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Chapter 3: The Biosphere

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Title: Chapter 3: The Biosphere


1
Chapter 3 The Biosphere
  • The Study of Ecology

2
What is Ecology?
  • Ecology is the scientific study of interactions
    among organisms and between organisms and their
    environment

3
Why do we study ecology?
  • We live in the natural world and use its
    resources (water, space,food, etc)
  • The natural world effects our lives (weather,
    fire, economy)
  • To protect biodiversity

4
Levels of Organization
  • Ecologists recognize there is a hierarchy of
    organization in the environment biosphere, biome
    ecosystem, community, population, and organisms

5
Levels of Organization
6
What is a Biosphere?
  • Part of Earth in which life exists including
    land, water, and air or atmosphere

7
What is a Biome?
Temperate Forest
Tundra
  • A group of ecosystems that have the same climate
    and similar dominant communities

8
What is an Ecosystem?
  • A collection of all organisms that live in a
    particular place, which includes the nonliving,
    or physical, environment

9
What is a Community and a Population?
  • A community is assemblage of different
    populations that live together in a defined area
  • A population is a group individuals that belong
    to the same species and live in the same area

10
How Do We Study Ecology?
  • Observing
  • Experimenting
  • Modeling (Ecological phenomena that occur over
    long periods of time)

11
How Do Organisms Obtain Energy in an Ecosystem?
  • Sunlight is the main energy source for life on
    Earth
  • Autotrophs will then use the energy from the sun
    (or chemicals) to make their own food
  • Autotrophs are also known as producers
  • Examples of autotrophs plants, algae,
    cyanobacteria

12
How Do Organisms Obtain Energy in an Ecosystem?
  • Autotrophs use photosynthesis to convert
    sunlight, carbon dioxide, and water into oxygen
    and carbohydrates

13
How Do Organisms Obtain Energy in an Ecosystem?
  • What if there is no light in the ecosystem?
  • The autotrophs will use chemosynthesis, which is
    a process that uses chemical energy to produce
    carbohydrates (ex bacteria living in volcanic
    vents)

14
How Do Organisms Obtain Energy in an Ecosystem?
  • Organisms that rely on other organisms for energy
    are known as consumers or heterotrophs

15
Types of Heterotrophs
  • Herbivores- consume only plants
  • Carnivores- consume only meat
  • Omnivores- consume both plants and animals
  • Detritivores- consume plant and animal remains
    (earthworms, mites, crabs)
  • Decomposer breaks down organic matter to obtain
    energy (bacteria fungi)

16
Feeding Relationships
  • Energy in an ecosystem flows in one direction
    (from sun to the heterotrophs)
  • Food chain- a series of steps in which organisms
    transfer energy by eating and being eaten

17
Food Chain
18
Food Web
19
Transfer of Energy
  • Each step in a food chain or food web is called a
    trophic level
  • Autotrophs make up the first trophic level,
    consumers make up 2nd, 3rd, 4th or higher levels
  • Only about 10 of energy is transferred to
    organisms at the next trophic level

20
Transfer of Energy
  • If 10 of solar energy is captured by plants then
    animals who eat the grass gain only 10 of that
    energy (1), animals who those animals gain 10
    from that (.1)
  • 10 --gt 1 --gt .1

21
What is Biomass?
  • Biomass is the total amount of living tissue
    within a given trophic level
  • A biomass pyramid can show you much food is
    available to each trophic level

22
Recycling Matter in the Biosphere
  • Elements, chemical compounds, and other forms of
    matter are passed from one organism and from one
    part of the biosphere to another in
    biogeochemical cycles

23
Important Biogeochemical Cycles
  • Water cycle
  • Carbon Cycle
  • Nitrogen Cycle
  • Phosphorus Cycle

24
The Water Cycle
25
The Water Cycle
  • Water moves between the ocean, atmosphere, and
    land
  • Water evaporates from bodies of water into the
    atmosphere
  • Water can also enter the atmosphere through
    transpiration (process by which water is lost
    through the leaves of plants)

26
Nutrient Cycles
  • A nutrient is a chemical substance that an
    organism needs to sustain life
  • Important nutrient cycles
  • Carbon Cycle
  • Nitrogen Cycle
  • Phosphorus Cycle

27
The Carbon Cycle
  • Carbons Roles
  • Ingredient in living tissue
  • Important component of animal skeletons (CaCO3)
  • Important component of the atmosphere (CO2)

28
The Carbon Cycle
  • Carbon enters the atmosphere by
  • Respiration
  • Geochemical processes
  • Human activities
  • Carbon is taken up by
  • Photosynthesis
  • Burial and decomposition of dead organisms
    (formation of fossil fuels)

29
The Carbon Cycle
CO2 in Atmosphere
CO2 in Ocean
30
The Nitrogen Cycle
  • The roles of nitrogen
  • Important component of amino acids
  • Major component of fertilizer (NO3-)
  • Major component of atmosphere (N2)

31
The Nitrogen Cycle
  • Nitrogen gas (N2) cannot be used by plants so it
    must be converted into a usable form
  • Soil bacteria convert nitrogen gas into ammonia
    (NH3) in the process of nitrogen fixation
  • More soil bacteria convert ammonia into nitrates
    (NO3-) and nitrites (NO2-) a usable form
  • Other soil bacteria then convert nitrates and
    nitrites back into nitrogen gas, which is known
    as denitrification

32
The Nitrogen Cycle
33
The Phosphorus Cycle
  • Roles of Phosphorus
  • Important component of DNA and RNA
  • Does not enter atmosphere (gas)
  • Steps
  • Phosphorus is found in rocks and sediment which
    gets moved by water
  • Plants absorb phosphorus in the form of phosphate
    from soil and water
  • Heterotrophs consume plants

34
What is a Limiting Nutrient?
  • A nutrient that is scarce of cycles very slowly
  • When an aquatic ecosystem receives a large amount
    of a limiting nutrient it immediately increases
    the amount of algae, which is known as algal bloom

35
Algal Bloom
  • What is the result of algal bloom?
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