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Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6

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6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystems have two major parts: living and nonliving Ecological community: the living part of the ecosystem

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Page 1: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

Ecosystems: Concepts and FundamentalsChapter 6

Page 2: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth

• Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living attributes. It is the minimum system that includes and sustains life.

Page 3: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth•Ecosystems have two major parts: living and nonliving•Ecological community: the living part of the ecosystem

Page 4: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth

• Two major functions in an ecosystem: • Cycling of chemical elements• Flow of energy• Ecosystems include some sort of fluid

medium (air, water, both)•We will learn about cycling of chemical

elements in the next chapter.

Page 5: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth

• Cycle: wastes are converted into food, which is converted into wastes, which must be converted once again into food, etc.• For this to take place, many species have

to interact with each other• The simplest ecosystem has one species

that produces its own food and another that decomposes the waste of the first species and a fluid medium

Page 6: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains

• Food chains: The linkage of who feeds on whom• Food webs: more complex linkages• Trophic level: all organisms in a food web

that are the same number of feeding levels away from the original energy source

Page 7: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains

• Photosynthesis: process of using sunlight to create food• Autotrophs: an organism that produces its

own food• Heterotrophs: Organism that cannot make

its own food so it lives by feeding on another

Page 8: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains• Herbivores: an organism that feeds on an

autotroph• Carnivores: Eat heterotrophs• Omnivores: Eat both autotrophs and

other heterotrophs

Page 9: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains

• Ex: Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming) – geyser basins• Photosynthetic bacteria and algae make

up the spring’s first trophic level.

Page 10: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains• Ephydrid flies (herbivore) make up the

second trophic level• Dolichopodid fly: feeds on the eggs and

larvae of the ephydrid flies (carnivore)

Page 11: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains

• Ex: Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming) – geyser basins• The herbivorous ephydrid flies have

parasites, so they would be on the third trophic level• Decomposers would be the fourth

trophic level, because they feed on all of the dead wastes

Page 12: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains

• Ex: Yellowstone National Park (Wyoming) – geyser basins• The community is dependent on

1. Sunlight2. Constant flow of hot water

• Without these, they cannot survive.

Page 13: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains

• Case Study: Sea Otters• Keystone species: if this species declines,

the whole ecosystem falls apart.

Page 14: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains• Food webs in the oceans generally involve

more species.• Pelagic ecosystem (open ocean ecosystem)• In the hot springs example, the food webs

and trophic levels were neat. In reality, this is not true • Ex: harp seal (see figure)

Page 15: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.2: Ecological Communities and Food Chains

Page 16: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.3 Ecosystems as Systems

• Ecosystems are open systems: energy and matter flow into and out of them• Where does an ecosystem start and where does

it end?• Commonly used way of determining where a

boundary of an ecosystem on land is is the watershed.• All rain that reaches the ground from any

source and flows out into one stream.

Page 17: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.4 Biological Production and Ecosystem Energy Flow• Ecosystem energy flow: movement of

energy through an ecosystem from the external environment• The issue is that energy is a difficult and

abstract concept. It is invisible to us and especially hard to measure with ecosystems

Page 18: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.4 Biological Production and Ecosystem Energy Flow•What limits the amount of organic matter in living things?•Entropy: there is a decrease in order, and energy is disorganized

Page 19: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.5 Biological Production and Biomass• Biomass: total amount of organic matter in any

ecosystem• Biological production: capture of usable energy

from the environment to produce organic matter• Gross production: the increase in stored energy

before any is used• Net production: the amount of newly acquired

energy stored after some energy has been used.

Page 20: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.5 Biological Production and Biomass• Primary production: production carried out by

autotrophs• Secondary production: the production carried

out by heterotrophs• Chemoautotrophs: organisms that create energy

from chemicals

Page 21: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.6 Energy Efficiency and Transfer Efficiency• No system can be 100% efficient.• Energy efficiency: ratio of output to input,

and is usually further defined as the amount of useful work obtained from some amount of available energy

Page 22: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.7 Ecological Stability and Succession• Ecosystems change and recover and overcome these changes• Ecological succession: the process of ecosystems recovering

Page 23: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.7 Ecological Stability and Succession

Page 24: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.7 Ecological Stability and Succession

Page 25: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.7 Ecological Stability and Succession

Page 26: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.7 Ecological Stability and Succession

Page 27: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.7 Ecological Stability and Succession

Page 28: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.7 Ecological Stability and Succession

Page 29: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 30: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 31: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 32: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 33: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 34: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 35: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 36: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.8 Chemical Cycling and Succession

Page 37: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.9 How Species Change Succession

Page 38: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.9 How Species Change Succession

Page 39: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.9 How Species Change Succession

Page 40: Ecosystems: Concepts and Fundamentals Chapter 6. 6.1 The Ecosystem: Sustaining Life on Earth Ecosystem: a ecological community of living and non-living

6.9 How Species Change Succession