Transcript Ecology
Ecology and the Environment
(Chapter 22)
Background and Historical Development
Attributes of Ecological Systems
Selected Issues – Applied Ecology
Take Home Messages
Take-Home Messages
Functional unit in ecology is the ecosystem; it is analogous to the
cell
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties is applicable to the
study of ecology
Energetics of ecosystems is driven by (i) principles of
thermodynamics (1st and 2nd Laws) and (ii) nature in which
organisms acquire and utilize energy; result is a predictable pattern
among all ecosystems embodied in the concept of trophic levels
Ecosystems are not static but change over time in predictable and
recurrent ways; this change is called succession
Energy passes through ecosystems unidirectionally, whereas
elements/materials cycle throughout ecosystems
Biodiversity, the number and distribution of species, is an
important feature of ecosystems
Ecologyand the Environment
Background and Historical Development
Attributes of Ecological Systems
Selected Issues – Applied Ecology
Take Home Messages
Background and Historical Context
Discipline of ecology
Evolution of the science
Orientation by type of system
Discipline
1950’s: emergence of the discipline
Stimulus: technological changes
Harnessing the atom (radioactive elements)
Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring
Two sub-disciplines
Basic ecology
Structure and function of ecosystems
Applied ecology
Human-altered and “managed” ecosystems
Evolution
Early to mid 1900
> 1950’s
descriptive natural history
Experimentally and hypothesis driven research
> 2000
Experimentally and hypothesis driven research
Mathematical modeling at a global scale
Types of Ecosystems
Natural ecosystems
Human-dominated ecological systems
Grasslands, unmanaged forests, wetlands, rivers, etc.
Key: ecological systems that are largely unmanaged for human
use
Agroecosystems, managed forest (timber), fish farms,
urban/suburban landscapes, etc.
Key: ecosystems that are harvested by humans and are
subsidized (fertilizer, water, pest management, etc.)
Attributes in common
Same basic structure and function (principles are the same)
Attributes
Ecosystem (ecological system)
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties
Structure of ecosystems
Energetics of ecosystems (flow of energy)
Biodiversity
Cycles of materials and elements
Ecology
Background and Historical Development
Attributes of Ecological Systems
Selected Issues – Applied Ecology
Take Home Messages
Attributes
Ecosystem
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties
Structure of ecosystems
Energetics of ecosystems (flow of energy)
Biodiversity
Cycles of materials and elements
Ecosystems
Ecological systems – ecosystem
Components
Biotic components
All living organisms – plants, animals and
microbes
Abiotic components
All non-living components – soil, atmosphere,
water, climate, etc.
Ecosystem
Fundamental unit of ecology; analogous to that of
the cell
Hierarchy Theory and Emergent
Properties
Earth
Biosphere
Biome
Ecosystem
Community
Population
Organisms
Terms
Population: assemblage of individuals of the
same species in the same area
Community: assemblage of all species in a given
area
Biome: large regional units of several different
types of ecosystems existing in same general
area
Biosphere: all of the Earth’s biomes at the
global scale (shuttle frame of reference)
Major Biomes
Emergent Properties
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties
Relate to ecology
Emergent properties
Water (combination of H and O)
Sodium chloride (combination of Na and Cl)
Mixes species forest (combination of 50+ different
species of trees, shrubs, microbes and animals)
Unanticipated properties
Attributes
Ecosystem (ecological system)
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties
Structure of ecosystems
Energetics of ecosystems (flow of energy)
Biodiversity
Cycles of materials and elements
Structure of Ecosystems
Structure is underpinned by flow of energy
Autotrophs: fix energy from sun - plants
Heterotrophs: consume energy in C-C bonds
Primary consumers - herbivores
Secondary consumers – carnivores and omnivores
Tertiary consumers – saprovores (dead organic matter)
All organisms are classified by their source of energy
Trophic Levels of an Ecosystem
Attributes
Ecosystem (ecological system)
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties
Structure of ecosystems
Energetics of ecosystems (flow of energy)
Biodiversity
Cycles of materials and elements
Energetics of Ecosystems
Common theme/attribute to all ecosystems
Linkage to physics
1st Law of Thermodynamics (conservation)
2nd Law of Thermodynamics (entropy increases)
Highly order state of all ecosystems is function of
transforming energy in trophic structure
Thermodynamics: dissipation of energy is most
common in form of heat and respiration
Keys to Energetics
Energy flows through ecosystems
unidirectionally
As energy flows, amount of energy available to
do work (potential energy in C-C bonds)
decreases
Flow of energy places constraints on the
number of organisms that can exist in higher
trophic levels
Quantification of Energy Flow
10%
2nd Consumers
10%
10 Consumers
10%
1%
Autotrophs
Sun
Respiration and heat
30 Consumers
Trophic Levels of an Ecosystem
Attributes
Ecosystem (ecological system)
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties
Structure of ecosystems
Energetics of ecosystems (flow of energy)
Biodiversity
Cycles of materials and elements
Biodiversity
Diversity of world’s biota: ~100 Million species,
of which 1.5 Million have been catalogued
Biodiversity: measurement of the diversity of
flora, fauna and microbes
Species richness (number of species)
Biodiversity
Biodiversity: Arid Landscaspes
Biodiversity: Significance
Humanistically: intuitively value (appreciate diversity of
life forms)
Ecologically: evidence that biodiversity is related to
stability and functioning of ecosystems
Declining biodiversity with human population
Attributes
Ecosystem (ecological system)
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties
Structure of ecosystems
Energetics of ecosystems (flow of energy)
Biodiversity
Cycles of materials and elements
Cycling of Elements and Materials
Unlike energy, elements and materials cycle
throughout ecosystems and they are re-used
Examples: water, carbon, nitrogen
Path is commonly circular passing from
biosphere to geosphere to hydrosphere to
atmosphere
Basic Cycling Model
Atmosphere
Biosphere
Hydrosphere
Geosphere
Cycling of Elements: Nitrogen
Ecology
Background and Historical Development
Attributes of Ecological Systems
Selected Issues – Applied Ecology
Take Home Messages
Human Population Growth
o
Selected Issues in Ecology
Acid rain
Biodiversity and habitat loss
Climate change – a global issue
Ozone and particulate matter in the atmosphere
Stratospheric ozone and UV-B radiation
Tropospheric ozone and human health
PM and human health
Take-Home Messages
Functional unit in ecology is the ecosystem; it is analogous to the
cell
Hierarchy theory and emergent properties is applicable to the study
of ecology
Energetics of ecosystems is driven by (i) principles of
thermodynamics (1st and 2nd Laws) and (ii) nature in which
organisms acquire and utilize energy; result is a predictable pattern
among all ecosystems embodied in the concept of trophic levels
Ecosystems are not static but change over time in predictable and
recurrent ways; this change is called succession
Energy passes through ecosystems unidirectionally, whereas
elements/materials cycle throughout ecosystems
Biodiversity, the number and distribution of species, is an
important feature of ecosystems