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Energy Fixation by Autotrophs. Solar energy converted to chemical energy CO 2 converted to Carbohydrate Solar energy + 6CO 2 + 6H 2 O → C 6 H 12 O 6 + 6O 2. Photosynthesis:. Happy Rays of Sunshine. You need to know this. O 2 (to air). CO 2 (from air). C 6 H 12 O 6. H 2 O.
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Solar energy converted to chemical energy CO2 converted to Carbohydrate Solar energy + 6CO2 + 6H2O→ C6H12O6 + 6O2 Photosynthesis: Happy Rays of Sunshine You need to know this O2 (to air) CO2 (from air) C6H12O6 H2O
Radiant Energy • Photosynthesis converts solar energy into the chemical energy of a carbohydrate by two sets of reactions: • Solar energy + 6CO2 + 6H2O→ C6H12O6 + 6O2 Reduced Oxidized Carbohydrate (glucose) Electrons from H2O are energized by the sun.
Oxidation-Reduction • Oxidation is the loss of electrons (energy) and reduction is the gain of electrons (energy). • In covalent rxn’s, oxidation also refers to the loss of hydrogen atoms, and reduction refers to the gain of hydrogen atoms.
Chloroplast structure Double membrane Thylakoids are interconnected Chlorophyll and other pigments are found in the thylakoids
Photosynthesis Overview • Composed of light-dependent and light-independent reactions • Light-dependent reactions (Thylakoids) • Capture solar energy and excite electrons • Water molecule is split and electrons and H+ enter the electron transport system • O2, NADPH, and ATP are produced • Light-independent reactions (Stroma) • CO2 is reduced to a carbohydrate • NADPH and ATP are consumed
Light-dependent Reactions Solar energy is used excite electrons (increases potential energy). ADP and NADP+ are reduced to ATP and NADPH. ATP and NADPH are then used to power the light-independent reactions. Water is split H+, e-, and O2 *Considered an electron donor*
Light-independent Reactions • Calvin Cycle – three stages • CO2 fixation, CO2 reduction, RuBP regeneration • Reactions require energy, which is supplied by ATP and NADPH
Light-independent Reactions-Calvin Cycle Fixation of CO2 From light-dependant reactions From light-dependant reactions
Photosynthesis in Chloroplast Light Independent ReactionsLight Dependant Reactions CO2 H2O Solar Energy Calvin Cycle Electron Pathways RuBP PGAL ATPO2 NADPH Glucose Aerobic Cellular Respiration in Mitochondria makes new ATP
Overview of Cellular Respiration • Cellular respiration is the step-wise release of energy from molecules (usually carbohydrates) used to synthesize ATP molecules. • This is an aerobic process that requires oxygen (O2) and gives off carbon dioxide (CO2), and involves the complete breakdown of glucose to carbon dioxide and water.
Mitochondrion structure Mitochondria are bounded by a double membrane surrounding fluid-filled matrix. The inner membranes of mitochondria are cristae. The matrix contains enzymes that break down carbohydrates and the cristae house protein complexes that produce ATP.
Drives ATP synthesis Oxidation of glucose is an exergonic reaction (releases energy) which drives ATP synthesis - an endergonic reaction (energy is required).
Phases of Complete Glucose Breakdown • Glycolysis - yields 2 ATP; occurs in cytoplasm • Citric acid cycle (yields 2 ATP) and Electron transport system (yields 32-34 ATP); occur in the mitochondria • Net ATP produced from respiration: 36-38
Overview of Glycolysis Glucose (6-C sugar) 2 ADP 6-C sugar diphosphate 3-C sugar-phosphate 3-C sugar-phosphate 2 ATP 2 ATP 2 NADH 2 NADH 3-C pyruvate 3-C pyruvate
Fermentation inputs and outputs per glucose molecule Inputs: glucose 2 ATP 4 ADP + 2 P Outputs: 2 lactate or 2 alcohol and 2 CO2 2 ADP 2 ATP (net) Pyruvate (Oxygen present) (Oxygen not present) Cellular Respiration Fermentation
2 NAD+ 2 NADH + H 2Pyruvate + 2CoA 2 Acetyl-CoA + 2CO2 Pyruvate oxidation: if oxygen is present Pyruvate is converted to a C2acetyl group attached to coenzyme A (CoA), and CO2is released. This occurs in the cytoplasm if oxygen is present.
Krebs Cycle • The Krebs cycle is a cyclical metabolic pathway located in the matrix of the mitochondria. • At the start of the citric acid cycle, CoA carries the C2 acetyl group to join a C4 molecule, and C6citrate results.
Citric acid (Kreb’s) cycle: Substrate-level phosphorylation results in a gain of one ATP per every turn of the cycle; it turns twice per glucose. Produces CO2, ATP and NADH
Electron Transport Chain • The electron transport chain located in the cristae of mitochondria is a series of protein carriers • Electrons carried by NADH and FADH2 enter the electron transport chain. • As a pair of electrons is passed from carrier to carrier, energy is released and is used to form ATP molecules by oxidative phosphorylation.
Overview of the electron transport chain Oxygen receives energy-spent electrons at the end of the electron transport system. Next, oxygen combines with hydrogen, and water forms: ½ O2 + 2 e- + 2 H+→ H2O
Photosynthesis is the process that produces energy rich organic molecules from energy deficient inorganic materials. Photosynthetic organisms are thus termed producers – they produce food for themselves as well as consumer organisms! Plants and consumers harvest energy from photosynthetic products through cellular respiration.
Primary Production • Primary production - the synthesis of organic matter by autotrophs • Always measured as a rate per unit of time • Sugar cane farmers kg/ha/yr cane production • To accumulate organic matter, photosynthesis must be greater than respiration • Compensation point – when photosynthesis = respiration • No growth / no reproduction
Two Measures of Production = = NPP = GPP - Respiration You need to know this
Primary Productivity Heat Energy Chemical Energy (ATP) Solar Energy CO2 Respiration Photosynthesis C6H12O6 O2 Available to Consumers Biomass (g/m2/yr) GPP NPP
Measuring Primary Production: Terrestrial • Primary production measured as a rate per unit time • Can measure CO2 uptake rate during the day = net production • CO2 released at night = respiration
Energetic Equivalents 12H20 + 6CO2 + 2966kj + solar energy C6H12O6 + 6O2 + 6H20 • Absorption of 6 moles of CO2 indicates that 2966kj of energy has been absorbed • This gives us a relationship between carbonaccumulated and energy gained • We can determine the amount of carbon in a plant be measuring the amount of energy in that plant
Harvest Method B = B2 – B1 • Whole plant, aerial production, or root production: • Two possible losses must be recognized L = biomass losses by death of plants or plant parts G = biomass losses to consumer organisms • With those values: NPP = B + L + G
Aquatic Primary Production • The most important primary producers in aquatic systems are phytoplankton • Single cell plants suspended in the water column • Estimate primary production by measuring gas-exchange using light bottle dark bottle • Light bottle determines oxygen produced by photosynthesis • Dark bottle measures oxygen consumed by respiration
Measure initial oxygen concentration in both bottles Place bottles in water for a specific period during the day Measure final oxygen concentration in both bottles Light – Dark Bottle LBI = initial O2 in the light bottle DBI = initial O2 in the dark bottle LBF = final O2 in the light bottle DBF = final O2 in the dark bottle GPP = LBF – DBF (Total oxygen produced) NPP = LBF – LBI (Oxygen increase) Respiration = DBI – DBF(Oxygen decrease)
GPP = LBF – DBF (Total oxygen produced) NPP = LBF – LBI (Oxygen increase) Respiration = DBI – DBF(Oxygen decrease) LBI = 5.3 DBI = 5.3 LBF = 6.8 DBF = 4.2; 1 hr GPP = LBF – DBF = 6.8 – 4.2 = 2.6 mg/L/hr NPP = LBF – LBI = 6.8 – 5.3 = 1.5 mg/L/hr Respiration = DBI –DBF= 5.3 – 4.2 = 1.1 mg/L/hr NPP = GPP – Respiration = 2.6 – 1.1 = 1.5 mg/L/hr
What Does Production Actually Mean?? • More carbon fixed from the atmosphere = more food available • The greater the productivity, the greater the biomass of heterotrophs that can be supported
How to Estimate Carbon Produced • 1 mg/L O2 = 0.375 g Carbon • GPP = 2.6 mg O2/L/hr * 0.375 = 0.975 mg C/L/hr • NPP = 1.5 mg O2/L/hr * 0.375 = 0.563 mg C/L/hr • For this example, 0.563 mg of carbon per liter of water per hour are added as biomass to the system
Estuaries Swamps and marshes Tropical rain forest Temperate forest Northern coniferous forest (taiga) Savanna Agricultural land Woodland and shrubland Temperate grassland Lakes and streams Continental shelf Open ocean Tundra (arctic and alpine) Desert scrub Extreme desert 800 1,600 2,400 3,200 4,000 4,800 5,600 6,400 7,200 8,000 8,800 9,600 Average net primary productivity (kcal/m2/yr) Net Primary Production (measure of produced energy)
Ocean Productivity • On a per square meter basis the oceans are about as productive as the arctic tundra • Sometimes called a biological desert • However, because the ocean’s make up 71% of the Earth’s surface, they account for 46% of total productivity
Energy fixed by primary production* Energy input per unit area per unit time Efficiency of GPP = X 100 Photosynthetic Efficiency • Percentage of received solar energy a plant uses: *Calculate number of carbon atoms from plant weight. Can then calculate the amount of energy required to build the plant.
= 0.42% 20,991 kJ/m2/yr gross primary production 4,973,604 kJ incident sunlight Efficiency of GPP = X 100 Efficiency of Lake Mendota, Wisconsin
dldt = kl Limiting Factors – Aquatic Communities • Depth of light penetration determines the photic zone: Where: l = amount of solar radiation (joules per m2 per unit of time) t = depth k = extinction coefficient • Typically, more than half of the solar radiation is absorbed in the first meter of water:
Attenuation of Solar Radiation Coastal seawater ~k=0.3 Mississippi River? -Turbulence Pure water Oceanic seawater
Lake Classification Based on Production • Eutrophic – high production but little light penetration • Oligotrophic – low production but high light penetration
Rate of Photosynthesis Measured as grams of carbon fixed per m2 Eutrophic Intermediate Oligotrophic Note the scale
Marine Communities North Pacific Gyre Euphotic Zone – the surface down to 1% light level Nutrient Limited?
Why are the Ocean’s so Unproductive? P – High; N – Low Nitrogen, not phosphorous, is limiting Surprising because of the ability of cyanobacteria to fix atmospheric nitrogen?
What else? • Top down control – Predation (by herbivores) is actually limiting the phytoplankton population • Nutrients phytoplankton zooplankton fish • Herbivory limits phytoplankton • Bottom up control – Some other nutrient than nitrogen or phosphorous may be limiting • Nutrients phytoplankton zooplankton fish • Nutrients limit phytoplankton
Sargasso Sea • Found not to be N or P limited, but Iron limited
Why Iron • Cyanobacteria fix atmospheric nitrogen to a form available to phytoplankton • Iron is necessary for this process: Iron cyanobacteria N fixation phytoplankton
Nutrient Addition:303 studies combined Silica important when community dominated by diatoms