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3-2 What Are the Major Components of an Ecosystem?

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1 3-2 What Are the Major Components of an Ecosystem?
Concept 3-2 Some organisms produce the nutrients they need, others get their nutrients by consuming other organisms, and some recycle nutrients back to producers by decomposing the wastes and remains of organisms.

2 Ecologists Study Interactions in Nature
Ecology is a key component of environmental science the study of how organisms interact with ________________ and their ________________ environment Organism - ___________________ living being Populations - ____________ of the same species Communities – populations of _____________ species Ecosystems – community plus its ______________ environment Biosphere – parts of the planet where _________ is found one another non-living individual groups interacting non-living life

3 Biosphere Ecosystem Community Population Organism Cell Molecule Atom
Parts of the earth's air,water, and soil where life is found Ecosystem A community of different species interacting with one another and with their nonliving environment of matter and energy Community Populations of different species living in a particular place, and potentially interacting with each other Population A group of individuals of the same species living in a particular place Organism An individual living being Cell The fundamental structural and functional unit of life Molecule Chemical combination of two or more atoms of the same or different elements Water Smallest unit of a chemical element that exhibits its chemical properties Atom Stepped Art Hydrogen Oxygen Fig. 3-5, p. 58

4 Ecosystems Have Living and Nonliving Components
The nonliving components of an ecosystem are called _______________ factors Water Air Nutrients Rocks Heat Solar energy The living and ____________________ components of an ecosystem are called _____________ factors Includes plants, animals, microbes, and all organisms abiotic once living biotic

5 What are some of the abiotic factors shown in this diagram? CO2 O2
precipitation minerals Figure 3.6: Key living and nonliving components of an ecosystem in a field are shown in this diagram. water Fig. 3-6, p. 59

6 Producers and Consumers Are the Living Components of Ecosystems (1)
Ecologists assign every type of organism in an ecosystem to a feeding level, or ____________ level Producers, autotrophs - ____________________ Photosynthesis: 6CO2 + 6H2O + sunlight → C6H12O6 + 6O2 (glucose) energy rich carbohydrate Chemosynthesis – process through which specialized _____________ living in deep-sea hydrothermal vents use __________________ energy to convert simple inorganic compounds into more complex nutrient compounds trophic “self-feeder” bacteria geothermal

7 Producers Green plants (photosynthesis) Algae (photosynthesis)
Figure 3.7: Some producers live on land, such as this large tree and other plants in an Amazon rain forest (Core Case study) in Brazil (left). Others, such as green algae (right), live in water. Algae (photosynthesis) Fig. 3-7a, p. 59

8 Producers Phytoplankton in the sea (photosynthesis) Chemosynthetic
Figure 3.7: Some producers live on land, such as this large tree and other plants in an Amazon rain forest (Core Case study) in Brazil (left). Others, such as green algae (right), live in water. Chemosynthetic bacteria Fig. 3-7a, p. 59

9 Producers and Consumers Are the Living Components of Ecosystems (1)
Consumers, heterotrophs - ___________________ Primary consumers - ___________________ Eat plants (or other producers) Examples: giraffes, caterpillars, and zooplankton Secondary consumers – eat ____________________ Examples: lions, spiders, small fish Tertiary consumers – eat other __________________ Examples: hawks, killer whales Omnivores – eat ________ plants and animals Examples: humans, pigs, rats “other-feeders” herbivores herbivores Carnivores both

10 Consumers Primary consumer - herbivore Secondary consumer - carnivore
Figure 3.8: The giraffe (left) feeding on the leaves of a tree is an herbivore. The lions (right) are carnivores feeding on the dead body of a giraffe that they have killed. Fig. 3-8a, p. 60

11 Producers and Consumers Are the Living Components of Ecosystems (2)
Decomposers Consumers that release _____________ from the wastes or remains of plants or animals Return those nutrients back to the soil for producers to use Example: Bacteria and fungi Detritivores (detritus feeders) Feed on ___________ bodies of other organisms Examples: Earthworms and vultures nutrients dead

12 Decomposer Figure 3.9: This saddle fungus feeding on a dead tree (left) is a decomposer. Three vultures and two Marabou storks (right), classified as detritivores, are eating the carcass of an animal that was killed by other animals. Fig. 3-9a, p. 61

13 Detritivores and Decomposers
Detritivores and decomposers ________________ nutrients, so there is very little waste of nutrients in nature recycle Figure 3.10: Various detritivores and decomposers (mostly fungi and bacteria) can “feed on” or digest parts of a log and eventually convert its complex organic chemicals into simpler inorganic nutrients that can be taken up by producers. Fig. 3-10, p. 61

14 Producers and Consumers Are the Living Components of Ecosystems (3)
Once organisms obtain glucose (or other organic nutrient) …they ALL break it down to obtain the energy stored in its __________ _______________ Aerobic respiration Using _______________ to turn glucose back to carbon dioxide and water Anaerobic respiration = ___________________ Breaks down glucose in the ______________ of oxygen End products…carbon compounds such as methane or acetic acid chemical bonds oxygen C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O + ENERGY fermentation absence

15 Energy Flow and Nutrient Cycling
Ecosystems and the biosphere are sustained through… _______________flow of energy from sun Nutrient _______________ of key materials one-way cycling

16 Ecosystem Components High quality energy is either used or
converted to…? heat Nutrients eventually return to the soil and producers through the work of…? Figure 3.11: Natural capital. This diagram shows the main structural components of an ecosystem (energy, chemicals, and organisms). Nutrient cycling and the flow of energy—first from the sun, then through organisms, and finally into the environment as low-quality heat—link these components. decomposers Fig. 3-11, p. 62

17 3-3 What Happens to Energy in an Ecosystem?
Concept 3-3 As energy flows through ecosystems in food chains and webs, the amount of chemical energy available to organisms at each succeeding feeding level decreases.

18 Energy Flows Through Ecosystems in Food Chains and Food Webs
A sequence of organisms, each which serves as ___________ or ___________ for the next, is called a ______________________ Different feeding levels are called _____________ levels Every use and transfer of energy involves a loss of _______________________ energy to the environment as _____________ Food web Network of ______________ food chains food energy food chain trophic high-quality heat interconnected

19 A Food Chain Figure 3.12: This diagram illustrates a food chain. The arrows show how the chemical energy in nutrients flows through various trophic levels in energy transfers; most of the energy is degraded to heat, in accordance with the second law of thermodynamics (see Chapter 2, p. 47). Question: Think about what you ate for breakfast. At what level or levels on a food chain were you eating? Fig. 3-12, p. 63

20 A Food Web Figure 3.13: This diagram illustrates a greatly simplified food web in the southern hemisphere. The shaded middle area shows a simple food chain. Its participants interact in feeding relationships to form the more complex food web shown here. Many more participants in the web, including an array of decomposer and detritus feeder organisms, are not shown here. Question: Can you imagine a food web of which you are a part? Try drawing a simple diagram of it. Fig. 3-13, p. 64

21 Usable Energy Decreases with Each Link in a Food Chain or Web
Each trophic level in a food chain has a certain amount of biomass…dry ______________ of all organic matter of a given trophic level in a food chain or food web Biomass ___________________ as you move through a food chain because high-quality energy is lost Pyramid of energy flow __________ of energy lost with each transfer Less _____________ ____________ available to organisms at each succeeding level weight decreases 90% chemical energy

22 Pyramid of Energy Flow Figure 3.14: This model is a generalized pyramid of energy flow that shows the decrease in usable chemical energy available at each succeeding trophic level in a food chain or web. The model assumes that with each transfer from one trophic level to another, there is a 90% loss in usable energy to the environment in the form of low-quality heat. (Calories and joules are used to measure energy. 1 kilocalorie = 1,000 calories = 4,184 joules.) Question: Why is a vegetarian diet more energy efficient than a meat-based diet? Fig. 3-14, p. 65

23 Some Ecosystems Produce Plant Matter Faster Than Others Do
The biomass in a particular ecosystem is determined by how much solar energy its producers can _____________ and store and how ____________ they can do so Gross primary productivity (GPP) ________ at which an ecosystem’s producers convert solar energy to chemical energy and biomass Measured in terms of energy production per unit area over a given time span….._______________ capture quickly Rate kcal/m2/year “photosynthesis”

24 Some Ecosystems Produce Plant Matter Faster Than Others Do
Net primary productivity (NPP) Rate at which an ecosystem’s producers convert solar energy to chemical energy, __________ the rate at which producers _________ energy for aerobic respiration GPP = ___________________ NPP = the money you have left over to spend after you have paid your ___________ expenses Clothes, transportation, food, supplies minus use “photosynthesis - respiration” paychecks work

25 Estimated Annual Average NPP in Major Life Zones and Ecosystems
Figure 3.15: The estimated annual average net primary productivity in major life zones and ecosystems is expressed in this graph as kilocalories of energy produced per square meter per year (kcal/m2/yr). Question: What are nature’s three most productive and three least productive systems? (Data from R. H. Whittaker, Communities and Ecosystems, 2nd ed., New York: Macmillan, 1975) What will happen to the NPP of a forest if its trees are cut down? It will decrease Fig. 3-15, p. 66

26 Review Questions 1. Which term describes interacting populations?
Organisms Community Ecosystem Biosphere

27 Review Questions 2. Which organism below is acting as primary consumer? Caterpillar

28 Review Questions 3. Why are the decomposers important?
They are recycling nutrients

29 Review Questions 4. Is energy being recycled? 5. Where does the energy come from? no Sun (perpetual)

30 Review Questions 6. What is the difference between GPP and NPP?
GPP – rate that producers can capture and store energy NPP – rate of energy capture minus rate of use for aerobic respiration


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