* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download File ap notes chapter 54
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Chapter 54: Ecosystems Ecosystem All organisms living in an area along with the abiotic factors with which they interact. Most inclusive level of biological organization Dynamics of an ecosystem: Energy flow Chemical cycling Trophic levels Primary producer Autotrophs; usually photosynthetic; includes plants, algae, & many species of bacteria Primary consumers Herbivores Secondary consumers Streams=Debris falling from terrestrial plants are major source of organic materials Limnetic zone of lakes & open oceans= Phytoplankton Shallow freshwater & marine ecosystems= Multi-cellular algae & plants Aphotic zones receive energy & nutrients from overlying photic zones Deep ocean vents= chemoautotrophs oxidize H2S for energy needs Carnivore that eats herbivores Tertiary consumers Carnivores that eat other carnivores **many primary & higher order consumers are opportunistic feeders (supplement diet of autotrophs with heterotrophs if available) Detrivores (decomposers) Consumers that derive energy from detritus (organic waste) & dead organisms from all trophic levels Link between all organisms in an ecosystem *Trophic relationships determine an ecosystem’s routes of energy & chemical cycling Food chain Pathway along which energy flows from one trophic level to the next Food web Feeding relationships in an ecosystem Production Consumption Incorporation of energy & materials into bodies of organisms Metabolic use of assimilated molecules for growth & reproduction Decomposition Breakdown of organic molecules into inorganic molecules Energy flow in ecosystems Global energy budget Earth receives 1022 joules of solar radiation/day (1J= 0.239 cal) Most intense radiation at equator ~1% of total solar energy is converted by photosynthesis into organic molecules (170 billion tons of biomass/year) Primary productivity Amount of light energy converted by ecosystem’s autotrophs into organic compounds in a given time period Gross primary productivity (GPP): total primary productivity Net primary productivity (NPP) NPP=GPP-R R=energy for respiration of the producer Key measurement to ecologists Represents the stored chemical energy available to consumers in the ecosystem *varies with the ecosystem Lack of nutrients (usually N or P) limits primary productivity in aquatic ecosystems & terrestrial ecosystems Temperature & moisture limit primary productivity in terrestrial & wetland ecosystems Measured through evapotranspiration Secondary productivity Rate at which consumers convert chemical energy in food into biomass Energy is lost in feces Respiration & body heat results in energy lost Some energy is used to generate growth & reproduction (adds to biomass) Ecological efficiency & ecological pyramids Trophic efficiency % of production transferred from one trophic level to the next ~5-20% of energy at each trophic level is passed on to the next level (average 10%) Loss of energy can be represented diagrammatically through: Pyramid of productivity Pyramid of biomass Can be inverted if turnover time for producers is short Pyramid of numbers Cycling of Chemical elements in ecosytems Inexhaustible influx of solar energy but continuation of life depends on recycling of essential chemical compounds Biogeochemical cycles Move nutrients among organic & inorganic, biotic & abiotic Water cycle Carbon cycle Phosphorus cycle Nitrogen cycle Nitrification Aerobic soil bacteria oxidize NH4+NO2-NO3Denitrification Anaerobic bacteria obtain oxygen by converting NO3- N2 Nitrogen fixation bacteria Legumes… N2 NH3+ Decomposition rates largely determine the rates of nutrient cycling Availability of water, oxygen, & temperature influence the rate of decomposition & recycling Tropical rain forest recycle rapidly resulting in soil with very little nutrients Soils in temperate deciduous forest may contain 50% of all of the organic materials in the ecosystem Decomposition in tundra can take up to 50 years Field experiments reveal how vegetation regulates chemical cycling Hubbard Brook experiment (NH) Long term ecological research since 1963 Plants control amount of nutrients leaving the ecosystem Human impacts on ecosystems Human population is disrupting chemical cycles throughout the biosphere Agricultural effects on nutrient cycling Accelerated eutrophication of lakes algal blooms Nutrients in food crops removed from geographical area Soil nutrient depletion leads to use of fertilizers Introduction of toxic materials runoff &/or ground water contamination Result of fertilizer runoff, sewage, & factory waste Decrease in aerobic respiration as debris levels increase Acid precipitation Burning of fossil fuels adds sulfur & nitrogen oxides that react with water in the atmosphere Falls as acid rain pH<5.6 Affects soil chemistry Leaching nutrients from soil & plants Kills keystone species in aquatic ecosystem Toxins can become concentrated in successive trophic levels of food webs= biological magnification Examples: DDT used to kill insect pests but found in high levels in osprey, eagles, & other birds Human activities are causing fundamental changes in the composition of the atmosphere CO2 emissions & greenhouse effect Depletion of atmospheric ozone 17% increase since 1958 best documented in Antarctica Caused by CFC’s & refrigerants Exploding human population is altering habitats & reducing biodiversity worldwide Increasing population & related activities continue to disrupt trophic structures, energy flow, & chemical cycling Human encroachment has resulted in: Only 15% of original primary USA forest & 1% of original tall grass prairie remaining Tropical rainforest being cut at a rate of 500,000km2/year Eliminated by 2020 at current rate Logging, war, oil spills continue to breakup & destroy habitats