1 / 52

Ecosystems

Ecosystems. Introduction. Species (be…specific!) Bear: not good American Black bear: great Ursus americanus: amazing Population Community Ecosystem Habitat Niche. All ecosystems have two sets of components. Biotic Living things How they interact Relationships. Abiotic Light

Download Presentation

Ecosystems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Ecosystems

  2. Introduction • Species (be…specific!) • Bear: not good • American Black bear: great • Ursus americanus: amazing • Population • Community • Ecosystem • Habitat • Niche

  3. All ecosystems have two sets of components. • Biotic • Living things • How they interact • Relationships • Abiotic • Light • Temperature • Soil • Turbidity • Wind speed • Dissolved oxygen • Slope • Salinity • Flow rate • Elevation • pH • Wave action

  4. How do you measure biotic components? • Identify the species • Use a dichotomous key • Estimate the abundance of organisms • Percent cover • Percent frequency • Estimating biomass • The mass of living material • It’s easiest for plants, but it’s destructive

  5. How do you measure biotic components? • We focused mostly on plants. • Animals are harder to measure, why? • There are some simple ways for smaller organisms. • For larger organisms, the Lincoln Index is the easiest way.

  6. Lincoln Index • Scientists capture a sample of individuals, mark them, and release them. • Scientists then return, capture another sample, and estimate the total population

  7. Calculating Lincoln Index • 25 birds caught, tagged, released. 30 birds caught second time, 18 were marked.

  8. Calculating Lincoln Index • 8 elephants caught, tagged, released. 9 elephants caught second time, 6 were tagged.

  9. Calculating Lincoln Index • 200 ants caught, marked, released. 185 ants caught second time, 57 were marked.

  10. Calculating Lincoln Index • 20 blugill caught, tagged, released. 30 bluegill caught second time, 3 were marked.

  11. Lincoln Index Assumptions • Population must be closed, no immigration or emigration • Time between samples must be small compared to the lifespan • Marked organisms must mix with the population after marking

  12. Lincoln Index Setbacks • Capture can injure animal • Mark/tag may harm animal • Mark/tag may be removed • Mark/tag may increase/decrease predators • Different individuals are more/less “capturable” • Individuals may become trap-happy or trap-shy

  13. But it’s not just about HOW MANY living things are in an area. • Diversity is very important as well and is a measure of the health of an ecosystem. • The lower the diversity, the lower the health. • Why do you think this is?

  14. Simpson’s Diversity Index

  15. Ecosystem 1 • 15 rats • 13 squirrels • 8 moles • 6 mice • 5 chipmunks

  16. Ecosystem 2 • 0 rats • 10 squirrels • 3 moles • 4 mice • 25 chipmunks

  17. Ecosystem 3 • 16 rats • 0 squirrels • 7 moles • 0 mice • 32 chipmunks

  18. Ecosystem 4 • 3 rats • 24 squirrels • 2 moles • 4 mice • 5 chipmunks

  19. Ecosystem 5 • 10 rats • 10 squirrels • 7 moles • 9 mice • 0 chipmunks

  20. Ecosystem 6 • 85 rats • 0 squirrels • 0 moles • 0 mice • 0 chipmunks

  21. Ecosystem 7 • 3 rats • 13 squirrels • 0 moles • 0 mice • 5 chipmunks

  22. Ecosystem 8 • 0 rats • 13 squirrels • 0 moles • 0 mice • 22 chipmunks

  23. Ecosystem 9 • 15 rats • 15 squirrels • 15 moles • 0 mice • 9 chipmunks

  24. Gross Primary Productivity • The amount of energy produced or amount of mass produced by producers

  25. Net Primary Productivity • The amount of energy or mass that is stored by producers • The amount of energy available to consumers

  26. Gross Secondary Productivity • The total amount of energy consumed by consumers

  27. Net Secondary Productivity • The total amount of mass gained by (primary) consumers

  28. Pyramid of Numbers • Shows the number of organisms at each level. • Good for comparing changes • Bad because numbers can be too great to represent and difficult for organisms at multiple trophic levels

  29. Pyramid of Biomass • Shows the amount of biomass at each level • Difficult to measure biomass, biomass varies over seasons

  30. Pyramid of Productivity • Shows the amount of energy flow through an ecosystem (rule of 10 - each level is about 10% of the previous level) • Good because ecosystems can be compared • Bad because the data is hard to get and species can be at multiple trophic levels.

  31. Measuring abiotic components • Marine Ecosystems: • Salinity • pH • Temperature • Dissolved Oxygen • Wave Action

  32. Measuring abiotic components • Freshwater ecosystems • Turbidity • Flow Velocity • pH • Temperature • Dissolved Oxygen

  33. Measuring abiotic components • Terrestrial ecosystems • Temperature • Light intensity • Wind speed • Slope • Soil moisture • Mineral content

  34. Measuring abiotic components • Best method: • Count the organisms • Next best method: • Capture-Mark-Release-Recapture • (Lincoln Index)

  35. Population Curves • S Curve • Reaches carrying capacity and stabilizes • J Curve • Unchecked population growth

  36. Survivorship • r- strategists • Short generation time • Mature quickly • Small size • Many offspring • Little parental care • Adapted to unstable/ unpredictable environments

  37. Survivorship • K- stragetists • Long life/generation time • Mature slowly • Large size • Few offspring • Parental care • Predictable/stable environments where population stays near carrying capacity

  38. Population Regulation • Density dependent inhibition • Population is regulated by negative feedback • Crowding • Competition

  39. Population Regulation • Density independent inhibition • Weather • Disturbances

  40. Succession • A natural increase in the complexity of the structure and species composition over time • A lifeless area becomes an ecosystem

  41. Bare surface • A lifeless abiotic environment becomes available for pioneer species • Usually r-selected species

  42. Seral Stage 1 • Simple soil starts • Pioneer species adapted to extreme conditions colonize

  43. Seral Stage 2 • Species diversity increases • Organic material and nutrients in soil increases

  44. Seral Stage 3 • Larger plants colonize • K-selected species become established • r-selected species unable to compete get fazed out

  45. Seral Stage 4 • Fewer new species • Narrower niches develop, K-selected species become specialists

  46. Climax Community • Stable and self-perpetuating ecosystem • Maximum development under temperature, light, precipitation conditions.

More Related