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Chapter 54 2005-2006 Ecosystems Ecosystem • Community of organisms plus the abiotic factors that exist in a certain area 2005-2006 Relationships, I • Trophic structure / levels~ feeding relationships in an ecosystem • Primary producers~ the trophic level that supports all others; autotrophs • Primary consumers~ herbivores • Secondary and tertiary consumers~ carnivores • Detrivores/detritus~ special consumers that derive nutrition from non-living organic matter • Food chain~ trophic level food pathway Energy Flow, I • • • • Primary productivity (amount of light energy converted to chemical energy by autotrophs) •Gross (GPP): total energy •Net (NPP): represents the storage of energy available to consumers •Rs: respiration NPP = GPP - Rs Biomass: primary productivity reflected as dry weight of organic material Secondary productivity: the rate at which an ecosystem's consumers convert chemical energy of the food they eat into their own new biomass Energy Flow, II • Ecological efficiency: % of E transferred from one trophic level to the next (5-20%) • Pyramid of productivity: multiplicative loss of energy in trophic levels • Biomass pyramid: trophic representation of biomass in ecosystems • Pyramid of numbers: trophic representation of the number of organisms in an ecosystem Energy inefficiency incomplete digestion metabolism Chemical Cycling • • • • • Biogeochemical cycles: the various nutrient circuits, which involve both abiotic and biotic components of an ecosystem Water Carbon Nitrogen Phosphorus Carbon cycle CO2 in atmosphere Combustion of fuels Industry and home Diffusion Respiration Photosynthesis Plants Animals Dissolved CO2 Bicarbonates Photosynthesis Deposition of dead material Animals Plants and algae Carbonates in sediment Deposition of 2005-2006 dead material Fossil fuels (oil, gas, coal) Nitrogen cycle Atmospheric nitrogen Carnivores Herbivores Plankton with nitrogenfixing bacteria Birds Plants Death, excretion, feces Fish Decomposing bacteria Excretion Amino acids Ammonifying bacteria Loss to deep sediments Nitrifying bacteria Soil nitrates 2005-2006 Nitrogenfixing bacteria (plant roots) Nitrogenfixing bacteria (soil) Denitrifying bacteria Phosphorus cycle Plants Land animals Animal tissue Urine and feces Soluble soil phosphate Decomposers (bacteria and fungi) Loss in drainage Decomposers (bacteria and fungi) Animal tissue and feces Rocks and minerals Phosphates in solution Aquatic animals Plants and algae Precipitates Loss to deep sediment 2005-2006 Nutrient cycling Decomposition connects all trophic levels 2005-2006 What have we done! 2005-2006 Human Impact • Biological magnification: trophic process in which retained substances become more concentrated at higher levels • Greenhouse effect: warming of planet due to atmospheric accumulation of carbon dioxide • Ozone depletion: effect of chlorofluorocarbons (CFC’s) released into the atmosphere • Acid Precipitation • Cause: Overpopulation? Impact of ecology as a science • Ecology provides a scientific context for evaluating environmental issues – Rachel Carson, in 1962, in her book, Silent Spring, warned that use of pesticides such as DDT was causing population declines in many non-target organisms 2005-2006 Barry Commoner’s Laws of Ecology • Everything is connected to everything else • Everything must go somewhere there is no such place as “away” • Nature knows best • There is no such thing as a free lunch Laws of Unintended Consequences 2005-2006 nitrogen oxides sulfur dioxide Acid Precipitation • power plants • industry • transportation 2005-2006 2005-2006 Acid rain BioMagnification 2005-2006 BioMagnification • PCBs – General Electric manufacturing plant on Hudson River – PCBs in sediment – striped bass nesting areas 2005-2006 Carbon Dioxide Global Warming 2005-2006 CO2 NOx methane 2005-2006 Ozone Depletion protects from UV rays 2005-2006 Ozone Depletion 2005-2006 Bad ozone vs. good ozone 2005-2006 Ozone Depletion • Loss of ozone above Antarctica 2005-2006