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Ecosystems and Energy

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Page 1: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Ecosystems and Energy

Page 2: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Energy Flow in Ecosystems

Energy flows, but matter is recycled

Page 3: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Matter and Energy

• Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem

• Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical cycles (carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, water)

Page 4: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Matter and Energy

• Energy enters from the sun as radiation, moves as chemical energy transfers through food webs, and exits as heat radiated back into space

Page 5: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Matter and Energy

Page 6: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Energy Flow

• Energy flows through ecosystems from the sun through producers to consumers

• Organisms within food webs and food chains interact

• Food webs and food chains are dependent on primary productivity

Page 7: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Primary Producers (Phototrophs)

• Plants, photosynthetic protists (algae), chemosynthetic and photosynthetic bacteria (cyanobacteria)

• Convert solar energy into chemical energy (glucose) through photosynthesis

Page 8: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Primary Producers (Chemotrophs) • Chemosynthetic bacteria (prokaryotes) are the

primary producers of the deep-sea hydrothermal vent communities

• Convert inorganic chemicals (CO2, H2S, CH4) into organic molecules (sugars) through chemosynthesis

Page 9: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Primary Productivity

• Primary productivity: The amount of light energy converted to chemical energy (organic molecules) by autotrophs (photosynthetic and chemosynthetic) during a given time period in an ecosystem

• Starting point for ecosystem metabolism

• Influenced by changes in regional and global climates and in atmospheric composition

Page 10: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Primary Productivity

• Food webs and food chains are dependent on primary productivity – why?

• Represents the storage of chemical energy that will be available to consumers in an ecosystem

Page 11: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

GPP and NPP

• Gross primary productivity (GPP): total primary production in an ecosystem (the amount of energy from light, or chemicals, converted to chemical energy of organic molecules per unit time

• Net primary productivity (NPP): equal to the GPP minus the energy used by the primary producers for autotrophic respiration

Page 12: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Net Primary Productivity (NPP)

Page 13: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Global Primary Production

Page 14: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Terrestrial Primary Production

Page 15: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Terrestrial Primary Production • Temperature and moisture are the main

factors controlling primary production in terrestrial ecosystems

Page 16: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Aquatic Primary Production

Page 17: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Aquatic Primary Productivity

• Ocean phytoplankton are responsible for approximately 50% of the global biosphere net primary production

• Global annual ocean primary production has decreased due to an increase in global sea surface temperature – why? (thermocline)

• Light and nutrients are limiting factors

Page 18: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Light and Nutrient Limitation

• Solar radiation drives photosynthesis (not the only variable controlling primary production)

• Limiting nutrients are elements that must be added for production to increase, such as nitrogen and phosphorus

Page 19: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Calculating Primary Production

• Use the textbook to explain how to calculate primary production in your notes.

• Write down the equation in your notes.

• More math….yes!!

Page 20: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Consumers (Heterotrophs)

• Herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, detritivores, decomposers

Page 21: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Role of Decomposers

Page 22: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Trophic Levels and Ecological Pyramids

Page 23: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Trophic Levels

• A trophic level is the position that an organism occupies in a food chain or food web (what it eats, what eats it)

Page 24: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Ecological Pyramids

• Graphical representations designed to show the biomass or bioproductivity at each trophic level in a given ecosystem

• Energy pyramid, biomass pyramid, and pyramid of numbers

Page 25: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Energy Pyramid

• A graphical representation of energy flow in a community of organisms

Page 26: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Trophic Efficiency

• Trophic efficiencies are generally only about 10% (90% of the energy available at one trophic level not passed on)

Page 27: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Trophic Efficiency

Page 28: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Pyramid of Net Production

Page 29: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Biomass Pyramid and Numbers Pyramid

• Biomass pyramids represent the total dry mass of all organisms in one trophic level

• Numbers pyramids show the number of individual organisms in one trophic level

Page 30: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

• By the way, I really miss school and you all! I’m sorry that you have to learn Ecology on your own, but you are all super smart and I know you can do it! Hang in there. I hope you all have a nice Thanksgiving break.

Mrs. Simpson

Ok, now on with the note taking…..

Page 31: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Biogeochemical Cycles

Cycle inorganic and organic nutrients between organisms and the

environment

Page 32: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Cycling of Matter

• Organisms must exchange matter with the environment to grow, reproduce and maintain organization

• Molecules and atoms from the environment are necessary to build new molecules

Page 33: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Molecules Essential for Life

• Carbohydrates – composed of C, H, and O, monomer is a monosaccharide

• Lipids – composed of C, H, and O, monomers are fatty acids and glycerol

• Proteins – composed of C, H, O, N, and S in trace amounts, monomers are amino acids

• Nucleic Acids – composed of C, H, O, N and P, monomers are nucleotides

Page 34: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Carbon

• Carbon moves from the environment to organisms where it is used to build the essential organic molecules

• Carbon is used in storage compounds and cell formation in all organisms

Page 35: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Carbon in the Environment

• Carbon found in something non-living is called inorganic carbon

• Inorganic carbon is found in rocks (limestone), shells, the atmosphere and the oceans

• Living organisms must “fix” inorganic carbon into organic carbon to build the organic compounds necessary for life

Page 36: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Carbon Cycle – Draw a diagram of the carbon cycle in your notes.

Page 37: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Nitrogen and Phosphorus

• Nitrogen moves from the environment to organisms where it is used to build proteins and nucleic acids

• Phosphorus moves from the environment to organisms where it is used to build nucleic acids, certain lipids, and ATP (cell energy)

Page 38: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Nitrogen in the Environment • The main reservoir for inorganic nitrogen is the

atmosphere – 80% nitrogen gas (N2)

• During nitrogen fixation, bacteria (and other processes) fix inorganic nitrogen into forms that can be used by living organisms to synthesize organic compounds

Page 39: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Nitrogen Cycle – Draw a diagram of the nitrogen cycle in your

notes.

Page 40: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Phosphorus in the Environment

• Most inorganic phosphorus in found in sedimentary rock of marine origin

• Phosphorus is also found in soil and dissolved in the oceans

• Weathering of rocks adds phosphates (PO43-)

to the soil which plants can absorb

Page 41: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Phosphorus Cycle – Draw a diagram of the phosphorus cycle

in your notes

Page 42: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Water

• Living systems depend on the properties of water that result from its polarity and hydrogen bonding

• Living organisms are mostly made of water (think cytoplasm and extracellular fluids!)

• Universal solvent supports cell reactions

• Acts as a delivery system between cells

Page 43: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Water Cycle – Draw a diagram of the water cycle in your notes

Page 44: Ecosystems and Energy - nausetschools.org · Matter and Energy •Energy enters, flows through, and exits an ecosystem •Chemical nutrients cycle within ecosystems through biogeochemical

Water Cycle