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CHAPTER 4: ECOSYSTEMS: COMPONENTS, ENERGY FLOW AND MATTER CYCLING Also some carry over from chapter 3 is in this chapter Slide 1 Ecology • The scientific study of relationships between organisms and their environment • Examines the life histories, distribution, and behavior of individual species, as well as the structure and function of natural systems at the level of populations, communities, ecosystems, and landscapes • Encourages us to think holistically about interconnections that make whole systems more than just the sum of their individual parts • Examines how and why materials cycle between the living and nonliving parts of our environment Slide 2 Periodic Table of the Elements Slide 3 • Ionic Bond - Formed when one atom gives up an electron to another atom. • Covalent Bond - Formed when two or more atoms share electrons. – Energy is needed to break chemical bonds. – Energy is released when bonds are formed. Chemical Bonding Slide 4 Fig. 2.4 Slide 5 Protein construction Nucleus (information storage) Energy conversion (b) Prokaryotic Cell Cell wall & membrane (transport of raw materials) DNA (information storage, no nucleus) Protein construction Packaging and energy conversion occur without specialized (a) internal structures Cell membrane (transport of raw materials and finished products) Eukaryotic Cell Figure 4-3 (1) Page 67 Slide 6 Cells: The Fundamental Units of Life • Microscopic organisms, such as bacteria and protozoa, are composed of single cells. • The human body contains several trillion cells of about two hundred distinct types. • Enzymes – catalysts that speed up the rate of chemical reactions in living systems • Metabolism - all the energy and matter exchanges that occur within a living cell or organism Slide 7 Atoms, Molecules, and Compounds • Most material substances can exist in three interchangeable states: solid, liquid, or gas. • Element - substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances by ordinary chemical reactions. Just four elements - carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen - make up over 96% of the mass of most organisms. • Atom - the smallest particle that exhibits the characteristics of an element • Molecule - a combination of two or more atoms • Compound - a molecule made up of two or more kinds of atoms held together by chemical bonds Slide 8 • Acids are compounds that readily release hydrogen ions (H+) in water. • Bases are substances that readily take up hydrogen ions (H+) and release hydroxide ions (OH-) in solution. • Strength measured by concentration of H+. – pH scale • 0-14 Acids and Bases Slide 9 Fig. 2.5 Slide 10 Levels of organization interaction. Click to view animation. Animation Slide 11 MUST KNOW DEFINITIONS FROM INDIVIDUAL UP • Organism • Species is group of organisms that interbreeds and produces fertile offspring. • Population is a group of individual organisms of the same species living in a particular area. • Community is the populations of all species living and interacting in an area at a particular time. • Ecosystem is a community of different species interacting with one another and with the chemical and physical factors making up its nonliving environment. Slide 12 Solar radiation Energy in = Energy out Reflected by atmosphere (34%) Radiated by atmosphere as heat (66%) UV radiation Absorbed by ozone Lower stratosphere (ozone layer) Visible Greenhouse light Troposphere effect Heat Absorbed by the earth Heat radiated by the earth Earth Figure 4-8 Page 69 Slide 13 Coastal chaparral and scrub Coastal mountain ranges 15,000 ft 10,000 ft 5,000 ft Coniferous forest Sierra Nevada Mountains Desert Great American Desert Coniferous forest Rocky Mountains Prairie grassland Deciduous forest Mississippi Great River Valley Plains Appalachian Mountains Average annual precipitation 100-125 cm (40-50 in.) 75-100 cm (30-40 in.) 50-75 cm (20-30 in.) 25-50 cm (10-20 in.) Below 25 cm (0-10 in.) Figure 4-9 Page 70 Slide 14 Terrestrial Ecosystems Aquatic Life Zones • Sunlight • Light penetration • Temperature • Water currents • Precipitation • Dissolved nutrient concentrations (especially N and P) • Wind • Latitude (distance from equator) • Altitude (distance above sea level) • Suspended solids • Salinity • Fire frequency • Soil Figure 4-12 Page 72 Slide 15 Sun Producers (rooted plants) Producers (phytoplankton) Primary consumers (zooplankton) Secondary consumers (fish) Dissolved chemicals Tertiary consumers (turtles) Sediment Decomposers (bacteria and fungi) Figure 4-10 Page 71 Slide 16 Oxygen (O2) Sun Producer Carbon dioxide (CO2) Primary consumer (rabbit) Falling leaves Precipitation and twigs Secondary consumer (fox) Producers Soil decomposers Water Soluble mineral nutrients Figure 4-11 Page 71 Slide 17 Heat First Trophic Level Second Trophic Level Third Trophic Level Fourth Trophic Level Producers (plants) Primary consumers (herbivores) Secondary consumers (carnivores) Tertiary consumers (top carnivores) Heat Heat Heat Solar energy Heat Heat Heat Heat Detritivores (decomposers and detritus feeders) Heat Figure 4-17 Page 76 Slide 18 Detritus feeders Bark beetle engraving Long-horned beetle holes Carpenter ant galleries Decomposers Termite and carpenter ant work Dry rot fungus Wood reduced to powder Time progression Mushroom Powder broken down by decomposers into plant nutrients in soil Figure 4-15 Page 75 Slide 19 Heat Heat Tertiary consumers (human) Decomposers Heat 10 Secondary consumers (perch) 100 1,000 10,000 Usable energy available at each tropic level (in kilocalories) Heat Primary consumers (zooplankton) Heat Producers (phytoplankton) Figure 4-19 Page 78 Slide 20 Human Blue whale Sperm whale Killer whale Elephant seal Crabeater seal Leopard seal Emperor penguin Adélie penguins Petrel Squid Fish Carnivorous plankton Herbivorous zooplankton Krill Phytoplankton Figure 4-18 Page 77 Slide 21 • Productivity depends on light levels, temperature, moisture, and nutrient availability. • Primary productivity - a community’s rate of biomass production, or the conversion of solar energy into chemical energy stored in living (or once-living organisms) • Net primary productivity - primary productivity minus the energy lost in respiration Part 4: Community Properties Slide 22 Figure 4-21 Page 79 Slide 23 Relative biomass accumulation of major world ecosystems. Slide 24 WHAT DO WE MEAN BY ECOSYSTEM STRUCTURE Structure can be thought of as: Physical – for example the diameter of trees, canopy cover and layers of vegetation or tree partitioning by various animal species such as finches. Spatial patterns – populations dispersed randomly, clumped or uniformly. Biodiversity Abundance - the number of individuals of a species in an area Richness - the number of different species in an area shich is a useful measure of the variety of ecological niches or genetic variation in a community. It decreases as we go from the equator towards the poles Genetic – gene frequency; number of alleles, etc. Habitat changes – frequency of habitat changes through a fixed distance Trophic level complexity – number of food chains (webs) in a system Number and types of services provided by natural capital – for example water purification Productivity Slide 25 Biosphere Carbon cycle Phosphorus cycle Nitrogen cycle Water cycle Oxygen cycle Heat in the environment Heat Heat Heat Figure 4-7 Page 69 Slide 26 Condensation Transpiration from plants Precipitation Precipitation to ocean Rain clouds Transpiration Precipitation Evaporation Evaporation From ocean Surface runoff (rapid) Surface runoff (rapid) Runoff Infiltration and percolation Groundwater movement (slow) Ocean storage Groundwater movement (slow) Figure 4-23 Page 81 Slide 27 Carbon cycle animation. Click to view animation. Animation Slide 28 diffusion between atmosphere and ocean combustion of fossil fuels Carbon dioxide dissolved in ocean water photosynthesis aerobic respiration Marine food webs producers, consumers, decomposers, detritivores incorporation death, into sediments sedimentation Marine sediments, including formations with fossil fuels uplifting over geologic time sedimentation Figure 4-24 (1) Page 82 Slide 29 Atmosphere (mainly carbon dioxide) volcanic action Terrestrial rocks weathering photosynthesis aerobic respiration Land food webs combustion of wood (for clearing land; or for fuel sedimentation producers, consumers, decomposers, detritivores Soil water (dissolved carbon) leaching runoff death, burial, compaction over geologic time Peat, fossil fuels Figure 4-24 (2) Page 83 Slide 30 © 2004 Brooks/Cole – Thomson Learning Gaseous Nitrogen (N2) In Atmosphere Nitrogen Fixation by industry for agriculture Food Webs On Land Fertilizers Nitrogen Fixation bacteria convert to ammonia (NH3+) ; this dissolves to form ammonium (NH4+) uptake by autotrophs excretion, death, decomposition Nitrogenous Wastes, Remains In Soil Ammonification NH3, NH4+ in soil bacteria, fungi convert the residues to NH3 , this uptake by autotrophs NO3 – in soil Denitrification by bacteria 2. Nitrification bacteria convert NO2- to nitrate (NO3-) dissolves to form NH4+ loss by leaching 1. Nitrification bacteria convert NH4+ to nitrate (NO2–) NO2 – in soil loss by leaching Figure 4-25 Page 84 Slide 31 The nigtrogen cycle animation. Click to view animation. Animation Slide 32 Nitrogen Fixation The nodules on the roots of this plant contain bacteria that help convert nitrogen in the soil to a form the plant can utilize. Slide 33 mining excretion FERTILIZER GUANO agriculture uptake by autotrophs MARINE FOOD WEBS weathering DISSOLVED IN OCEAN WATER uptake by autotrophs weathering DISSOLVED IN SOIL WATER, LAKES, RIVERS death, decomposition sedimentation MARINE SEDIMENTS LAND FOOD WEBS death, decomposition settling out weathering uplifting over geolgic time ROCKS Figure 4-26 Page 86 Slide 34 Phosphorus cycle interaction. Click to view animation. Animation Slide 35 Sulfur cycle animation. Click to view animation. Animation Slide 36 Water Acidic fog and precipitation Sulfuric acid Sulfur trioxide Ammonia Oxygen Sulfur dioxide Ammonium sulfate Hydrogen sulfide Plants Volcano Dimethyl sulfide Animals Industries Ocean Sulfate salts Metallic sulfide deposits Decaying matter Sulfur Hydrogen sulfide Figure 4-27 Page 87 Slide 37 Critical nesting site locations USDA Forest Service USDA Forest Service Private owner 1 Private owner 2 Topography Habitat type Forest Wetland Lake Grassland Real world Figure 4-28 Page 88 Slide 38 Slide 39 Slide 40