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Homework assignment 11/5/12 Use the reading titled Energy Economics in Ecosystems from nature.com and your own background knowledge to answer the questions below. Answer the questions in full sentences. Please read the article first! 1. What is the “energy currency” of an ecosystem? The next section of the article subtitled Energy Production goes on to explain how the energy currency is created. Explain how the “currency” is created. Carbon. Carbon is created from earth’s ultimate source of energy the sun. Plants convert light energy into chemical energy (organic molecules), like sugars lipids and proteins. 2. In the same subsection called Energy Production the author talks about “fossilized sunlight.” What major point is the author trying to make when they use the term “fossilized sunlight”? Energy that comes from coal, natural gas and petroleum is actually from organisms that captured the suns energy millions of years ago and stored it as carbon. Today we release the energy from these carbon containing compounds through combustion (burning coal, gas and oil). 3. After you have read the subsection titled Energy Consumption look at the chemical equations for Photosynthesis and Respiration. Describe the relationship between the two. How are they related? Secondly, how do we as humans return carbon to the atmosphere, so it can be used again by plants? Photosynthesis starts with carbon dioxide and water and ends with sugar and oxygen. Respiration starts with sugar and oxygen and ends with water and carbon dioxide. Essentially the two equations compliment or support each other. The products of one is the reactants of the other. 4. In the subsection entitled Conservation of Energy: Balancing the Budget the first sentence says light is converted to organic carbon compounds (sugars, fats, and proteins). We’ve been saying this all along in our biology class. Now, read on and answer the following: Why is primary production called “primary”? What happens to most of the light energy that reaches earth from the sun? Primary production is the amount of energy produced by plants. It is the biomass directly produced from CO2 captured by plants. Much of the light is reflected or absorbed and re-radiated back to space. 5. Look at your yard or street that you live on. Right now there is lots of carbon floating around outside. Actually, lots of energy is there for the taking. People may compost it and feed it to their garden next spring, burn it, or simply put in a bag and have it hauled away. What am I referring to? I’m referring to leaves! What great compost material and what a great source of carbon. Compost your leaves over the winter and spring, and then add them to your garden. You’re completing the carbon cycle and other nutrients cycles like the nitrogen cycle.