energy flows and matter cycles

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Energy Flows and Matter Cycles EK 4.A.6 Interactions among living systems & with their environment result in the movement of matter & energy

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EK 4.A.6 Interactions among living systems & with their environment result in the movement of matter & energy. Energy Flows and Matter Cycles. Energy Flows through Trophic Levels. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

EK 4.A.6 Interactions among living systems & with their environment

result in the movement of matter & energy

Page 2: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Energy Flows through Trophic LevelsPrimary Producers –

autotrophs capable of converting solar energy into chemical energy (plants, photosynthetic protists, cyanobacteria and chemosynthetic bacteria

Page 3: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Energy Flows through Trophic Levels

Primary Consumers – herbivores that eat primary producers

Secondary consumers – primary carnivores that eat primary consumers

Tertiary consumers – secondary carnivores eat the secondary consumers

Page 4: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Energy Flower through Trophic LevelsDetritivores – consumers

that obtain their energy by consuming dead plants and animals (detritus); the smallest are called decomposers and include fungi and bacteria; others include nematodes, earthworms insects and scavengers such as crabs, vultures, and jackals

Page 5: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Energy Flows through Trophic LevelsEcological Pyramids – used

to show the relationship between the tropic levels; Horizontal bars or tiers are used to represent the relative size of the tropic levels, each represented in terms of energy (productivity), biomass or numbers of organisms; tiers are stacked upon one another in the order in which energy is transferred

Page 6: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Energy Flow through Trophic LevelsEcological Efficiency –

describes the proportion of energy represented at one trophic level that is transferred to the next level; only about 10% of the productivity (energy) of one trophic levels is transferred to the next level; 90% of the energy is consumed by the individual metabolic activities of the organism

Page 7: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Energy Flows through Trophic LevelsFood Chain – linear

flow chart of who eats whom; shows energy flow

Food Web – expanded, more complete version of food chain; Arrows connect all organisms that are eaten to the animals that eat them in the direction of the energy flow

Page 8: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycledBiogeochemical

Cycles – describe the flow of essential elements from the environment to living things and back to the environment

Why do we need these elements to be recycled? What purpose do they serve?

Page 9: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycleHydrological cycle

Reservoirs – oceans, air (as water vapor), groundwater, glaciers, (evaporation, wind and percipitation move water from oceans to lands

Assimilation – plants absorb water from the soil animals drink water or eat other organisms (which are mostly water)

Release – plants transpire; animals and plants decompose

Page 10: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycleCarbon Cycle

Reservoirs – atmosphere (as CO2), fossil fuels (coal and oil), peat, durable organic material (i.e. cellulose)

Assimilation – plants use CO2 in photosynthesis; animals consume plants or other animals

Release – plants and animals release CO2 through respiration and decomposition; CO2 is released when organic material is burned

Page 11: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycledNitrogen Cycle

Reservoirs – atmosphere (N2); soil (NH4 ammonium, NH3 ammonia, NO2 nitrite, or NO3 nitrate)

Assimilation – plants absorb nitrogen either as nitrate or ammonium; animals obtain nitrogen by eating plants or other animals

Page 12: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycledNitrogen

AssimilationNitrogen Fixation –

Nitrogen gas and ammonium are fixed by nitrogen-fixing prokaryotes (in soil or root nodules); nitrogen gas is converted to ammonia by lightening and UV radiation

Page 13: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycledNitrogen

Assimilation Nitrification –

ammonium converted to nitrite and nitrite converted to nitrate by various nitrifying bacteria; ammonium or nitrate converted to organic compounds by plant metabolism

Page 14: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycleNitrogen Cycle

Release – denitrifying bacteria convert nitrate back to nitrogen gas (denitrification); detrivorous bacteria convert organic compounds back to ammonium (ammonification); animals excrete ammonium or ammonia, urea or uric acid

Page 15: Energy Flows and Matter Cycles

Matter is RecycledPhosphorus Cycle

Reservoirs – rocks and ocean sediments

Assimilation – plants absorb inorganic phosphate from soils; animals obtain organic phosphorous when then eat plants or other animals

Release – plants and animals release phosphorous when they decompose; animals excrete phosphorous in their waste products