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ECOSYSTEM ECOLOGY

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Title: ECOSYSTEM ECOLOGY


1
ECOSYSTEM ECOLOGY ENERGY FLOW CHEMICAL CYCLES
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Ecosystem a spatially explicit unit of the
Earth that includes all of the organisms, along
with all the components of the abiotic
environment within its boundaries. Gene Likens
3
Ecosystem (trophic-dynamic) the system composed
of physical-chemical-biological processes active
within a space-time unit of any magnitude
Ray Lindeman 1941
Cedar Ck. Bog, MN
4
Function, not Species -- Stuff, not Things
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TROPHIC STRUCTURE Defined by energy
flow. primary producer primary consumer
(herbivore) secondary consumer (carnivore) ,
top carnivore.  
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Ray Lindeman 1942 First Ecosystem model
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Eugene Odum 1953. Silver Springs, Florida.
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Fig. 6.2 Ricklefs -- E.P Odums universal model
of ecological energy flow
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ECOSYSTEM Compartments include leaves, wood,
soil, rhizosphere. Small size scale. Compartment
s contain living non-living
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Lake Wingra ECOSYSTEM BOUNDARIES
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BOUNDARIES
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ECOSYSTEM SCALES
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ECOSYSTEM ECOLOGY ENERGY
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PHOTOSYNTHESIS RESPIRATION
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Gross Primary Productivity Respiration Net
Primary Productivity NPP GPP - R
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Measuring Primary Productivity  Oxygen method c14
method a radioactive tracer technique  annual
production
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CALORIMETRY Measuring Energy Flow calorie 1
degree C increase at 15 degrees C, for 1 ml
water 1000 calories 1 Calorie carbohydrate
and protein about 5 Cal per gram fat about 9 Cal
per gram teaspoon sugar 4 grams or 20
Calories (kilocalories)
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Average Annual Net Primary Productivity, by
Habitat Ricklefs Fig. 6.8
19
MASS BALANCE Application of conservation of
matter Input Output Pool (Reservoir) Equilib
rium Steady State Source Sink Flux Net Turnover
Rate Time Burial
Ricklefs Fig. 7.5 Global Carbon Cycle
20
TROPHIC CONCEPTS Productivity Biomass Turnover
Time Pool/Input Biomass/Productivity Turnover
Rate Inverse of Turnover Time At equilibrium,
Input Output
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Steady State (Equilibrium) Trillions of moles
(per year) Turnover Time 38,000,000/8400 4524
years Turnover rate is about 0.022 per year
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ECOLOGICAL EFFICIENCY Ratio of the productivity
for two adjacent trophic levels. EXAMPLE primary
productivity 2 grams per m2 per day herbivore
productivity 0.2 grams per m2 per day, then
the ecological efficiency is ???
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Rule of Thumb The ecological efficiency is
10 per trophic level.
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TROPHIC CASCADES (CARPENTER) DIRECT INDIRECT
EFFECTS OF TOP PREDATORS ON BIOMASS PRODUCTIVITY
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Bottom-Up Top-Down effects
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Characteristics of Top Carnivores not dense (few
per unit area) because of ecological
efficiency large territory (widely ranging) large
body long life fast moving charismatic hunt-able,
either as trophies or varmints, not usually for
meat. Extirpation Indirect Effects Trophic
Cascade
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Microbial Loop Extra links reduce amount of
energy reaching predators by about 90.
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Atmospheric Carbon Global Warming
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ECOSYSTEM MANIPULATIONS THE NITROGEN
CYCLE Bormann and Likens (1970) -- HUBBARD BROOK,
NH ecological consequences of clear-cutting a
38-acre watershed in a New Hampshire Experimental
Forest Organic N oxidized to nitrate, producing
nitric acid pH of stream decreased nitrogen
fixation decreased nutrients rapidly flushed out
of the watershed
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Nitrogen Excretion Ammonium, Urea, Uric Acid
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P04 surrogate for primary productivity
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ECOLOGICAL STOICHIOMETRY Elemental
Ratios REDFIELD RATIO CNP
106161 CN decaying wood, DOC. NP --
cyanobacteria advantage. CP phosphate
limitation for Daphnia.
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