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Energy Transfer through organisms. Energy flows through an ecosystem, being transferred from one organism to the next. Energy flows in one direction, obeying the law of conservation of energy. Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only changed from one form to another.
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Energy flows through an ecosystem, being transferred from one organism to the next. Energy flows in one direction, obeying the law of conservation of energy. Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only changed from one form to another. When energy is converted from one form to another, some is always lost as heat. This inefficiency of transfer limits the number of organisms found in any food chain.
Net primary productivity (NPP) is a good way to compare different ecosystems. The availability of light, water and nutrients are different around the world and therefore the productivity of the world’s ecosystems also varies greatly. desert ecosystem NPP = 260kJm-2 year-1 tropical rainforest ecosystem NPP = 400,000kJm-2 year-1
The net primary productivity represents the potential food available to consumers in the ecosystem. This energy can be transferred to the next trophic level in several ways: • The organism is consumed by a primary, secondary or tertiary consumer. • Death, production of urine and feces and loss of organic tissue (e.g. fruit fall, hair loss) allows the energy from the organism to be passed on to decomposers.
The rate at which energy is used to make new organic molecules within heterotrophs is known as secondary production. As with the transfer of energy from the sun to autotrophs, the transfer of energy from one organism to another is inefficient. The efficiency of chemical potential energy transferred between trophic levels can be measured. energy available after the transfer × 100 efficiency = energy available before the transfer The energy available is usually measured in kilojoules per square meter per year (kJm-2 year-1).
A large percentage of the energy is lost between trophic levels. This is as a result of the following: • Some of the organism cannot be eaten, e.g. bones, fur, etc. • Once eaten, some of the organism cannot be digested. • Energy is lost in excretory materials, such as urine. • Energy is lost in the form of heat from respiration and body heat.