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Plant Ecology - Chapter 14. Ecosystem Processes. Ecosystem Ecology. Focus on what regulates pools (quantities stored) and fluxes (flows) of materials and energy in abiotic and biotic components. Ecosystem Ecology. Turnover time - how rapidly does it move through the system
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Plant Ecology - Chapter 14 Ecosystem Processes
Ecosystem Ecology • Focus on what regulates pools (quantities stored) and fluxes (flows) of materials and energy in abiotic and biotic components
Ecosystem Ecology • Turnover time - how rapidly does it move through the system • Retention time - how long does it reside in a component
Ecosystem Ecology • Pools, fluxes connected together into biogeochemical cycles • Biology, geology, chemistry interconnected
Ecosystem Ecology • Plants under the influence of some cycles, influence others • Water, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, potassium
Water Cycle • Terrestrial plants are only living things to have significant effect on water cycle • Evapotranspiration from plants can provide huge proportion of moisture in atmosphere - affect rainfall patterns
Water Cycle • Cutting rainforests can result in decreased evapotranspiration, decreased rainfall, increased air temperatures at ground surface
Water Cycle • Since plants intercept rainfall, reduce its impact on ground, removing vegetation can alter infiltration/runoff relations
Water Cycle • Even removing vegetation in semi-arid regions can reduce rainfall, increase soil temperatures, induce onset of desertification
Water Cycle Flux differences among, within biomes
Water Cycle • Potential evapotranspiration (PET) - water lost via this process if water is freely available and plant cover is 100% • Actual evapotranspiration (AET) - precipitation minus runoff and infiltration • PET>AET in dry climates • PET=AET in intact tropical rain forests • AET linked to productivity, decomposition
Primary productivity - rate of transfer of inorganic C from atmosphere into organic C in plants via photosynthesis Carbon Cycle
NPP - dry metric tons/ha/yr Carbon Cycle
Productivity Different forests - latitude, climate, elevation Different ecosystems - related to leaf biomass
Estimating Productivity • Standing biomass after a growing season • Drawbacks: destructive, and ignores belowground productivity (can be majority in some plants)
Estimating Productivity • Indirect measures: develop formulae for relating plant size changes to biomass changes • Allometric relationships used by timber companies, forest ecologists • Drawback: formula needed for each species
Estimating Productivity • Indirect measures: use relation between productivity and AET • Fairly good estimates of productivity over broad range of climates • Drawback: poor predictor of productivity where precipitation and temperature are both high
Estimating Productivity • Remote sensing - use reflectance of light wavelengths by chlorophyll to estimate productivity • Normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) - good correlation between NDVI and NPP ground measurements NDVI = NIR-VIS NIR+VIS
Decomposition Dead stuff becomes soil organic matter, then via mineralization becomes inorganic nutrients, CO2, water, and energy
Decomposition - Saprophytic fungi are the major decomposers of dead leaves, plant litter - Bacteria also essential, but only in latter stages
Decomposition Root decomposition of soft and hardwoods • Decomposition largely an aerobic process - very slow in waterlogged, cold soils • Physical, chemical characteristics also affect rate of decomposition
Net Ecosystem Production • NEP is net accumulation of carbon per year by ecosystem • Positive during growing season, negative during non-growing season
Net Ecosystem Production • Undisturbed ecosystems usually show small, positive accumulations of C each year • Accumulation of woody tissue in long-lived plants
Nitrogen Cycle • Rapid flux through living organisms • Large global pool with slow turnover
Phosphorus Cycle • Does not have major atmospheric • pool like other cycles • Mostly recycled in organic form • through other living organisms
Calcium Cycle • Sedimentary cycle • Needed by plants for chemical (growth, stress regulation), structural (support) roles • Largely lost in leaf fall - must be replaced each year
Calcium Cycle • Calcium depletion occurring in many forests today • Acid deposition displaces soil calcium, logging removes it • Decreased growth, higher mortality (more susceptible to pathogens)