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National Diploma in Countryside Management

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National Diploma in Countryside Management Unit 2 Principles of Ecology Session 8 Energy and Nutrient in Ecosystems Tutor Robert Mackey Aims of the session ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: National Diploma in Countryside Management


1
National Diploma in Countryside Management
  • Unit 2
  • Principles of Ecology
  • Session 8 Energy and Nutrient in Ecosystems
  • Tutor Robert Mackey

2
Aims of the session
  • Identify cycling processes in ecosystems
  • Define the parts of the processes
  • Consider the importance of cycling processes in
    ecosystems
  • Exercise to identify webs within the survey area

3
Cycles in ecosystems
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Producers
  • Producers are organisms that use the sun's energy
    to make food
  • Note there are a few examples of other energy
    sources (e.g. sulphur in deep water)
  • They are autotrophs
  • Includes most plants
  • Energy is stored as chemical bonds within the
    tissues of the organism
  • The energy becomes available to other organisms
    in the ecosystem

6
Consumers
  • Consumers are organisms that are not producers!
  • They are heterotrophs
  • They require energy from other organisms to
    sustain themselves
  • Likely to obtain their nutrients too
  • Consumers include
  • Animals (herbivores and carnivores)
  • Micro-organisms (most)
  • i.e. Everything except plants!
  • Includes decomposers

7
Decomposers
  • Decomposers are
  • A specialised type of consumer
  • Fundamental to life on earth
  • The break down the organic remains of other
    (dead) organisms
  • They release energy from as either
  • Decomposer biomass (for consumption) or
  • Carbon dioxide (for photosynthesis)
  • Includes
  • Worms,
  • Some bacteria and some fungi

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10
Energy Transfer
  • Energy ecosystems allows organisms to live
  • One original source photosynthesis
  • Plants use this solar energy to produce
    carbohydrates
  • Consumed by other organisms
  • Transfers the energy.
  • System is not efficient

11
Energy Transfer
  • Not all of the energy from sunlight is used by
    the plants
  • Plants are not efficient
  • Much sunlight misses the plant
  • Or is in the wrong wavelength
  • Or lost in the inefficiencies of photosynthesis
  • Or used by the plant itself
  • Gross primary production is the total energy in
    the molecules of the plant
  • Net primary production is the surplus energy not
    used by the plant itself.

12
Efficiency of Energy Transfer
  • At each level of the food chain energy is lost
    because it is used by the organism itself for
    respiration. This limits the number of steps
    there can be on a food chain.
  • Generally only about 8 of the energy is
    transferred from one stage to the next.

13
Pyramid of Number
  • The number of individuals at each trophic level
    varies
  • See diagram
  • The length (or area to be more accurate) of each
    bar is proportional to the number of individuals.

14
Food Chains
  • A food chain shows how energy is transferred
    between organisms
  • The energy from sun
  • Plants convert into chemical energy
    (photosynthesis)
  • Herbivores eat the plants, taking some of the
    energy
  • They are prey, energy is transferred to the
    predator.

15
Food Chains
  • A food chain is a simple series of feeding
    relationships within an ecosystem
  • Example
  • Rose bush --gt caterpillars --gt robin --gt
    sparrowhawk
  • There is a flow of energy through the food chain
  • Some energy in the rose bush is consumed by the
    caterpillars
  • Some of the energy n the caterpillars is consumed
    by the robin
  • Some of the energy in the robin is consumed by
    the sparrowhawk 
  • All food chains begin with energy from the sun

16
Food Chains
  • All food chains begin with energy from the sun
  • The transfer of energy from level to level is
    inefficient
  • Transfer efficiency may be as low as 1
  • Numbers of producers must be large
  • Numbers reduce up the food chain
  • A food web is a (complex) series of inter-related
    food-chains

17
A simple food web
18
Cycling in ecosystems
  • Cycling/webs in ecosystems include
  • Energy
  • Water
  • Carbon/Carbon Dioxide
  • Nutrient
  • Potash, Phosphate and minor elements
  • Nitrogen
  • Water

19
A food web
20
Nitrogen Cycling
21
Carbon Cycling
  • Currently very significant
  • Carbon makes up 50 of all organisms
  • Links to producers/consumers
  • CO2 is a greenhouse gas
  • Exists naturally in the atmosphere
  • Modifies radiation in/out of earth
  • Increased levels increase temperature
  • 25 increase since 1850

22
Carbon Dioxide in the Atmosphere
  • Increased CO2 caused by
  • Natural decomposition of organic matter
  • Burning of fossil fuels
  • Changes to land use
  • Deforestation
  • Soil cultivation
  • Release from oceans
  • Decreased CO2 caused
  • Photosynthesis (plant growth)
  • Absorption by oceans
  • Improved soil management

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Task
  • Consider your survey area
  • Identify food webs in the ecosystem
  • Use correct binomial names
  • What are the producers?
  • What do they contribute to the eco-system?
  • What are the consumers
  • What are they taking from the systems
  • What are they contribution
  • What can we do about it?
  • How do we improve
  • Nutrient recycling
  • Carbon sequestration (Fixing)
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