixation
  • Nitrogen gas converted to nitrogen-containing
    compounds.
  • Three ways all require energy
  • Lightning
  • nitrogen oxygen ? oxides of nitrogen
  • Industrial processes
  • Haber process combine hydrogen and nitrogen to
    form ammonia
  • Fixation by micro-organisms

53
Fixation by microorganisms
  • Free-living nitrogen fixers
  • Bacteria reduce nitrogen to ammonia
  • Used to manufacture amino acids
  • Nitrogen rich compounds released when die and
    decay.

54
  • Mutualistic nitrogen fixers
  • E.g. Rhizobium
  • Live in root nodules of leguminous plants
  • Nitrogenase converts N2 to NH4 using H and ATP
  • Requires anaerobic conditions (leghaemoglobin)
  • Plant uses ammonium ions to make amino acids

55
Assimilation
  • Nitrogen assimilated in the form of ammonium ions
  • Nitrate ions reduced to nitrite ions and then
    ammonium ions.
  • Animals assimilate nitrogen in the form of protein

56
Ammonification
  • Production of ammonium-containing compounds
  • E.g urea, protein, nucleic acids and vitamins
  • Decomposers feed on these releasing ammonia

57
Nitrification
  • Two stages
  • Oxidation of ammonium ions to nitrites
  • Nitrosomonas
  • Oxidation of nitrites to nitrates
  • Nitrobacter

58
Denitrification
  • Anaerobic denitrifying bacteria
  • Reduce soil nitrates into nitrogen gas
  • NO3- ? NO2- ? N2O ? N2

59
Nitrogen Cycle
Nitrogen in atmosphere (N2)
assimilation
Nitrogen-fixing bacteria in root nodules of
legumes
Denitrifying bacteria
Plants
animals
Nitrates (NO3-)
Decomposers (aerobic and anaerobic bacteria and
fungi)
Nitrobacter
ammonification
Nitrification
Nitrites (NO2-)
Ammonium (NH4)
Nitrosomonas
Nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria
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