chapter 3 ecosystem ecology. reversing the deforestation of haiti 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60%...

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Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology

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Page 1: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Chapter 3Ecosystem Ecology

Page 2: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI

•75% < $2.00/day•1923- 60% forest•2006 - <2% forest

•What does deforestation do to ecosystem services?

Page 3: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 4: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI

Mango Trees!!!

$70 - $150 of mangos/year!

How does this address the deforestation problem?

Page 5: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

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.

Page 6: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Ecosystem Boundaries

• Biotic and abiotic components provide boundaries that distinguish one ecosystem from another.

• 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.

Page 7: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 8: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

• Ecosystem boundaries might be defined by a particular species of interest or topographic features.

Page 9: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 10: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 11: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Ecosystem Processes

• Even though it is helpful to distinguish between two different ecosystems, ecosystems interact with other ecosystems by exchanging matter and energy.

Page 12: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Checkpoint…

•What is an ecosystem and what are its components?

Page 13: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Checkpoint…

•How would you know when you left one ecosystem and entered another?

Page 14: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Checkpoint…

How are ecosystem boundaries different than natural ones?

Page 15: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Energy Flows through Ecosystems

Page 16: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Photosynthesis and Respiration

• Producers (autotrophs) are able to use the suns energy to produce usable energy through the process called photosynthesis.

Page 17: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 18: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Let’s demonstrate…

Volunteers please….

Page 19: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Photosynthesis and Respiration

• Cellular respiration is the process by which other organisms gain energy from eating the tissues of producers.

Page 20: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Trophic Levels, Food Chains, and Food Webs

• Consumers (heterotrophs)- obtain energy by consuming other organisms.

• Primary Consumers (herbivores)- consume producers.

• Secondary Consumers (carnivores)- obtain their energy by eating primary consumers.

• Tertiary Consumers (carnivores)- eat secondary consumers.

Page 21: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 22: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

• 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.

Page 23: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 24: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Ecosystem Productivity

• 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)- The energy captured (GPP) minus the energy respired by producers.

Page 25: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

GPP = amount you get paid

NPP = amount after taxes

Page 26: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

CO2 taken up during photosynthesis = CO2 taken up in sunlight + CO2 produced in the

dark

With this information can determine the GPP of anecosystem/day.

Units: kg C/m2/day

(Kilograms of C taken up per m2 per day).

Page 27: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 28: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Converting sunlight into chemical energy is not efficient.

NPP ranges from 25-50% of GPP Or

0.25% of solar energy striking the plant.

Of the 1% of sun’s energy that is captured by a producer only 40% is

used.

Let’s do the math!

Page 29: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

A forest in North America has a GPP of 2.5 kg C/m2/year.

It loses 1.5 kg C/m2/year to respiration

NPP= 2.5 -1.5 = 1 kg C/m2/year (1.8 lbs C/m2/year)

This means: plants living in 1 m2 of forest will add 1kg of C to their tissues each year by

growing/reproduction.

NPP= 40% of GPP

ALLOWS US TO COMPARE PRODUCTIVITY AND CHANGE IN AN ECOSYSTEM!

Page 30: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 31: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Energy Transfer Efficiency and Trophic Pyramids

• Biomass- The energy in an ecosystem is measured in terms of biomass.

• Standing crop- The amount of biomass/energy present in an ecosystem at a particular time. (note different than productivity or rate of energy)

• Ecological efficiency- The proportion of consumed energy that can be passed from one trophic level to another.

• Trophic pyramid- The representation of the distribution of biomass among trophic levels.

Page 32: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Standing Crop

Slow growing forest:•Low productivity – low amounts of biomass added each year•Standing Crop – biomass is high

Page 33: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Standing Crop

•Algae – high productivity due to high growth

rates--- standing

crop is l ow due to primary consumers.

Page 34: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Ecological Efficiency

• 10% rule

• Only about 10% of the available biomass at each trophic level can be converted into energy at the next level.

• REPRESENTED BY THE TROPHIC PYRAMID

Page 35: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 36: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Suppose all humans decided to become

vegetarians….

• 1 acre of cropland = 1,000 kg soybeans

• 10x more food available if eaten raw reather than feeding to beef to eat meat.

• 1kg of soybeans = 2.5x calories as beef

• 1 acre would produce 25x more caloires.

MORE LAND REQUIRED TO BE SECONDARY CONSUMER!

Page 37: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Checkpoint…

•Why is photosynthesis an important process?

Page 38: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Checkpoint…

•What determines the productivity of an ecosystem?

Page 39: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Checkpoint…

•How efficiently is energy transferred between trophic levels in an ecosystem?

Page 40: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

STOP HERE

• Make a list of what you ate today for lunch and where it came from (animals, plants etc.)

• Make a trophic pyramid and place all organisms in each level.

• At which level did you get most of your energy?

Page 41: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Matter cycles through the biosphere

• Biosphere- The combination of all ecosystems on Earth.

• Biogeochemical cycles- The movement of matter within and between ecosystems involving biological, geologic and chemical processes.

IWhat type of system is this?

Page 42: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

The Hydrologic Cycle

• The movement of water through the biosphere.

Page 43: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 44: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

The Hydrologic Cycle

• Transpiration- The process where plants release water from their leaves into the atmosphere.

• Evapotranspiration- The combined amount of evaporation and transpiration. (often used to measure water through an ecosystem)

• Runoff- When water moves across the land surface into streams and rivers, eventually reaching the ocean.

Page 45: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Human Activities and Hydrologic

Cycle• Havesting Trees

• Paving Roads

• Diverting Water

Page 46: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

The Carbon Cycle

Page 47: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Carbon Cycle

• Photosynthesis (plants)

• Respiration (animals)

• Exchange (atmosphere and ocean)

• Sedimentation and burial

• Extraction (recent phenomenon)

• Combustion (fossil fuels/timber)

• Faster processes involve living organisms.

Page 48: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Carbon Cycle

• Producers – water

• Consumers – food

• Decomposers – dead organisms

• During Decomposition elements become available to producers again.

Page 49: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

The Nitrogen Cycle

Page 50: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Nitrogen CycleStep 1

• Only a few organisms can conver Nigrogen into ammonia. By NITROGEN FIXATION

• Cyanobacteria, bacteria in legume roots

• Enzymes break nitrogen bond and add hydrogen to form ammonia and ammonium in the soil.

• Bacteria excrete ammonium into plant roots and plant gives bacteria sugars.

• LIGHTENING/COMBUSTION – Nitrogen to nitrate

Page 51: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Step 2 - Assimilation

Nitrogen assimilated into tissues

Page 52: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Step 3 - Ammonification

• Decomposers use nitrogen wastes and dead bodies as food and excrete ammonium

Page 53: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Step 4 - Nitrification

• Bacteria convert ammonium into nitrite and then nitrate (minor importance but can be used by producers)

Page 54: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Step 5 - Denitrification

• Nitrate is transported through soil (leaching)

• Bacteria in waterloggged soil convert nitrate into nitrous oxide and nitrogen gas and put back into the atmosphere.

Page 55: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

The Phosphorus Cycle

Page 56: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Ecosystems respond to disturbance

• Disturbance- An event caused by physical, chemical or biological agents that results in changes in population size or community composition.

Page 57: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 58: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Watershed Studies

• Watershed- All of the land in a given landscape that drains into a particular stream, river, lake or wetland.

Page 59: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 60: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Resistance versus Resilience

• Resistance- A measure of how much a disturbance can affect its flows of energy and matter.

• Resilience- The rate at which an ecosystem returns to its original state after a disturbance.

• Restoration ecology- A new scientific discipline that is interested in restoring damaged ecosystems.

Page 61: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

The Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis

• The intermediate disturbance hypothesis- states that ecosystems experiencing intermediate levels of disturbance are more diverse than those with high or low disturbance levels.

Page 62: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -
Page 63: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Ecosystems Provide Valuable Services

Instrumental vs Intrinsic

Page 64: Chapter 3 Ecosystem Ecology. REVERSING THE DEFORESTATION OF HAITI 75% < $2.00/day 1923- 60% forest 2006 -

Instrumental Values of Ecosystems

• Provisions- Goods that humans can use directly.

• Regulating services- The service provided by natural systems that helps regulate environmental conditions.

• Support systems- The support services that natural ecosystems provide such as pollination, natural filters and pest control.

• Resilience- Resilience of an ecosystem ensures that it will continue to provide benefits to humans. This greatly depends on species diversity.

• Cultural services- Ecosystems provide cultural or aesthetic benefits to many people.