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Basic Ecology

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Title: Basic Ecology


1
Basic Ecology
2
Four Levels of Investigation
  • Organism
  • Population
  • An interbreeding group belonging to the same
    species
  • Community
  • All the populations of different species in an
    area
  • Ecosystem
  • The community and all non living factors of an
    area

3
Ecosystem examples
Aquariums
Ponds
Pastures
Coral reefs
Woodlots
4
Ecosystems involve exchange of matter and
energy between living and nonliving elements in a
manner that sustains life - includes plants,
animals, air, soil, and water
5
Living part of the ecosystem biotic community
plants, animals, insects, etc. Nonliving part
abiotic (physical environment) temperature,
light, substrates, altitude, etc. - biotic and
abiotic exchange energy and material
6
Ecosystems consist of several communities ex.
wetland communities
  • great blue herons, egrets, ducks, geese, etc.
    bird community
  • dragonflies, mosquitoes, damselflies, spiders,
    etc. insect community
  • - cottonmouth, garter snake, water snake,
    copperhead, etc. snake community

7
The Macrocosm and Microcosm
8
  • Cosmos Everything that exists anywhere
  • Macro Large
  • Micro Small
  • Macrocosm The universe without
  • Microcosm The universe within

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Primary Abiotic Factors
  • Solar Energy
  • Water
  • Temperature
  • Wind

22
The Atmosphere
23
The Origins of the Atmosphere
  • Molten metals solidify within the frost line of
    the early solar system
  • They become planetary seeds, and continue to grow
    as gravitational attraction brings them together
  • As they approach planetary size the force of
    gravity causes a density distribution, with
    denser materials sinking and lighter ones rising
  • Volcanic activity begins to spew trapped gasses
    into the air
  • H2O, CO2, CO, H2
  • Earth is only massive enough to keep heavier
    gasses, H2 and He escape into space
  • Oxygen is never released in this manner, and had
    to arrive through biological processing

24
Atmospheric Composition
25
Parts of the Atmosphere
26
Atmospheric Purpose
  • It creates pressure which allows water to exist
    in liquid form
  • It absorbs and scatter light making daytime skies
    bright
  • Absorption allows them to protect from dangerous
    radiation
  • They cause wind and weather patterns
  • Interactions between atmospheric gasses and the
    solar wind can create a protective magneto sphere
    around planets with a strong magnetic field
  • Greenhouse gasses cause planetary temperatures to
    be warmer than they normally would be (H2O, CO2,
    CH4)

27
Greenhouse Gasses
28
Climate
  • Curvature of the earth induces temperature
    variation
  • Temperature patterns induce wind
  • Evaporation and condensation patterns cause
    rainfall

29
Wind Induction
30
Water
31
The Origins of Terrestrial Oceans
  • H2O was emitted by early volcanic activity.
  • The major abundance of water on earth is still a
    mystery.
  • Scientists speculate large amounts of water were
    brought to earth after it cooled by comets from
    the Kuiper Belt and Oort Cloud.

32
Water Ecosystems
  • Estuary A freshwater stream or river merging
    with an ocean
  • Wetland Inbetween an aquatic and terrestrial
    region where soil is saturated with water
    permanently or periodically
  • Intertidal zone A wetland at the edge of an
    estuary or ocean which is sequentially covered by
    the tides
  • Pelagic Zone Open ocean

33
Pelagic Regions
  • Photic Zone Oceanic region where light
    penetrates
  • Aphotic Zone Oceanic region where light does not
    penetrate sufficiently for photosynthesis
  • Benthic Zone The ocean floor

34
Primary Ecosystems
35
Biomes worldwide grouping of similar
communities, commonly described by dominant
vegetation
36
Temperate Grassland - Big bluestem, Little
bluestem, Grama grass - prairie chicken, western
meadowlark, prairie dog, coyote
37
Temperate Deciduous Forest - Oaks, Maples -
ruffed grouse, black-capped chickadee, blue jay,
white-tailed deer, fox squirrel, white-footed
mouse
38
Desert - Sagebrush, Creosote bush, Cacti -
sage grouse, burrowing owl, roadrunner, desert
bighorn sheep, desert jackrabbit
39
Tundra - Sedges, Lichens, Cranberries - snowy
owl, golden plover, caribou, musk ox, brown
lemming
40
Boreal Forest - Spruce, Firs - gray jay,
moose, lynx, snowshoe hare
41
Mediterranean Scrub Forest - Coffee-berry,
Scrub oaks (fire-resistant) - California quail,
annas hummingbird, mule deer, bobcat, brush
rabbit
42
Density and Dispersion Patterns
43
Dispersion Patterns
  • Clumped Often results from unequal distributions
    of resources
  • Uniform Often results from interactions between
    individuals of a population
  • Random Quite rare. Occurs in the tropics.

44
Idealized Growth Models
  • Exponential Growth G rN
  • G Growth Rate
  • r Intrinsic rate of increase An organisms
    maximum capacity to reproduce. It can be
    estimated by subtracting the death rate from the
    birth rate.
  • N Population size

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Population Limiting Factors
  • K Carrying Capacity the maximum population
    size that an environment can support

47
What causes non-ideality?
  • Declining birth rates
  • Rising death rates
  • Competition for limited resources

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Boom and Bust Cycles
  • The Lynx and the Hare

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Thermodynamics
52
History
  • The study of energy
  • Arose from the need to increase the efficiency of
    steam engines
  • Fluidic theory of heat disproved by Boyle
  • 1824 Carnot publishes, Reflections on the Motive
    Power of Fire.
  • The term, Thermodynamics, coined in 1849 by
    William Thomson (the Lord Kelvin).

Sadi Carnot
53
The Laws
  • Conservation of Energy The change in the
    internal energy of a closed thermodynamic system
    is equal to the sum of the amount of heat energy
    supplied to the system and the work done on the
    system
  • Entropy The total entropy of any isolated
    thermodynamic system tends to increase over time,
    approaching a maximum value.
  • Absolute Zero Temperature As a system
    asymptotically approaches absolute zero all
    processes virtually cease and the entropy of the
    system goes to a minimum value.

54
The Laws - simplified
  • Conservation of Energy The stuff is always
    there you cant get stuff from nothing, and
    stuff cant disappear.
  • Entropy The universe is lazy stuff always take
    the path of least resistance. Entropy is a
    measurement of the chaos of the stuff.
  • Absolute Zero Heat is actually movement of the
    stuff. If stuff is completely cold, its not
    moving at all.

55
Implications
  • Disorder is Natural
  • Order is unnatural specified complexity is
    extremely rare.
  • Many processes are irreversible
  • Cant burn something twice
  • Eggs shatter, but they dont reassemble
  • The universe is running down
  • Processes are always losing energy

56
Dealing with Entopy
  • Entropy is one of the most important scientific
    understandings of the behavior of matter.
  • It has serious implications in philosophy as
    well.
  • Entropy makes rivers crooked
  • People do what is easiest to do
  • Ancient people described this as the law of
    disintegration or decay. It was often represented
    by a serpent eating its tail.
  • Ezekiels valley of dry bones
  • Mummification is a defense against it
  • Gold wasso admired for its resistance to decay

57
Wisdom Schools and Entropy
  • The Gods and the Fates
  • Greek Tragedy Man cant win because he doesnt
    know whats coming.

58
Their Solution
  • No day is like any other you cant know the
    details of tomorrow.
  • Despite that, there is a pattern Everything
    moves.
  • Does it move in every way? No everything is
    going down.
  • Since everything is going down, why didnt
    everything end a long time ago?
  • Something is working the other way.
  • The sun goes down each year, but it comes back.
  • Though we cant know the specifics of tomorrow,
    we can learn its patterns.

59
How Modern Science Uses Entropy
  • We use equations to model the future.
  • If we can describe the trajectory of a cannon
    ball with an equation, we know its future in that
    case.
  • The more repeatable the results, the more
    confident we are in our model.
  • We understand that we have to put thought
    directed work into matter to order it for our
    purposes.
  • Example We dont wait around for a football
    stadium to organize itself, we cause it to happen
    by putting work into the environment.
  • Example Even though there is a chance that dust
    will fall on a table in the attic in a perfect
    checkerboard pattern, we know it wont.
  • Many times we dont know the specifics of one
    particular thing, but we know it for a group of
    them very well statistics.
  • Example the behavior of a fan at a football game
    as opposed to the entire stadium.
  • Example radioactive decay - the behavior of one
    atom as opposed to billions of them in an object.
  • Implication Stereotypes exist because they are
    mostly correct.

60
Energy Flow
61
The Origin of Energy
  • All energy ultimately comes from mass
  • E mc2
  • The Big Bang
  • As far as we are concerned, from an ecological
    standpoint, almost all energy important to life
    comes from the sun.
  • A small portion comes from deep oceanic thermal
    vents.

62
The Direction of Energy
  • Energy is not recycled in ecosystems.
  • It must be imported from the sun.
  • Implication of the 2nd Law
  • When energy is converted some is always lost as
    heat.
  • Recall, this also means, ultimately, that the
    universe is running down.
  • Ecosystems have limits placed on them due to loss
    of energy.

63
Purpose of Energy in Organisms
  • Entropy (ie chaos) is always breaking organisms
    down.
  • The only way to counteract this trend is with
    energy applied in very specific ways.
  • Organisms use energy in several ways
  • builds cells, tissues, and organs (growth)
  • thermoregulation
  • digestion
  • muscle activity

64
Trophic Structures
  • Sacrifice The Law of Life
  • Trophic Of, or relating to nutrition.
  • Everywhere along this chain energy is lost.

65
Plants are Producers First trophic
level Photosynthesis starts the energy flow
Energy assimilated in photosynthesis Gross
Primary Productivity (GPP) Plants use energy for
maintenance needs
The leftover energy is stored as organic matter
in green plants Net Primary Productivity (NPP)
66
Primary consumers Second trophic
level Herbivores (ex. mouse, grasshopper,
caterpillar, deer) - eat plants and obtain NPP
energy - some energy is used for maintenance,
growth, or reproduction - some energy is passed
out of the body as waste - some is lost as heat
67
Secondary consumers Third trophic
level Carnivores and omnivores predators (ex.
snake, frog, coyote, etc.) - eat primary
consumers - energy is used for maintenance,
growth, or reproduction
  • some energy is passed out of the body as waste
  • - some energy is lost as heat

68
Tertiary consumers Fourth trophic
level Carnivores top predator (ex. hawk, wolf,
bear, etc.) - eat secondary consumers - energy
is used for maintenance, growth, or reproduction
- some energy is passed out of the body as
waste - energy lost as heat
69
Decomposers fungi and bacteria - break down
organic molecules from the ecosystem to obtain
energy
- some is lost as heat
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Limits
  • Between each level energy is lost
  • This puts limits on the possible levels an
    ecosystem can have
  • Consuming meat is simply less efficient than
    consuming plants

72
Matter Cycling
73
The Origins of Matter
  • The first Law informs us that matter and energy
    are related we may think of matter as frozen
    energy.
  • The most prevalent elements in the universe
  • Hydrogen 98
  • Helium 2
  • Others (fraction of a percent)
  • The Stars are Matter Mill Houses

74
The Supernova Stellar Alchemy
  • Nearly all the matter present on earth came from
    super nova remnants

75
Earth A Closed System
  • Matter, essentially, does not enter or leave the
    earth
  • A miniscule amount enters from meteors.
  • Matter must be recycled by ecosystems.
  • Chemicals are cycled between organic matter and
    abiotic reservoirs.

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Water Cycling
77
The Carbon Cycle
78
The Nitrogen Cycle
79
The Phosphorus Cycle
80
Finis
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