Ecosystem-net-primary
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Transcript Ecosystem-net-primary
Introduction to
Ecosystems
2/13/12
What is an individual?
One of a species.
What is a species?
A group of individuals who have similar enough DNA
that they are able to produce viable offspring.
What is a population?
Several individuals of the same
species that live in the same area.
What is a community?
Populations that interact with one
another.
What is an ecosystem?
An ecosystem a
community of biotic
(living) organisms
that interact with
abiotic (non-living)
organisms in an
interdependent
system.
What is a biome?
A type of ecosystem that shares
similar climate, and components.
What are primary
producers?
An Autotroph; A species that
creates its own food through
photosynthesis or from reduced
inorganic compounds.
What are consumers?
Organisms that eat other organisms
to obtain energy.
What are decomposers?
Organisms that obtain energy by
feeding on the dead remains of
other organisms or waste products.
Get nutrients and live on dead organic matter
(habitat)
What is are trophic
levels?
Trophic levels are organisms that obtain
their energy from the same source.
Energy moves through ecosystems in the form of light,
or chemical energy.
Usually no more than 4-5 trophic levels, due to 2nd law
of Thermodynamics.
What is an herbivore?
An organism that eats plants.
What is an omnivore?
An organism that eats plants and
animals.
What is a carnivore?
An organism that eats other
animals.
What is a predator?
An organism that kills and
consumes other organisms.
What is a prey?
An organism that is consumed by a
predator.
What is the carrying
capacity of a population?
When a population stabilizes at a maximum
number of individuals that can be supported by
resources available in the habitat over a sustained
period of time.
How does the carbon
cycle relate to the food
chain?
Carbon (and other nutrients) move
up the food chain, carrying with it
stored energy.
What is parasitism?
A long term relationship between two organisms that
is beneficial to one organism (the parasite), but
detrimental to the other (the host).
(+/-)
Example: Wasps that lay eggs in caterpillars, malaria
causing plasmodium, misquitos, Mycobacterium
(causes tuberculosis), lice, tapeworms
What is mutualism?
A type of symbiotic relationship
between two species that is
beneficial to both species.
(+/+)
Examples: Bees and flowers, Treehoppers and ants,
Lichen = algae+fungus
What is commensalism?
A relationship in which one
organism benefits and one the
other neither benefits or is
harmed by the interaction.
(0/+)
Barnacles on whales, Remora sharks hitch
a ride on larger sharks, clown fish and sea
anemones
What is amensalism?
A relationship in which one
organism is harmed and the
other neither benefits or is
harmed.
(0/-)
Penecillin kills bread mold, humans
and cattle or sheep trample the grass,
Black walnut trees secrete chemicals
that kill other plants, redwoods have
tannic acid in their leaves/needles that
make the soil too acidic for other plants
to grow
What is
competition?
A relationship in which both species
are negatively affect by the outcome
of the interaction.
(-/-)
What is an ecological
niche?
A specific role or job that an
individual has in an ecosystem.
What is a keystone
species?
A species that has an exceptionally great impact on the
surrounding community.
Pisaster (sea star), sea otter
Net Primary
Productivity
What is photosynthesis?
A series of chemical reactions and electron transfer
events that converts the energy of light into chemical
energy stored in glucose.
Equation for photosynthesis:
6CO2 + 6H20 + light energy C6H12O6 +6O2
Why is dissolved oxygen
a measure of
productivity?
Dissolved oxygen is produced in
photosynthesis.
Dissolved oxygen is consumed in cellular
respiration.
What is gross primary
productivity?
The amount of biomass produced by photosynthesis
per unit area over a specific time period.
What is Respiration?
Metabolizing glucose (carbon compound) into
chemical energy using oxygen.
What is Net primary
productivity?
The Net primary productivity= gross primary
productivity - respiration