* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Unit 2 Ecological Interactions
Theoretical ecology wikipedia , lookup
Pleistocene Park wikipedia , lookup
Ecosystem services wikipedia , lookup
Triclocarban wikipedia , lookup
Photosynthesis wikipedia , lookup
Ecological succession wikipedia , lookup
Sustainable agriculture wikipedia , lookup
Human impact on the nitrogen cycle wikipedia , lookup
Lake ecosystem wikipedia , lookup
Natural environment wikipedia , lookup
Unit 2 Ecology Ch. 5 How Ecosystems Work Section 5-1: Energy Flow in Ecosystems Where does an organism’s energy come from? • Ultimate source of energy is the sun • Producers – make their own food, autotrophs • Plants – photosynthesis • Protists, bacteria in aquatic ecosystems – photosynthesis • 6CO2 + 6H2O + sunlight C6H12O6 + 6O2 • carbon dioxide + water + sunlight glucose + oxygen • Consumers – cannot make their own food, heterotrophs • Describe the 4 types of consumers in your notes (p. 127) Types of Consumers in an Ecosystem • Herbivores – primary, eat only plants • Carnivores – meat eaters, capture and eat herbivores (secondary) and other carnivores (tertiary) • Omnivores – eat plants and meat • Decomposers – bacteria and fungi that consume dead organisms and organic waste • Recycles nutrients back into the environment • How do you think energy is transferred in an ecosystem? How is energy transferred in an ecosystem? • When organisms eat other organisms • Food chain – a sequence in which energy is transferred from one organism to the next when organisms eat each other • Begins with producers, then herbivores, then carnivores • Why do you think food chains are not the best way to illustrate the true transfer of energy in ecosystems? • What could be used in place of food chains to better represent the transfer of energy in ecosystems? • Most organisms eat a variety of food so there are many food chains in an ecosystem • Food web – network of food chains representing the feeding relationships among organisms in an ecosystem • Changes in population of one organism have effects on many other populations i.e. Whales and krill • More diverse food webs indicate a more stable ecosystem What are trophic levels? • Each step in a food chain = trophic level • Layer in the structure of feeding relationships in an ecosystem • 1st level – producers, entry level of all energy, biggest level • 2nd level – primary consumers • 3rd level – secondary consumers • 4th level – tertiary consumers Omnivores, scavengers, and decomposers feed at all levels Energy Pyramid (p. 131) • Draw a pyramid in your notes. Indicate the following on your pyramid. • Layers for producers, primary consumers, secondary consumers, and tertiary consumers • Layers with highest and lowest energy • Layers with highest and lowest number of organisms • Layers with highest and lowest biomass (total mass of organisms) Energy pyramids • Shows the loss of energy from one trophic level to the next • Amount of energy passes to next level decreases due to life functions (heat, cellular respiration) =only 10% moves to the next level • Producers at the base and have the most energy, then herbivores, then carnivores • Pyramid gets smaller at the top showing loss of energy • Limits the number of trophic levels in an ecosystem • Can show • Energy at each level • number of organisms at each level • Biomass Where Does the Energy Go? • Open to p. 131 to find out!!! Section 5-2: The Cycling of Materials The Cycling of Materials in an Ecosystem • Materials constantly being recycled and reused Matter is continually moving through an ecosystem back and forth between organisms and the environment Most abundant elements are: Nitrogen, Oxygen, Carbon, and Hydrogen The Carbon Cycle • Continual movement of carbon around and through the earth and it’s organisms • Key players in the cycle = living things For example, • Carbon is cycle through photosynthesis and cellular respiration • Carbonates make up hard parts of bones and shells • Carbon – also stored in rocks and fossil fuels • Human effect on the carbon cycle • Release carbon dioxide into atmosphere when we burn fossil fuels • Contributes to global warming The Nitrogen Cycle • Continual cycling of nitrogen through the earth and it’s organisms • Organisms require nitrogen to make proteins and new cells • Nitrogen = 78% of gases in air • Nitrogen-fixing bacteria convert N in air into a usable form called ammonia for living things • Live in soil and legume roots (beans, clover, peanuts) • Plants use the ammonia formed by bacteria • Other bacteria consumes ammonia to produce nitrites and nitrates (fertilizer) • Nitrogen is returned to soil by decomposers • Human effect: create and use fertilizers that can runoff into ponds and hurt organisms The Phosphorus Cycle • Phosphorus – in cells of organisms • Enters soil when rocks weather and from decaying matter or waste • Plants get P from soil and water • Animals get P from eating plants and animals that have eaten plants • Slow cycle that doesn’t involve the air • Human effect – fertilizers – runoff into ponds and lakes causing algae blooms Section 5-3: How Ecosystems Change How do ecosystems change over time? • Always changing in response to natural and human disturbances • Older inhabitants die out, new organisms move in • Ecological succession – gradual process of change and replacement of some or all of the species in a community • Can take hundreds to thousands of years • Caused by slow changes in physical environment OR Caused by sudden natural disturbance Complete the following data table in your notes (pp. 137-141) Primary Succession Description Examples Secondary Succession What is primary succession? • Succession on land where no soil previously existed • Hardened volcanic lava or ash • Rocks exposed from glacier melt • Pioneer species – 1st to populate an area • i.e. Lichens • Creates soil What is secondary succession? • Succession that occurs where an ecosystem has already existed • More common than primary • Follows a community changing disturbance • Wild fires, humans clearing land, storms, floods, earthquakes, • Climax Communities – ending point of succession – mature stable community • Still goes through change over time Old Field Succession Occurs on a field once used as farmland Secondary Succession after a fire Secondary Succession of a Lake