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Ecology and Human Concerns Chapter 25 Ecology Study of interactions of organisms with one another and with the physical environment Ecological Terms • Habitat • Succession • Community • Primary succession • Niche • Secondary succession • Specialist species • Generalist species • Ecosystem Simple Ecosystem Model energy input from sun PHOTOAUTOTROPHS (plants, other producers) nutrient cycling HETEROTROPHS (consumers, decomposers) energy output (mainly heat) Nature of Ecosystems Autotrophs • Producers Heterotrophs Tropic Levels 1 - Producers 2 - Herbivores • Consumers 3 - Primary carnivores • Detritivores 4 - Secondary carnivores • Decomposers • Omnivores Food Chain MARSH HAWK • A straight-line sequence of who UPLAND SANDPIPER eats whom • Simple food chains GARTER SNAKE are rare in nature CUTWORM Food Web Primary Productivity • Gross primary productivity is ecosystem’s total rate of photosynthesis • Net primary productivity is rate at which producers store energy in tissues in excess of their aerobic respiration Ecological Pyramids • Producers form base • Biomass pyramid • Energy pyramid Energy pyramid for Silver Springs top carnivores carnivores herbivores 21 383 3,368 producers 20,810 decomposers/detritivores 5,060 Biogeochemical Cycle • The flow of a nutrient from the environment to living organisms and back to the environment • Main reservoir for the nutrient is in the environment Three Categories • Hydrologic cycle – Water • Atmospheric cycles – Nitrogen and carbon • Sedimentary cycles – Phosphorus and sulfur Hydrologic Cycle Atmosphere wind-driven water vapor 40,000 evaporation from ocean 425,000 precipitation into ocean 385,000 precipitation onto land 111,000 evaporation from land plants (evapotranspiration) 71,000 surface and groundwater flow 40,000 Oceans Land Phosphorus Cycle • Phosphorus is part of phospholipids and all nucleotides • It is the most prevalent limiting factor in ecosystems • Main reservoir is Earth’s crust; no gaseous phase Phosphorus Cycle 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 death, decomposition leaching, runoff settling out uplifting over geologic time MARINE SEDIMENTS ROCKS LAND FOOD WEBS Human Effects • In tropical countries, clearing lands for agriculture may deplete phosphorus- poor soils • In developed countries, phosphorus runoff is causing eutrophication of waterways Carbon Cycle • Carbon moves through the atmosphere and food webs on its way to and from the ocean, sediments, and rocks • Sediments and rocks are the main reservoir Carbon Cycle diffusion Atmosphere Bicarbonate, volcanic action carbonate Marine food TERRESTRIAL webs ROCKS Terrestrial rocks photosynthesis Land food webs Soil water Marine sediments weathering Peat, fossil fuels Carbon in Atmosphere • Atmospheric carbon is mainly carbon dioxide • Carbon dioxide is added to atmosphere – Aerobic respiration, volcanic action, burning fossil fuels • Removed by photosynthesis Greenhouse Effect • Greenhouse gases impede the escape of heat from Earth’s surface Carbon Dioxide Increase • Carbon dioxide levels fluctuate seasonally • The average level is steadily increasing • Burning of fossil fuels and deforestation are contributing to the increase Other Greenhouse Gases • CFCs - synthetic gases used in plastics and refrigeration • Methane - produced by termites and bacteria • Nitrous oxide - released by bacteria, fertilizers, and animal wastes Nitrogen Cycle • Nitrogen is used in amino acids and nucleic acids • Main reservoir is nitrogen gas in the atmosphere Nitrogen Cycle GASEOUS NITROGEN (N2) IN ATMOSPHERE NITROGEN FIXATION by industry for agriculture FOOD WEBS ON LAND FERTILIZERS NITROGEN FIXATION uptake by autotrophs excretion, death, decomposition NITROGENOUS WASTES, REMAINS IN SOIL NH3-, NH4+ IN SOIL AMMONIFICATION loss by leaching 1. NITRIFICATION uptake by autotrophs NO3IN SOIL 2. NITRIFICATION NO2IN SOIL loss by leaching Biological Magnification A nondegradable or slowly degradable substance becomes more and more concentrated in the tissues of organisms at higher trophic levels of a food web Human Population Growth • Population now exceeds 6 billion • Rates of increase vary among countries • Average annual increase is 1.26 percent • Population continues to increase exponentially Side-Stepping Controls • Expanded into new habitats • Agriculture increased carrying capacity; use of fossil fuels aided increase • Hygiene and medicine lessened effects of density-dependent controls Limiting Factors • Any essential resource that is in short supply • All limiting factors acting on a population dictate sustainable population size Logistic Growth • As size of the population increases, rate of reproduction decreases • When the population reaches carrying capacity, population growth ceases carrying capacity Time Density-Dependent Controls • Logistic-growth equation deals with density-dependent controls • Limiting factors become more intense as population size increases • Disease, competition, parasites, toxic effects of waste products Air Pollutants • Carbon oxides • Sulfur oxides • Nitrogen oxides • Volatile organic compounds • Photochemical oxidants • Suspended particles Industrial Smog • Gray-air smog • Forms over cities that burn large amounts of coal and heavy fuel oils; mainly in developing countries • Main components are sulfur oxides and suspended particles Photochemical Smog • Brown-air smog • Forms when sunlight interacts with components from automobile exhaust • Nitrogen oxides are the main culprits • Hot days contribute to formation Ozone Thinning • In early spring and summer, ozone layer over South America Antarctica thins • Seasonal loss of ozone is at highest level ever recorded Antarctica Effect of Ozone Thinning • Increased amount of UV radiation reaches Earth’s surface • UV damages DNA and negatively affects human health • UV also affects plants, lowers primary productivity Water Use and Scarcity • Most of Earth’s water is too salty for human consumption • Desalinization is expensive and requires large energy inputs • Irrigation of crops is the main use of freshwater Negative Effects of Irrigation • Salinization, mineral buildup in soil • Elevation of the water table and waterlogging • Depletion of aquifers Generating Garbage • Developed countries generate huge amounts of waste • Paper products account for half the total volume • Recycling can reduce pollutants, save energy, ease pressure on landfills Desertification • Conversion of large tracts of grassland to desertlike conditions • Conversions of cropland that result in more than 10 percent decline in productivity Effects of Deforestation • Increased leaching and soil erosion • Increased flooding and sedimentation of downstream rivers • Regional precipitation declines • Possible amplification of the greenhouse effect Regions of Deforestation • Rates of forest loss are greatest in Brazil, Indonesia, Mexico, and Columbia • Highly mechanized logging is proceeding in temperate forests of the United States and Canada Reversing Deforestation • Coalition of groups dedicated to saving Brazil’s remaining forests • Smokeless wood stoves have saved firewood in India • Kenyan women have planted millions of trees Fossil Fuels • Coal, oil, natural gas • Main energy source of developed countries • Burning of fossil fuels contributes to global warming Nuclear Energy • Used extensively in some energypoor developed countries • Little support in the United States • Emits fewer air pollutants than burning coal, but creates radioactive wastes • Potential for meltdown Chernobyl Accident - 1986 • Core meltdown at a nuclear power plant in the Ukraine • 31 immediate deaths, radiation sickness and death for others • Cloud of radiation spread by winds across Europe • Long-term health impacts downwind Wind Energy • An indirect use of solar energy • Wind farms are arrays of turbines • Can supplement needs of some regions but is not dependable enough on its own Solar-Hydrogen Energy • Photovoltaic cells use sunlight energy to split water • Hydrogen gas produced in this way can be used as fuel or to generate electricity • Clean, renewable technology Deforestation • Removal of all trees from large tracts of land • 38 million acres logged each year • Wood is used for fuel, lumber • Land is cleared for grazing or crops