Energy Flow in Ecosystems File
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Transcript Energy Flow in Ecosystems File
Energy Flow In Ecosystems
BIG IDEA:
WHAT HAPPENS TO ENERGY STORED IN
BODY TISSUES WHEN ONE ORGANISM EATS
ANOTHER?
Food Chains & Food Webs
How does energy flow
through ecosystems?
A 1-way stream, from primary
producers to consumers
Food Chains
A series of steps in which
organisms transfer energy by
eating and being eaten
Food Chains & Food Webs
Food Webs
A network of feeding relationships; shows all the feeding
relationships within an ecosystem
Food Chains & Food Webs
Food Webs –
Very complicated
Notebook Time:
Describe the ecosystem that is your backyard
Draw a food web of that ecosystem
Be as specific as possible
Draw a food chain from within your food web
What role do decomposers & detritivores play in food webs?
Food Chains & Food Webs
Disturbances
In your groups, answer the following questions using the food
web below:
What effect would an insecticide have on the food web?
Would this have an effect on the populations of non-insect eating
animals?
What populations would increase?
What populations would decrease?
Would this change any animals
eating habits? Which ones & how?
Trophic Levels & Ecological Pyramids
Trophic Level
Each step in a food chain
Ecological Pyramids
Show relative amount of energy or matter contained within
each trophic level in a given food chain or food web
There are 3 different types of Ecological Pyramids
Pyramids of Energy
Pyramids of Biomass
Pyramids of numbers
Ecological Pyramids
Pyramids of Energy
Show relative amounts of
energy available at each
trophic level
Typically
1/10 or 10% of available
energy within one trophic
level is passed on to the
next level
In other words:
1/10 of the solar energy
captured and stored in
leaves of grasses ends
up stored in the tissues
of cows
Ecological Pyramids
Pyramid of Biomass &
Numbers
Biomass –
Total amount of living
tissue within a given
trophic level
Pyramid of Biomass
Illustrates the relative
amount of living organic
matter available at each
trophic level of an
ecosystem
Ecological Pyramids
Pyramid of Biomass &
Numbers
Pyramid of Numbers
Shows the relative number of
individual organisms at each
trophic level in an ecosystem
Cycles of Matter
How does matter move through the biosphere?
Biogeochemical cycles
Elements pass from one organism to another and among parts of the
biosphere in closed loops
These loops are powered by the flow of energy.
4 Processes involved with biogeochemical cycles
Biological Processes
Any and all activities performed by living organisms
Geological Processes
Volcanic eruptions, erosion, plate tectonics
Chemical & Physical Processes
Formation of clouds, flow of running water, lightning
Human Activity
Deforestation, burning of fossil fuels, use of fertilizers
Water Cycle
Water moves continuously between, oceans, the
atmosphere, land and the organisms in them.
Transpiration
Evaporation of water from leaves of the plants
Evaporation
Loss of water from surface of bodies of water
Condensation
When water vapor cools & becomes liquid
Precipitation
When water falls out of the atmosphere
Nutrient Cycles
3 main Nutrient Cycles
Carbon
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Nutrient Cycles
Carbon Cycle
Found in several large reservoirs in biosphere
Atmosphere = CO2
Oceans = Dissolved CO2
Land = in organisms, soil & rocks
Underground =
Coal, Petroleum & Calcium Carbonate
In Life = base of all organic molecules
Nutrient Cycles
Nitrogen Cycle
Required to build proteins, DNA, RNA
Atmospheric Nitrogen
N2 = Non-usable form for most organisms
Needs to be “fixed”
Nitrogen Fixation
• Process of N2 being converted into ammonia, nitrates & nitrites by
bacteria
• Relatively small amounts of N2 can be fixed by Lightning
Denitrification
• When N2 is released by soil bacteria who use nitrates for energy
Fertilizer
Huge human influence in adding excess Nitrates & Nitrites into
aquatic ecosystems
Can cause algal blooms
Nutrient Cycles
Phosphorus Cycle
Essential for creation of DNA, RNA
Not very abundant in biosphere
Remains mostly on land in rock, soil, & sediments
As rock & sediments wear down, P is released to environment.
Nutrient Cycles
Nutrient Limitation
Limiting Nutrient
In Soil
The nutrient whose supply limits productivity
Typically Limiting Nutrients are:
Ca, Mg, S, Fe, Mn, P, Fixed N,
In Ocean
Typically Limiting Nutrients are:
Fixed N