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Energy Flow (Part 1).

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Presentation on theme: "Energy Flow (Part 1)."— Presentation transcript:

1 Energy Flow (Part 1)

2 Why do we need energy in an Ecosystem
Every organism requires energy to carry out life process: Growing Moving Reproducing

3 Producers (Autotroph)
Can convert light from sun to the chemical energy (SUGAR). Example: plants and zooplankton

4 Producers Supports all other tropic levels
Terrestrial Ecosystem (on land) plants are the producers Aquatic Ecosystem (sea) phytoplankton bacteria algae aquatic plants are the producers

5 Consumers (Heterotroph)
Obtain chemical energy (SUGAR) by eating producers or other consumers

6 Consumers In trophic levels above producers
Categorized by what they eat Herbivore – eats only producers Not just plant eaters

7 Carnivore Eats other consumers

8 Eats both producers and other consumers
Omnivore Eats both producers and other consumers

9 Consumers Primary Consumers – feeds directly on producers
In Terrestrial Ecosystem – grazing mammals like deer In Aquatic Ecosystem – can be zooplankton

10 Consumers Secondary Consumers – eat primary consumers
In Terrestrial Ecosystem – eat insects, carnivores that eat rodents and grazing mammals In Aquatic Ecosystem – Small fish (eat zooplankton)

11 Consumers Tertiary Consumers – (3rd Level Consumer) eat secondary consumer

12 Decomposers Break down waste and dead organisms Example: bacteria and fungi They recycle chemicals within an ecosystem

13 The Path of Energy Energy is not recycled within an ecosystem, but flows through it and out. Producers must continue to receive energy so they can transfer that energy; if not the ecosystem could not survive.

14 Food Chains Trophic Level – A feeding level in an ecosystem Food Chain – the pathway of food transfer from one trophic level to another

15 Food Webs Food Web – the pattern of feeding by interconnected and branching food chains. - a bunch of food chains put together

16 Energy Diagrams Energy Pyramids (AKA Food Pyramid)
energy loss from one level to the next. only 10% of available energy is actually transferred. 90% is lost as HEAT.

17 The Carbon and Oxygen Cycle
CO₂ is also released to the atmosphere by: decomposers Burning fossil fuels (oil, coal, natural gas) Forest Fires Volcanic eruptions Animal breathe out CO2 Plants absorb CO2

18 The Carbon and Oxygen Cycle

19 Mostly involves nonliving processes
The Water Cycle Mostly involves nonliving processes Evaporation of oceans Transpiration – Evaporation from plant’s leaves Condensation in clouds Precipitation (rain)

20 Human Activities vs. Ecosystem
Deforestation – The clearing of forest for agriculture, lumber, and other uses eliminating plants that absorb CO₂ Greenhouse Effect – the process by which atmospheric gases trap heat

21 Human Activities vs. Ecosystem
Acid Rain – the precipitation that contains nitric and/or sulfuric acids. Pollution – The addition of substances to the environment that results in a negative effect.

22 Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources
Resource – any necessity of life, such as water, nutrients, light, food ,or space. Renewable Resource – can be produced or replaced by a healthy ecosystem.

23 Renewable and Nonrenewable Resources
Nonrenewable Resource – natural processes cannot replenish them within a reusable amount of time.

24 Sustainable Resources
Sustainable Development – using resources in such an environmentally conscious way


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