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Fig. 55-1 ECOSYSTEMS AP CHAP 55 An ecosystem consists of all the organisms living in a community, as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Fig. 55-1


1
Fig. 55-1
ECOSYSTEMS AP CHAP 55
An ecosystem consists of all the organisms living
in a community, as well as the abiotic factors
with which they interact
2
Fig. 55-2
Regardless of an ecosystems size, its dynamics
involve two main processes energy flow and
chemical cycling Energy flows through (one way)
ecosystems while matter cycles within them
3
Physical laws govern energy flow and chemical
cycling in ecosystems
  • The first law of thermodynamics states that
    energy cannot be created or destroyed, only
    transformed
  • Energy enters an ecosystem as solar radiation, is
    conserved, and is lost from organisms as HEAT!
  • The second law of thermodynamics states that
    every exchange of energy increases the entropy of
    the universe
  • In an ecosystem, energy conversions are not
    completely efficient, and some energy is always
    lost as HEAT!

4
Conservation of Mass
  • The law of conservation of mass states that
    matter cannot be created or destroyed
  • Chemical elements are continually recycled within
    ecosystems
  • Ecosystems are open systems, absorbing energy and
    mass and releasing heat and waste products.

5
Energy, Mass, and Trophic Levels
  • Autotrophs build molecules themselves using
    photosynthesis or chemosynthesis as an energy
    source heterotrophs depend on the biosynthetic
    output of other organisms
  • Energy and nutrients pass from primary producers
    (autotrophs) to primary consumers (herbivores) to
    secondary consumers (carnivores) to tertiary
    consumers (carnivores that feed on other
    carnivores)

6
  • Detritivores, or decomposers, are consumers that
    derive their energy from detritus, nonliving
    organic matter
  • Prokaryotes and fungi are important detritivores
  • Decomposition connects all trophic levels

7
Fig. 55-3
8
Fig. 55-4
Tertiary consumers
Microorganisms and other detritivores
Secondary consumers
Primary consumers
Detritus
Decomposition connects all trophic levels
Primary producers
Heat
Key
Chemical cycling
Sun
Energy flow
9
Energy and other limiting factors control primary
production in ecosystems
  • Primary production in an ecosystem is the amount
    of light energy converted to chemical energy by
    autotrophs during a given time period.ie.amount
    of PHOTOSYNTHESIS

10
In primary producers the main energy input is
from the solar energy. In a plant, not all of the
solar energy available actually makes it into the
leaf.
Only about 1 of visible light that strikes
photosynthetic organisms is converted to chemical
energy in photosynthesis.
11
  • It is the energy that is incorporated into the
    biomass that is available for the next trophic
    level.

12
In the consumer a further series of energy losses
occur. The consumer will take in a certain amount
of energy from the trophic level beneath it.
13
  • It is generally accepted that only around 10 of
    the energy gained from the previous trophic level
    is passed on to the next level. All other energy
    is lost as described above. This limits the
    number of trophic levels in any food chain.

14
Gross and Net Primary Production
  • Total primary production is known as the
    ecosystems gross primary production (GPP)
  • Since autotrophs also have to respire to obtain
    energy, their GPP is reduced by the amount of
    energy used for fuel in cell respiration.

15
  • Net primary production (NPP) is GPP minus energy
    used by primary producers for cell respiration
  • Only NPP is available to consumers

16
SO
Only NPP is available to consumers
  • NPP GPP - R

17
  • Its like Gross Pay what you make
  • Net Pay what you bring home
  • NPP GPP from photosynthesis R from cellular
    respiration
  • Or GPP NPP R

18
  • In many ecosystems, NPP is about ½ of GPP.
  • NPP represents the storage of chemical energy
    that will be available to consumers.
  • NPP can be expressed as energy per unit area per
    unit time (J/m2 yr) or as biomass added per unit
    area per unit time (g/m2 yr) added in that unit
    of time.

19
Energy lost
Reflected
Tree Layer
Shrub layer
Solar Radiation
Absorbed
Energy accumulated as biomass
Herb Layer
Transmitted
Energy cannot be created or destroyed so all of
this has to add up.
20
Our LabWe are calculating the NPP for our Fast
Plants by measuring their biomassaccumulated.
Remember some energy is lost as heat and used in
respiration.
21
  • Then we are measuring the transfer of energy
    from plants to butterfly larvae in Secondary
    Production.

22
  • Primary productivity can also be determined by
    measuring oxygen being produced
  • Or the amount of carbon compounds being produced
  • Think photosynthesis.

23
  • This can be done by measuring the amount of
    oxygen in samples of water in bottles in light
    and dark.

24
Experiment we used to do
25
Rememberthe difference between gross and net
primary productivity.
  • Gross productivity is the total amount of
    productivity in the environment. Net
    productivity is the average productivity produced
    at a certain period of time.
  • Gross primary productivity is the total amount of
    something made in an area. Net primary
    productivity is the amount of that energy that
    can actually be used.
  • Gross primary production is the overall total of
    production.

26
  • Primary productivity is the amount of light
    energy converted to chemical energy during a
    period of time. It is the photosynthetic output
    of an ecosystems autotrophs.
  • The NPP is an ecosystems GPP minus the energy
    used by producers in their own cellular
    respiration (R).
  • So NPP GPP R
  • GPP NPP R

27
  • Tropical rain forests, estuaries, and coral reefs
    are among the most productive ecosystems per unit
    area
  • Marine ecosystems are relatively unproductive per
    unit area, but contribute much to global net
    primary production because of their volume

28
Fig. 55-6
Net primary production (kg carbon/m2yr)

0
1
2
3
29
Primary Production in Aquatic Ecosystems
  • In marine and freshwater ecosystems, both
    light and nutrients control primary production

30
Nutrient Limitation
  • More than light, nutrients limit primary
    production in the ocean and in lakes
  • A limiting nutrient is the element that must be
    added for production to increase in an area
  • Nitrogen and phosphorous are typically the
    nutrients that most often limit marine production

31
Fig. 55-7
EXPERIMENT
Long Island
Shinnecock Bay
G
F
E
C
D
Moriches Bay
B
Nutrient enrichment experiments confirmed that
nitrogen was limiting phytoplankton growth off
the shore of Long Island, New York
Great South Bay
Atlantic Ocean
A
Ammonium NH3
RESULTS
30
Ammonium enriched
Phosphate enriched
24
Unenriched control
18
Phytoplankton density (millions of cells per mL)
12
6
0
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
Collection site
32
Table 55-1
What is the limiting factor in this area?
IRON
33
  • Upwelling of nutrient-rich waters in parts of the
    oceans contributes to regions of high primary
    production
  • The addition of large amounts of nutrients to
    lakes has a wide range of ecological impacts
  • In some areas, sewage runoff has caused
    eutrophication of lakes, which can lead to loss
    of most fish species

34
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35
Primary Production in Terrestrial Ecosystems
  • In terrestrial ecosystems, temperature and
    moisture affect primary production on a large
    scale
  • Evapotranspiration is related to net primary
    production

36
Fig. 55-8
3,000
Tropical forest

2,000
Net primary production (g/m2yr)
Temperate forest
1,000
Mountain coniferous forest
Desert shrubland
Temperate grassland
Arctic tundra
0
1,500
1,000
500
0
Actual evapotranspiration (mm H2O/yr)
37
  • On a more local scale, a soil nutrient is
    often the limiting factor in primary production

What is the limiting factor in this soil example?
38
Energy transfer between trophic levels is
typically only 10 efficient
  • Secondary production of an ecosystem is the
    amount of chemical energy in food converted to
    new biomass during a given period of time

39
Production Efficiency
  • When a caterpillar feeds on a leaf, only about
    one-sixth of the leafs energy is used for
    secondary production
  • An organisms production efficiency is the
    fraction of energy stored in food that is not
    used for respiration

40
Fig. 55-9
200 6
Plant material eaten by caterpillar
200 J
67 J
Cellular respiration
100 J
Feces
33 J
Growth (new biomass)
41
Trophic Efficiency and Ecological Pyramids
  • Trophic efficiency is the percentage of
    production transferred from one trophic level to
    the next
  • It usually ranges from 5 to 20
  • Trophic efficiency is multiplied over the length
    of a food chain
  • Approximately 0.1 of chemical energy fixed by
    photosynthesis reaches a tertiary consumer
  • A pyramid of net production represents the loss
    of energy with each transfer in a food chain

42
Fig. 55-10
Energy transfer between trophic levels is
typically only 10 efficient
Tertiary consumers
10 J
Secondary consumers
100 J
Primary consumers
1,000 J
Primary producers
10,000 J
1,000,000 J of sunlight
43
  • In a biomass pyramid, each tier represents the
    dry weight of all organisms in one trophic level
  • Most biomass pyramids show a sharp decrease at
    successively higher trophic levels
  • Certain aquatic ecosystems have inverted biomass
    pyramids producers (phytoplankton) are consumed
    so quickly that they are outweighed by primary
    consumers

44
Fig. 55-11
Trophic level
Dry mass (g/m2)
Tertiary consumers
1.5
Secondary consumers
11
Primary consumers
37
Primary producers
809
(a) Most ecosystems (data from a Florida bog)
Trophic level
Dry mass (g/m2)
Primary consumers (zooplankton)
21
Primary producers (phytoplankton)
4
(b) Some aquatic ecosystems (data from the
English Channel)
45
Biological and geochemical processes cycle
nutrients between organic and inorganic parts of
an ecosystem
  • Life depends on recycling chemical elements
  • Nutrient circuits in ecosystems involve biotic
    and abiotic components and are often called
    biogeochemical cycles

46
Biogeochemical Cycles
  • Gaseous carbon, oxygen, sulfur, and nitrogen
    occur in the atmosphere and cycle globally
  • Less mobile elements such as phosphorus,
    potassium, and calcium cycle on a more local level

47
Fig. 55-13
Reservoir A
Reservoir B
All elements cycle between organic and inorganic
reservoirs
Organic materials available as nutrients
Organic materials unavailable as nutrients
Fossilization
Living organisms, detritus
Coal, oil, peat
Respiration, decomposition, excretion
Assimilation, photosynthesis
Burning of fossil fuels
Reservoir D
Reservoir C
Inorganic materials available as nutrients
Inorganic materials unavailable as nutrients
Weathering, erosion
Minerals in rocks
Atmosphere,soil, water
Formation of sedimentary rock
48
  • In studying cycling of water, carbon,
    nitrogen, and phosphorus, ecologists focus on
    four factors
  • Each chemicals biological importance
  • Forms in which each chemical is available or used
    by organisms
  • Major reservoirs for each chemical
  • Key processes driving movement of each chemical
    through its cycle

49
  • The Water Cycle
  • Water is essential to all organisms
  • 97 of the biospheres water is contained in the
    oceans, 2 is in glaciers and polar ice caps, and
    1 is in lakes, rivers, and groundwater
  • Water moves by the processes of evaporation,
    transpiration, condensation, precipitation, and
    movement through surface and groundwater

50
Fig. 55-14a
Transport over land
Solar energy
Net movement of water vapor by wind
Precipitation over land
Evaporation from ocean
Precipitation over ocean
Evapotranspiration from land
Percolation through soil
Runoff and groundwater
51
  • The Carbon Cycle
  • Carbon-based organic molecules are essential to
    all organisms
  • Carbon reservoirs include fossil fuels, soils and
    sediments, solutes in oceans, plant and animal
    biomass, and the atmosphere
  • CO2 is taken up and released through
    photosynthesis and respiration additionally,
    volcanoes and the burning of fossil fuels
    contribute CO2 to the atmosphere

52
Fig. 55-14b
CO2 in atmosphere
Photosynthesis
Cellular respiration
Photo- synthesis
Burning of fossil fuels and wood
Phyto- plankton
Higher-level consumers
Primary consumers
Carbon compounds in water
Detritus
Decomposition
53
  • The Terrestrial Nitrogen Cycle
  • Nitrogen is a component of amino acids, proteins,
    and nucleic acids
  • The main reservoir of nitrogen is the atmosphere
    (N2), though this nitrogen must be converted to
    ammonia or nitrate for uptake by plants, via
    nitrogen fixation by bacteria
  • Organic nitrogen is decomposed to ammonia by
    ammonification, and ammonia is decomposed to
    nitrate in soil by nitrification
  • Denitrification converts nitrates back to N2
  • in the atmosphere.

54
NITROGEN
Nitrogen Fixation
BACTERIA
ammonia, nitrates
55
Organic nitrogen from metabolism
ammonification

BACTERIA
BACTERIA
ammonia nitrification
DECOMPOSITION
nitrates
denitrification N2
BACTERIA
56
Fig. 55-14c
N2 in atmosphere
BACTERIA are super important here!
Assimilation
Denitrifying bacteria
NO3

Nitrogen-fixing bacteria
Decomposers
Nitrifying bacteria
Ammonification
Nitrification
NH3
NH4
NO2


Nitrogen-fixing soil bacteria
Nitrifying bacteria
57
  • The Phosphorus Cycle
  • Phosphorus is a major constituent of nucleic
    acids, phospholipids, and ATP
  • Phosphate (PO43) is the most important inorganic
    form of phosphorus
  • The largest reservoirs are sedimentary rocks of
    marine origin, the oceans, and organisms
  • Phosphate binds with soil particles, and movement
    is often localized
  • DOES NOT CYCLE IN THE ATMOSPHERE

58
Fig. 55-14d
Precipitation
Geologic uplift
Weathering of rocks
Runoff
Consumption
Decomposition
Plant uptake of PO43
Plankton
Dissolved PO43
Soil
Uptake
Leaching
Sedimentation
59
Decomposition and Nutrient Cycling Rates
  • Decomposers (detritivores) play a key role in the
    general pattern of chemical cycling
  • Rates at which nutrients cycle in different
    ecosystems vary greatly, mostly as a result of
    differing rates of decomposition
  • The rate of decomposition is controlled by
    temperature, moisture, and nutrient availability
  • Rapid decomposition results in relatively low
    levels of nutrients in the soil

60
Human activities now dominate most chemical
cycles on Earth
  • As the human population has grown, our activities
    have disrupted the trophic structure, energy
    flow, and chemical cycling of many ecosystems

61
How have humans impacted our ecosystems?
  • 1) Agriculture and N cycling
  • In agriculture, we have depleted our N resources
    and added back with fertilizers which have harmed
    our ecosystems.

62
  • 2) Contamination of Aquatic Ecosystems
  • When excess nutrients are added to an ecosystem,
    the critical load (minimal amt plants can absorb)
    is exceeded
  • Remaining nutrients can contaminate groundwater
    as well as freshwater and marine ecosystems and
    cause eutrophication

63
3) Acid Precipitation
  • Combustion of fossil fuels is the main cause of
    acid precipitation
  • North American and European ecosystems downwind
    from industrial regions have been damaged by rain
    and snow containing nitric and sulfuric acid
  • Acid precipitation changes soil pH and causes
    leaching of calcium and other nutrients

64
Fig. 55-19
4.5
4.4
4.3
pH
4.2
4.1
4.0
2000
1995
1990
1985
1980
1975
1970
1965
1960
Year
65
4) Toxins in the Environment
  • Humans release many toxic chemicals, including
    synthetics previously unknown to nature
  • One reason toxins are harmful is that they become
    more concentrated in successive trophic levels
  • Biological magnification concentrates toxins at
    higher trophic levels, where biomass is lower

66
Fig. 55-20
Herring gull eggs 124 ppm
Lake trout 4.83 ppm
Concentration of PCBs
Smelt 1.04 ppm
Zooplankton 0.123 ppm
Phytoplankton 0.025 ppm
67
Brier Creek fish kill report looks at material
used in mining, wastewater treatment
  • In a status report on the incident, Savannah
    Riverkeeper said the characteristics of the fish
    kill are indicative of poisoning by aluminum
    sulfate used as a coagulant in kaolin mining
    and sewage treatment.

68
5) Greenhouse Gases and Global Warming
  • One pressing problem caused by human activities
    is the rising level of atmospheric carbon dioxide
  • Due to the burning of fossil fuels and other
    human activities, the concentration of
    atmospheric CO2 has been steadily increasing

69
Fig. 55-21
What we know for sure The concentration of
atmospheric CO2 has been steadily increasing.
14.9
390
14.8
380
14.7
14.6
370
Temperature
14.5
360
14.4
14.3
350
CO2 concentration (ppm)
Average global temperature (ºC)
14.2
340
14.1
CO2
330
14.0
13.9
320
13.8
310
13.7
13.6
300
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
1990
1995
2000
2005
Year
70
The Greenhouse Effect and Climate
  • CO2, water vapor, and other greenhouse gases
    reflect infrared radiation back toward Earth
    this is the greenhouse effect
  • could cause global warming and climatic change
  • Northern coniferous forests and tundra show the
    strongest effects of global warming

71
Depletion of Atmospheric Ozone
  • Life on Earth is protected from damaging effects
    of UV radiation by a protective layer of ozone
    molecules
  • Destruction of atmospheric ozone probably results
    from chlorine-releasing pollutants such as CFCs
    produced by human activity
  • Ozone depletion causes DNA damage in plants and
    poorer phytoplankton growth

72
Fig. 55-23
350
300
250
Ozone layer thickness (Dobsons)
200
Satellite studies suggest that the ozone layer
has been gradually thinning since 1975
100
0
80
60
05
2000
95
90
85
75
70
65
1955
Year
73
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74
Fig. 55-24
ozone
Chlorine atom
O2
Chlorine
O3
ClO
O2
ClO
Cl2O2
Sunlight
How free chlorine in the atmosphere destroys
ozone.
75
  • Ozone depletion causes DNA damage in plants and
    poorer phytoplankton growth

76
Scientists first described an ozone hole over
Antarctica in 1985 it has increased in size as
ozone depletion has increased
Fig. 55-25
(a) September 1979
(b) September 2006
  • An international agreement signed in 1987 has
    resulted in a decrease in ozone depletion

77
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