The Biosphere
Download
Report
Transcript The Biosphere
The Biosphere
Chapter 3
What is Ecology?
scientific
study of interactions among
organisms and between organisms and
their environment
Biosphere
Combined
portions of the planet in which all of
life exists, including land, water and air or
atmosphere
Extends from 8 kilometers above Earth’s
surface to 11 kilometers below the surface of
the ocean
Interactions and Interdependence
Interactions
within the biosphere produce a
web of interdependence between organisms
and the environment in which they live
Levels of Organization
Individual:
interactions between an organism and
its surroundings
cottontail rabbit
Population: groups of individuals that belong to
the same species and live in the same area
group of cottontail rabbits
Levels of Organization
Communities:
different populations that live
together in a defined area
rabbits, coyotes, ravens, lizard
Ecosystem: collection of all the organisms that
live in a particular place, together with their
nonliving, or physical, environment
rabbits, coyotes, ravens, lizard, rocks, dirt,
climate, water
Levels of Organization
Biome:
group of ecosystems that have the same
climate and dominant communities
desert, tundra, tropical rain forest
Biosphere: planet Earth
Ecological Methods
Three
approaches to ecological research:
Observing: Use of 5 senses to ask ecological
questions
Experimenting: Used to test hypotheses
artificial environment in a lab
within natural ecosystems
Ecological Methods
Modeling:
Used to gain insight into complex
phenomena such as the effects of global
warming
may include mathematical formulas based on
data collected through observation and
experimentation
predictions tested by further observations and
experiments
Energy Flow
Energy
flows from the sun or inorganic
compounds to producers.
Consumers eat producers to get energy.
The primary source of energy on Earth is the sun!!
Producers
– “self feed”
Use sunlight to create carbohydrates via
photosynthesis
Ex – Plants, algae and some bacteria
Some bacteria create organic compounds from
inorganic chemicals – Chemosynthesis
Autotrophs
Live
in remote places.
Producers
Consumers
– “Different food”
Must eat to obtain energy.
Ex – animals, fungi, some protists
Heterotroph
Types of Heterotrophs
– eats plants
Carnivore – eats animals
Omnivore – eats plants and animals
Detritivore – eats detritus (plant and animal
remains)
Herbivore
Ex-
snails, crabs, earthworms
Decomposer
Ex
– breaks down organic matter
– bacteria and fungi
Feeding Relationships
Energy
flows through an ecosystem in one
direction,
from the sun or inorganic compounds
autotrophs (producers) various heterotrophs
(consumers).
Food Chain
A series
of steps in which organisms transfer
energy by eating and being eaten.
i.e. Wheat mouse snake hawk
Food Chain Example
Food Web
Network
of complex interactions formed by
the feeding relationship among the various
organisms in an ecosystem.
Trophic Levels
Each
step in a food chain or food web
1st level = producers
2nd, 3rd, or higher levels = consumers
Usually no more than 5 levels because 90% of
energy is lost at each level.
Ecological Pyramid
A diagram
that shows the relative amounts of
energy or matter contained within each
trophic level in a food chain or food web.
Energy, biomass, and population numbers
can all be represented by a pyramid.
Ecological Pyramid
Cycles of Matter
Recycling
in the Biosphere
Matter is recycled within and between
ecosystems.
Matter moves through an ecosystem in
biogeochemical cycles.
Water Cycle
Carbon
Cycle
Nitrogen Cycle
N2 in Atmosphere
NH3
NO3and NO2-
Nitrogen Cycle
78%
of Earth’s atmosphere is Nitrogen gas = N2
Nitrogen containing products:
Ammonia (NH3)
Nitrate ions (NO3-)
Nitrite ions (NO2-)
Nitrogen is needed for protein and nucleic acid
synthesis
Nitrogen Cycle
Converting
nitrogen gas into ammonia is called
nitrogen fixation.
Only certain types of bacteria can do this.
Plants use the converted products (NH3, NO3- ,&
NO2-) to make plant proteins.
Some bacteria convert nitrates into nitrogen gas
(denitrification).
Phosphorus Cycle
Phosphorus Cycle
Phosphorus
is important for the formation of
DNA and RNA molecules.
Phosphorus is not very common and does not
enter the atmosphere, instead it is found mostly
on land in rock and soil.
Primary Productivity
The
rate at which producers create organic matter.
Determines the size of the community.
Limited by availability of nutrients.
– phosphorus (P), nitrogen (N), potassium (K)
Marine – nitrogen
Fresh water - phosphorus
Land
Algal Bloom