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Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology By 2006, more than 9 million people lived in this small nation, and less than 2 percent of its land remained forested.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology By 2006, more than 9 million people lived in this small nation, and less than 2 percent of its land remained forested."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology By 2006, more than 9 million people lived in this small nation, and less than 2 percent of its land remained forested.

2 Ecosystem Ecology examines interactions between the Living and Non-Living world Ecosystem - A particular location on Earth distinguished by its particular mix of interacting biotic and abiotic components.

3 Ecosystem Boundaries don’t need in notes Some ecosystems, such as a caves and lakes have very distinctive boundaries. However, in most ecosystems it is difficult to determine where one ecosystems stops and the next begins.

4 Producers (autotrophs) are able to use the sun’s energy to produce usable energy through the process called photosynthesis. Section 2: Energy Flows through Ecosystems

5 Cellular respiration is the process by which other organisms gain energy from eating the tissues of producers. Section 2: Energy Flows through Ecosystems

6 “Trophic” Energy Pyramid The representation of the distribution of biomass among trophic levels. Decreases by 10% with each higher level Ecological efficiency- The proportion of consumed energy that can be passed from one trophic level to another.

7 Calories don’t need in notes The energy needed to raise the temperature of 1 gram of water through 1 °C

8 Trophic pyramid (don’t need in notes) This trophic pyramid represents the amount of energy that is present at each trophic level, measured in joules (J). While this pyramid assumes 10 percent ecological efficiency, actual ecological efficiencies range from 5 to 20 percent across different ecosystems. For most ecosystems, graphing the numbers of individuals or biomass within each trophic level would produce a similar pyramid. (page 39) One joule is equal to the energy used to accelerate a body with a mass of one kilogram using one newton of force over a distance of one meter.

9 Food Chain : The sequence of consumption from producers through tertiary consumers. Food Web : A more realistic type of food chain that takes into account the complexity of nature. vs.

10 Ecosystem Productivity Gross primary productivity (GPP) Gross primary productivity (GPP) The total amount of solar energy that the producers in an ecosystem capture via photosynthesis over a given amount of time. Net primary productivity (NPP) Net primary productivity (NPP) The energy captured (GPP) minus the energy respired (lost) by producers.


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