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Ch 54 - Ecosystems. What is an ecosystem?. All organisms in a community and the abiotic factors they interact with. Physical Laws & Energy. Law of conservation of energy – energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or transformed
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What is an ecosystem? • All organisms in a community and the abiotic factors they interact with
Physical Laws & Energy • Law of conservation of energy – energy cannot be created or destroyed, only transferred or transformed • 2nd law of thermodynamics – every exchange of energy increases the entropy of the universe • Thus ecosystems need a constant supply of energy
Energy flow in ecosystems • Energy flows through the ecosystem –one way • Sun is primary source of energy
Trophic levels • Autotrophs – primary producers • plants, phytoplankton • Heterotrophs – consumers • Primary consumers – herbivores • Secondary consumers – carnivores that eat herbivores • Tertiary consumers – carnivores that eat other carnivores
Decomposers/Detritivores- get energy from detritus • prokaryotes & fungi are main decomposers • Decomposition connects all trophic levels • http://www.countrysideinfo.co.uk/rabbita.htm • http://vimeo.com/21216124
Sun Key Chemical cycling Energy flow Heat Primary producers Primaryconsumers Detritus Microorganismsand otherdetritivores Secondary andtertiary consumers
Primary production • Most ecosystems - primary production is the amount of light energy converted to chemical energy by autotrophs during a given time period • In a few ecosystems, chemoautotrophs are the primary producers
GPP vs. NPP • Gross primary production – total primary production • Net primary production: • = GPP minus energy used by primary producers for respiration • On average NPP is ½ of GPP • This is the amount of energy available to consumers
Global net primary production Net primary production(kg carbon/m2yr) 3 2 1 0
Primary production in Aquatic systems • Factors: • Light limitation • Nutrient limitation Commonly nitrogen & phosphorous • Eutrophication • Process where bodies of water receive too many nutrients, which results in excessive plant growth, reducing oxygen concentration & water clarity
Primary production in Terrestrial ecosystems • Factors • Temperature • Moisture • Nutrients
Plant adaptations for nutrients • Symbiotic relationships: • Nitrogen fixing bacteria – • Convert N2 to NH3 • Rhizobium forms nodules on roots of legumes • Mycorrhizae - • Host plant provides fungus with sugar • Fungus increases surface area for water uptake, and supplies plant with minerals absorbed from soil
Secondary production The amount of chemical energy from food that is converted to a consumer’s biomass
Trophic efficiency • 10% rule • Only 10% of energy available at one trophic level is transferred to the next trophic level • 90% of energy is not transferred: • Not eaten, lost through respiration, contained in feces • http://science.howstuffworks.com/life/27995-assignment-discovery-energy-flow-video.htm
Biogeochemical Cycles Matter gets recycled