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Ecosystems & Restoration Ecology

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Presentation on theme: "Ecosystems & Restoration Ecology"— Presentation transcript:

1 Ecosystems & Restoration Ecology
Campbell & Reece Chapter 55

2 Ecosystems no matter what size; 2 processes occurring: energy flow
chemical cycling

3 Conservation of Energy
1st Law of Thermodynamics: nrg can neither be created or destroyed, only transferred or transformed 2nd Law of Thermodynamics: every exchange of nrg increase the entropy of the universe lost nrg: heat

4 Conservation of Mass matter can neither be created or destroyed
elements not significantly gained or lost on a global scale but can be gained or lost from a particular ecosystem in nature most gains & losses to ecosystems small compared to amt cycled but balance between inputs & outputs determines if given ecosystem is a source or a sink for a given element

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6 Energy, Mass, & Trophic Levels
trophic levels are based on their main source of nutrition & nrg Primary Producers ultimately support all other levels biosphere‘s main autotrophs: plants algae photosynthetic prokaryotes

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8 Definitions Detritus: nonliving organic material
Detritivores: decompsers

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10 Global Energy Budget every day Earth’s atmosphere bombarded by ~ 10²² joules of solar radiation (or enough nrg to supply demands of Earth’s human population for ~25 yrs using 2009 levels) most incoming solar radiation is absorbed, scattered or reflected by clouds & dust in the atmosphere amt that actually reaches Earth’s surface limits the possible photosynthetic output of ecosystems

11 Gross & Net Production GPP: gross primary production = amt nrg from light (or chemicals in chemoautotrophic systems) converted to the chemical nrg of organic molecules per unit time NPP: net primary production = GPP – nrg used by primary producers for their own respiration (Ra) NPP = GPP – Ra NPP =/= total biomass of photosynthetic autotrophs present; NPP = amt new biomass added in given period of time

12 Primary Production amt of light nrg  chemical nrg by autotrophs in an ecosystem during given time GPP: total nrg assimilated by an ecosystem in given time NPP: nrg accumulated in autotroph biomass,

13 Net Ecosystem Production
total biomass accumulation of an ecosystem = GPP – total ecosystem respiration satellites used to study global patterns of primary production show ecosystems vary considerably tropical rainforest highest coral reefs & estuaries high but global total is low because only cover ~1/10th what rainforest do

14 Primary Production in Aquatic Ecosystems
limited by light & available nutrients

15 Primary Production in Terrestrial Ecosystems
globally limited by: temperature moisture locally limited by: a particular soil nutrient

16 Limiting Nutrient is the element that must be added for production to increase in marine ecosystems it is most often N or P

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18 Secondary Production amt of chemical nrg in consumers’ food that is converted to their own new biomass during a given period of time vast majority of an ecosystem’s production is eventually consumed by detritivores

19 Energy partitioning w/in a Link of the Food-Chain

20 Production Efficiency
efficiency with which food nrg is converted to each link in a food chain another way: Production Efficiency is the % of nrg stored in assimilated food not used for respiration

21 10% Efficiency in Energy Transfers
Production efficiency = Net secondary production x 100 Assimilation of primary production

22 Trophic Efficiency % of production transferred from 1 trophic level to the next ~ 5% – 20% with 10% being typical Pyramids of nrg & biomass reflect low trophic efficiency aquatic ecosystems can have inverted biomass pyramids: producers grow, reproduce & are consumed so quickly there is no time to develop a large population

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27 Biogeochemical Cycles
photosynthetic organisms essentially have unlimited supply of solar nrg but have limiting amts of chem elements atoms taken in by organism either  assimilated or wastes organism dies: atoms replenish pool of inorganic nutrients  used by other organisms this cycling of nutrients involving biotic & abiotic components called: biogeochemical cycles

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30 Water Cycle: Biological Importance
essential to all organisms availability influences rates of ecosystem processes especially 1° production & decomposition in terrestrial biomes

31 Water Cycle: Forms Available to Life
most water used in its liquid phase seasonal freezing limits soil water’s availability to terrestrial organisms

32 Water Cycle: Reservoirs

33 Water Cycle: Key Processes
main processes driving water cycle: evaporation of liquid water by solar radiation condensation of water vapor Precipitation Transpiration Runoff : surface or percolation  groundwater

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35 Carbon Cycle: Biological Importance
C forms framework of organic molecules essential to all living organisms

36 Carbon Cycle: Forma Available to Life
photosynthetic organisms utilize CO2 converting inorganic C  organic C

37 Carbon Cycle: Reservoirs
fossil fuels sediments of aquatic ecosystems soils plant & animal biomass atmosphere (CO2)

38 Carbon Cycle: Key Processes
removing CO2 from atmosphere: photosynthesis returning CO2 to atmosphere: cellular respiration burning of fossil fuels & wood volcanic eruptions

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40 Nitrogen Cycle: Biological Importance
N part of a.a., proteins, & nucleic acids

41 Nitrogen: Forms Available to Life
plants can assimilate 2 forms of N: ammonium: nitrate

42 Nitrogen: Forms Available to Life
bacteria can use both these & nitrite, NO2-

43 Nitrogen: Forms Available to Life
animals can only use organic forms of N

44 Nitrogen Cycle: Reservoirs
main reservoir of N is the atmosphere (80% free N gas) others: soil sediments of rivers, lakes, oceans biomass

45 Nitrogen Cycle: Key Processes
Nitrogen Fixation: N2  forms that can be used to synthesize organic N cpds natural methods: certain bacteria or lightening man activities: industrial production of fertilizers legume crops

46 Nitrogen Cycle: Key Processes
Denitrification: certain bacteria in soil organic N  N2 gas (reduction of N2 )

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48 The Phosphorus Cycle

49 Phosphorus Cycle: Biological Importance
P is major component of Nucleic Acids Phospholipids ATP

50 Phosphorus Cycle: Forms Available to Life
plants absorb phosphate ion  organic molecules

51 Phosphorus Cycle: Reservoirs
sedimentary rock of marine origin is largest reservoir also in soil, dissolved in oceans & in biomass recycling of P tends to be localized in ecosystems

52 Phosphorus Cycle: Key Processes
weathering of rocks gradually adds P to soil some taken up by plants  food webs  decomposition of biomass returns P to soil some  runoff  oceans almost no P in atmosphere

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54 Decomposition Rates determine the proportion of a nutrient in a particular form is determined by same factors that limit primary production: temperature moisture nutrient availability

55 Decomposition in Rainforest
is rapid  relatively little organic material accumulates on floor ~ 75% of nutrients in ecosystem is in woody trunks of trees ….only ~10% is in the soil

56 Decomposition Rates temperate forests because decomp much slower  up to 50% of all organic material in soil decomp slower when land is either too dry for decomposers to survive or too wet to supply them with enough O2 ecosystems wet & cold (peatlands) store large organic matter (decomposers grow poorly): primary production >>decomp

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58 Decomposition Rates in Aquatic Ecosystems
anaerobic muds: can take > 50 years algae & aquatic plants usually assimilate nutrients directly from the water so lake sediments act as nutrient “sink”

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60 Restoration Ecology bioremediation : use of organisms to detoxify & restore polluted & degraded ecosystems biological augmentation: an approach to restoration ecology that uses organisms to add essential materials to a degraded ecosystem

61 Bioremediation

62 Biological Augmentation

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