ecosystems. what is an ecosystem? the biological community together with its associated non-living...

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ECOSYSTEMS

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Page 1: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

ECOSYSTEMS

Page 2: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

What is an Ecosystem?

The biological community together with its associated non-living environment

Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic components

Page 3: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Biotic Components of an Ecosystem

Living things

Divided into two groups based on their source of food:

Autotrophs

Heterotrophs

Page 4: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Autotrophs

Require only inorganic nutrients and an outside energy source to produce organic nutrients

Also called producers as they produce food

Two types: Photoautotrophs – produce organic nutrients via

photosynthesis

Chemoautotrophs – produce organic nutrients using energy obtained from the oxidization of inorganic compounds

Page 5: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Examples of Autotrophs

Algae

PlantsCyanobacteria Photosynthetic protists

Chemosynthetic bacteria

Page 6: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Heterotrophs

Require a source of preformed organic nutrients

Also called consumers as they consume food

All animals are heterotrophs, as are fungi, many bacteria and parasitic plants

Parasitic herb (Hyobanche sanguinea), Namaqualand

Page 7: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Types of Heterotrophs

Herbivores – Feed on plants or algae

Carnivores – Feed on other animals

Omnivores – Feed on plants and animals

Detrivores – Feed on decomposing organic matter

Decomposers – Break down organic material

Page 8: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Examples of Heterotrophs

Herbivore Herbivore Carnivore

Carnivore Decomposer Decomposer

Page 9: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Energy Flow & Chemical Cycling

Every ecosystem is characterised by two fundamental processes:

1. Energy flow One-way flow of energy through biotic community

Begins when producers absorb solar energy

2. Chemical cycling Cyclical flow of materials from the abiotic

environment, through the biotic community and back again to the abiotic environment

Page 10: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Energy Flow & Chemical Cycling

Energy flows through an ecosystem

Chemicals cycle through an ecosystem

Page 11: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Energy Flow

With few exceptions, all ecosystems depend on solar energy as a primary energy source

Primary productivity is the rate at which producers convert solar energy into biomass

Primary productivity is dependent upon sunlight, nutrient and water availability

Page 12: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Productivity of Ecosystems

Tropical rain forests have high productivity because of abundant rainfall and sunlight

Estuaries and marshes have high productivity because of high nutrient influx from rivers and streams

Page 13: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Productivity of Ecosystems

Page 14: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Energy Flow

Some of the energy captured from the sun is lost to the environment as heat when producers use energy for cellular respiration

Some energy also goes to detritus feeders through waste production and death

Only a portion (~10%) of the energy captured by producers is passed on to consumers

Page 15: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Energy Flow

Consumers also lose energy due to respiration, excretion, and death

At each trophic level, only ~10% of the energy is passed up to the next trophic level

All the energy taken in by producers is ultimately lost as heat through respiration

Page 16: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Energy Flow

Only 10% of the energy taken in by a herbivore goes to carnivores

The rest goes to detritus feeders, or is lost to the environment as heat

Page 17: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Energy Flow

Energy flow through an ecosystem is one way; it is not recycled

Autotrophs must continue to capture the sun’s energy for ecosystems to persist

Page 18: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Trophic Levels

Ecosystems have a trophic structure that represents the different feeding relationships that determine the route of energy flow and the pattern of chemical cycling

Species in an ecosystem are divided into different trophic levels based on their main source of nutrition

Page 19: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Trophic Levels

Trophic levels include:

1. Primary producers

2. Primary consumers

3. Secondary consumers

4. Tertiary consumers

5. Detritivores and decomposers

Page 20: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Primary Producers

Autotrophs support all other trophic levels either directly or indirectly by synthesising sugars and other organic molecules using light energy

EXCEPTION: In hot water deep-sea vents, chemosynthetic bacteria form the basis of the food chain. These bacteria obtain energy from chemical sources such as hydrogen sulfide (H2S) instead of from sunlight

Page 21: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Primary Consumers

Primary consumers are herbivores that consume the primary producers

For example, herbivorous insects, grazing mammals, seed-eating birds, aquatic zooplankton and some fish

Page 22: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Secondary Consumers

Secondary consumers are carnivores that eat herbivores

E.g. spiders, frogs, insect-eating birds, lions, many fish, sea-stars

Page 23: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Tertiary Consumers

Tertiary consumers are carnivores that eat other carnivores

Page 24: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Detritivores & Decomposers

These are consumers that derive energy from organic wastes and dead organisms

E.g. bacteria, fungi, and scavengers such as cockroaches and vultures

This level is an important part of the recycling process as it returns chemicals to the primary producers

Page 25: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Food Chains

A food chain depicts the transfer of energy from one trophic level to the next

Page 26: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Food Webs

Feeding relationships in nature are usually much more complex than a simple chain

E.g. several primary consumers may feed on the same plant species and one primary consumer may eat several types of plant

These complex feeding relationships are depicted in a diagram called a food web

Page 27: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Antarctic Food Web

Page 28: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Ecological Pyramids

Food chains lose energy between trophic levels

Only about 10% of the energy of one trophic level is available to the next trophic level

This explains why few top carnivores can be supported in an ecosystem

The flow of energy between successive trophic levels can be depicted as an ecological pyramid

Page 29: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Productivity Pyramids

A productivity or energy pyramid depicts the amount of energy contained in each trophic level from the lowest, the producers, to the highest, the top carnivores

Trophic levels are stacked in blocks proportional in size to the energy acquired from the level below

Page 30: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Productivity Pyramid

Page 31: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

Biomass Pyramid

In a biomass pyramid, each tier symbolises the total dry weight of all organisms in that level

Page 32: ECOSYSTEMS. What is an Ecosystem?  The biological community together with its associated non-living environment  Ecosystems consist of biotic and abiotic

QUESTION

Why could more people be supported on Earth if people were vegetarians than if they ate meat?