Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Ecology
- Species, communities and ecosystems
- Species
- Species are groups of organism that can
potentially interbreed to produce fertile
offspring
- Members of a species may be
reproductively isolated in separatelocations
- Species can have either an autotrophic or
heterotrophic method nutrition
- Autotrophic: Some organisms make their
own carbon compounds from carbon dixide
and other simple substance, Which means
self feeding
- Heterotrophs: Some organsims obtain their
carbon compounds from other organisms, which
means feeding on others
- A consumer are heterotrophs that feed on living organisms
by ingestion Eg. Mosquito feeding of human blood
- Detritivores are heterotrophs that obtain organic
nutrience from detritus by internal digestion
- A Saprotoph are heterotrophs that obtain
organic nutrience from dead organic matter by
external digestion
- Autotrophs and heterotrophs obtain
inorganic nutrients from abiotic
environments
- Encosystems
- Ecosytems have the potential to be substainable
over long periods of time
- The supply of inorganic nutrients is maintained by nutrients cycling
- Communities
- A community is formed by populations of different species
living together and interacting with each other
- A communtiy forms an ecosystem by its interaction with
the abiotic environment
- A population are a group of the same species living ;in the same area at the same time
- Energy Flow
- Most ecosystems rely on a supply of energy
from sunlight
- Light energy is converted to chemcial energy in
carbon compounds by photosynthesis
- Chemical enegy in carbon compounds flows
through food chains by means of feeding
- Energy is released from carbon compounds by
respiration is used in living organisms and converted to
heat
- Living organisms cannot convert heat to other forms of energy
- Heat is lost from ecosystems
- Energy losses between trophic levels
restrict the length of food chains and
the biomass of higher trophic levels
- Carbon cycle
- In aquatic ecosystems carbon is
present as dissolved carbon dioxide
and hydogen carbonate ions
- Carbon dioxide diffuses from the atmosphere or water into autotophs
- Autrotrophs convert carbon dioxide
into carbohydrates and other
carbon compounts
- Carbon dioxide is produced by respiration and
diffuses out of organisms into water or the
atmosphere
- Methane is produced from organic matter in anaerobic
conditions by Methanogen archaeans and some
diffuses into the atmosphere or accumulates in thee
ground
- Methane is oxidized to carbon
dioxide and water in the
atmosphere
- Peat forms when organic matter is not fully decomposed because
of acidic and/or anaerobic conditions in waterlogged soils
- Partially decomposed organic matter from past ecological erres
was converted into coal or into oil and gas that accumulated in
porous rock
- Carbon dioxide is produced by the
combustion of biomass and fossilized organic
matter
- Coal, Oil and gas are fossilized organic matter
- Animals such as reef-building coral have hard parts that are decomposed of calcium
carbonate and can become fossilized in limestone
- Climate change
- Carbon dioxide and water vapour are the most sigificant green house
gases
- Other gases include methane and nitrogen oxide, they have
less impact
- The impact of a gas depends on it's ability to absorb long
wave radiation as well as on its concentration in the
atmosphere
- The warmed earth emits longer wave
radiation
- Longer wave radiation is absorbed by greenhouse gases that
retain the heat in the atmosphere
- Global temperatures and climate patterns are influenced by
concentration of greenhouse gases
- Correlation between global temperatures and carbon dioxide
concentrations of earth
- There is a correlation between rising
atmospheric concentrations of carbon dioxide
since the 18th century
- Increases in atmospheric carbon dioxide is due to buring of
fossil fuels