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Ecosystems: Components, Energy Flow, and Matter Cycling

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Title: Ecosystems: Components, Energy Flow, and Matter Cycling


1
Ecosystems Components, Energy Flow, and Matter
Cycling
  • All things come from earth, and to earth they
    all returnMenander

2
Ecosystem Organization
  • Organisms
  • Made of cells
  • Eukaryotic vs Prokaryotic
  • Species
  • Groups of organisms that resemble one another in
    appearance, behavior, and genetic make up
  • Sexual vs Asexual reproduction
  • Production of viable offspring in nature
  • 1.5 million named 10-14 million likely
  • Populations
  • Genetic diversity
  • Communities
  • Ecosystems
  • Biosphere

Fig. 4.2, p. 66
3
Earths Life Support Systems
  • Troposphere
  • To 11 miles
  • Air is here
  • Stratosphere
  • 11 to 30 miles
  • Ozone layer
  • Hydrosphere
  • Solid, liquid, and gaseous water
  • Lithosphere
  • Crust and upper mantle
  • Contains non-renewable res.

4
Sustaining Life on Earth
  • One way flow of high quality energy
  • The cycling of matter (the earth is a closed
    system)
  • Gravity
  • Causes downward movement of matter

5
Major Ecosystem Components
  • Abiotic Components
  • Water, air, temperature, soil, light levels,
    precipitation, salinity
  • Sets tolerance limits for populations and
    communities
  • Some are limiting factors that structure the
    abundance of populations
  • Biotic Components
  • Producers, consumers, decomposers
  • Plants, animals, bacteria/fungi
  • Biotic interactions with biotic components
    include predation, competition, symbiosis,
    parasitism, commensalism etc.

6
Limiting Factors on Land in H2O
  • Terrestrial
  • Sunlight
  • Temperature
  • Precipitation
  • Soil nutrients
  • Fire frequency
  • Wind
  • Latitude
  • Altitude
  • Aquatic/Marine
  • Light penetration
  • Water clarity
  • Water currents
  • Dissolved nutrient concentrations
  • Esp. N, P, Fe
  • Dissolved Oxygen concentration
  • Salinity

7
The Source of High Quality Energy
  • Energy of sun lights and warms the planet
  • Supports PSN
  • Powers the cycling of matter
  • Drives climate and weather that distribute heat
    and H2O

8
Fate of Solar Energy
  • Earth gets 1/billionth of suns output of energy
  • 34 is reflected away by atmosphere
  • 66 is absorbed by chemicals in atmosphere
    re-radiated into space
  • Visible light, Infrared radiation (heat), and a
    small amount of UV not absorbed by ozone reaches
    the atmosphere
  • Energy warms troposphere and land
  • Evaporates water and cycles it along with gravity
  • Generates winds
  • A tiny fraction is captured by photosynthesizing
    organisms
  • Natural greenhouse effect vs. Global Warming

9
Primary Productivity
  • The conversion of light energy to chemical energy
    is called gross primary production.
  • Plants use the energy captured in photosynthesis
    for maintenance and growth.
  • The energy that is accumulated in plant biomass
    is called net primary production.

10
Primary Productivity
  • NPPGPP-respiration rate
  • GPP RATE at which producers convert solar energy
    into chemical energy as biomass
  • Rate at which producers use photosynthesis to fix
    inorganic carbon into the organic carbon of their
    tissues
  • These producers must use some of the total
    biomass they produce for their own respiration
  • NPP Rate at which energy for use by consumers is
    stored in new biomass (available to consumers)
  • Units Kcal/m2/yr or g/m2/yr
  • How do you measure it? AP Lab Site
  • Most productive vs. least productive

11
What are the most productive Ecosystems?
12
Fate of Primary Productivity and Some important
questions
  • Since producers are ultimate source of all food,
    why shouldnt we just harvest the plants of the
    worlds marshes?
  • Why dont we clear cut tropical rainforests to
    grow crops for humans?
  • Why not harvest primary producers of the worlds
    vast oceans?
  • Vitousek et al Humans now use, waste, or
    destroy about 27 of earths total potential NPP
    and 40 of the NPP of the planets terrestrial
    ecosystems

13
Biotic Components of Ecosystems
  • Producers (autotrophs)
  • Source of all food
  • Photosynthesis
  • Consumersheterotroph
  • Aerobic respiration
  • Anaerobic respiration
  • Methane, H2S
  • Decomposers
  • Matter recyclers
  • Release organic compounds into soil and water
    where they can be used by producers

14
Trophic Levels
  • Each organism in an ecosystem is assigned to a
    feeding (or Trophic) level
  • Primary Producers
  • Primary Consumers (herbivores)
  • Secondary Consumer (carnivores)
  • Tertiary Consumers
  • Omnivores
  • Detritus feeders and scavengers
  • Directly consume tiny fragments of dead stuff
  • Decomposers
  • Digest complex organic chemicals into inorganic
    nutrients that are used by producers
  • Complete the cycle of matter

15
Detritivores vs Decomposers stop
16
Energy Flow and Matter Cycling in Ecosystems
  • Food Chains vs. Food Webs
  • KEY There is little if no matter waste in
    natural ecosystems!

17
Generalized Food Web of the Antarctic
Note Arrows Go in direction Of energy flow
18
Food Webs and the Laws of matter and energy
  • Food chains/webs show how matter and energy move
    from one organism to another through an ecosystem
  • Each trophic level contains a certain amount of
    biomass (dry weight of all organic matter)
  • Chemical energy stored in biomass is transferred
    from one trophic level to the next
  • With each trophic transfer, some usable energy is
    degraded and lost to the environment as low
    quality heat
  • Thus, only a small portion of what is eaten and
    digested is actually converted into an organisms
    bodily material or biomass (WHAT LAW ACCOUNTS FOR
    THIS?)

19
Food Webs and the Laws of matter and energy
  • Food chains/webs show how matter and energy move
    from one organism to another through an ecosystem
  • Each trophic level contains a certain amount of
    biomass (dry weight of all organic matter)
  • Chemical energy stored in biomass is transferred
    from one trophic level to the next
  • With each trophic transfer, some usable energy is
    degraded and lost to the environment as low
    quality heat
  • Thus, only a small portion of what is eaten and
    digested is actually converted into an organisms
    bodily material or biomass (WHAT LAW ACCOUNTS FOR
    THIS?)
  • Ecological Efficiency
  • The of usable nrg transferred as biomass from
    one trophic level to the next (ranges from 5-20
    in most ecosystems, use 10 as a rule of thumb)
  • Thus, the more trophic levels or steps in a food
    chain, the greater the cumulative loss of useable
    energy

20
Food Webs and the Laws of matter and energy
  • Ecological Efficiency
  • The of usable energy transferred as biomass
    from one trophic level to the next (ranges from
    5-20 in most ecosystems, use 10 as a rule of
    thumb)
  • Thus, the more trophic levels or steps in a food
    chain, the greater the cumulative loss of useable
    energy

21
Pyramids of Energy and Matter
  • Pyramid of Energy Flow
  • Pyramid of Biomass

22
Ecological Pyramids of Energy
23
Ecological Pyramids of Biomass
24
Implications of Pyramids.
  • Why could the earth support more people if the
    eat at lower trophic levels?
  • Why are food chains and webs rarely more than
    four or five trophic levels?
  • Why do marine food webs have greater ecological
    efficiency and therefore more trophic levels than
    terrestrial ones?
  • Why are there so few top level carnivores?
  • Why are these species usually the first to suffer
    when the the ecosystems that support them are
    disrupted?

25
ATMOSPHERE
26
LITHOSPHERE
27
HYDROSPHERE
28
ECOSPHERE
29
Ecosystem Services and Sustainability
Lessons From Nature!
  1. Use Renewable Solar Energy As Energy Source
  2. Recycle the chemical nutrients needed for life

30
Matter Cycles
  • You are responsible for knowing the water,
    carbon, nitrogen, sulfur, and phosphorus cycles
  • Know major sources and sinks
  • Know major flows
  • Know how human activities are disrupting these
    cycles

31
BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
32
Fundamentals of biogeochemical cycles
  • All matter cycles...it is neither created nor
    destroyed...
  • As the Earth is essentially a closed system with
    respect to matter, we can say that all matter on
    Earth cycles .
  • Biogeochemical cycles the movement (or cycling)
    of matter through a system

33
  • by matter we mean elements (carbon, nitrogen,
    oxygen) or molecules (water) so the movement of
    matter (for example carbon) between these parts
    of the system is, practically speaking, a
    biogeochemical cycle
  • The Cycling Elements macronutrients required
    in relatively large amounts "big six"
  • carbon , hydrogen , oxygen , nitrogen ,
    phosphorous sulfur

34
HYDROLOGIC CYCLE
CONNECTS ALL OF THE CYCLES AND SPHERES TOGETHER
35
Water Quality Degradation
36
IMPORTANCE OF CARBON CYCLE
CARBON IS THE BACKBONE OF LIFE!
37
Carbon Cycle
38
MARINE CARBON CYCLE
39
TERRESTRIAL CARBON CYCLE
40
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41
The Nitrogen Cycle
42
Nitrogen is a key element for
  • amino acids
  • nucleic acids (purine, pyrimidine)
  • cell wall components of bacteria (NAM).

43
Nitrogen Cycle
44
IMPORTANCE OF PHOSPHOROUS CYCLE
  • 1.Phosphorous is an essential nutrient of both
    plants and animals.
  • 2. It is part of DNA molecules which carry
    genetic information.
  • 3. It is part of ATP and ADP) that store
    chemical energy for use by organisms in cellular
    respiration.
  • 4. Forms phospholipids in cell membranes of
    plants and animal cells.
  • 5. Forms bones, teeth, and shells of animals as
    calcium phosphate compounds.

45
PHOSPHOROUS CYCLE
46
http//3.bp.blogspot.com/_n9nytwY_jek/TS8oQCN8xHI/
AAAAAAAAACU/v5pYyLVVZkU/s640/eutrophication.gif
47
https//iboess.wikispaces.com/5.4Eutrophication
48
(No Transcript)
49
SULFUR CYCLE
50
ROCK CYCLE
51
HUMAN IMPACTS ON ROCK CYCLE
  • 1. Humans are excavating minerals and removing
    rock material. It takes millions of years for
    rock to form.
  • 2. Humans remove sediments for building
    materials. This removes sediments that may form
    sedimentary rocks in the future.
  • 3. Humans are filling in wetlands (peatlands),
    area that will form future coal beds.

52
Works Cited
  1. http//science.pppst.com/carboncycle.html
  2. westernreservepublicmedia.org/earthmotion3/images/
    Carbon_Cycle.ppt
  3. clima-dods.ictp.it/d3/annalisa/ocean_sv/lecture1.p
    pt
  4. www.geology.wmich.edu/Koretsky/envs2150/Pcycle_1.p
    pt
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