Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Ecosystems
- Organism require certain
elements to build their bodies
and metabolic process
- Phosphorus
- -Plants: take up phosphates
dissolved in soil water.
-Aquatic producers: in water
-Animals: by eating producers
or any other animal
- -Component of ATP
-Phospholipids
-Nucleic acids
- Ecosystem: Array of organisms and
abiotic things, interacting through
a one flow energy and cycling of
nutrients
- Primary producers
(autotrophos) Energy from
nonliving things
- Consumers (heterotrophos) By
feeding on tissues wastes and
remains of producers.
- Consumers: -Herbivores:
plants -Carnivores: meet.
- Parasites: living host
-Omnivores:plants and
animals -Destritivores:
small particles of organic
material -Descomposers:
organic wastes(bacteria
and fungi)
- THE NATURE OF
ECOSYSTEMS
- Trophic Estrucutre of
Ecosystems
- Trophic levels: hierarchy of
feeding relationship position in
Food Chain
- Food Chain:sequence of steps of
energy
- 1st level: Primary
producers: obtain energy from a nonlivingsource.-sunlight-
- 2nd level: Primary consumers: Get
energyand carbonby feeding on
tissues and wastes
- 3rd level: Second
consumers: feeding on insects and tissues
- 4th level: Third
consumers: feeding on other animals
- THE NATURE OF FOOD WEBS
- Food Web: food chains of an
ecosystem cross-connect
- Two division:
- Graning food web
- Primary Producers eating by
Primary Consumers
- Detretial food web
- Energy producers hows to
detritivores
- Number of tranfers are
limited.
- Energy captured by producers
passes through no more than 4 or
5 trophic levels
- -Shortest:
conditions
vary widely
-Longer:
weathers has
no effect
-Complex:
large variety
of herbivores.
-Fewer: more
carnivores
- ENERGY FLOW
- System's gross primary
production: energy captured
by producers
- Net primary production:
portion used for growth and
reproduction
- Ecological pyramids:
trophic structure
- Biomass pyramids: dry weight
of all organisms
- Energy pyramid: how amount
of energy diminishes as it is
transferred through an
ecosystem
- Ecological
Efficiency
- Factors that influence the efficiency of tranfers
- E.E is higher in aquatic ecosystems
- Some components of a body
may be unavailable to a
consumer
- Some is lost as
metabolic heat
- BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES
- An element essential to life moves
between a community and its
enviroment through the living
component.
- THE WATER CYCLE
- Moves water from the ocean to the atmosphere, onto
land, and back to the ocean
- -Liquid
-Evaporation
-Condenses
-Precipitation
- Watershed: area in whict
all precipitation drains
into a specific waterway.
- Soil water: some water
remains between soil
particles
- Aquifers: water that drains
through soil layers often
collect
- Groundwater: soil water
and soil aquifers
- Runoff: water that flows over
soil into streams
- Movement of water
- Movement of:
-carbon
-nitrogen
-phosphorus
- Limited
fresh water
- Majority of Earth's
water is too salty to
drink or irrigales
crops
- THE CARBON CYCLE
- Atmospheric cycle:
biogeochemical cycle
in which a gaseous
form of an element
plays a significant
role
- Terrestial Carbon cycle
- Land plants take up CO2 to carry out photosynthesis
- Soil Carbin consist of
humus and
organisms
- Bacteria and fungi
decompose humus and
release carbon dioxide
- Marine Carbon Cycle
- Bicarbonate HCO3
- Organisms
release
CO2
by
aerobic
respiration
- Carbon Fossil Fuels
- PHOSPHORUS CYCLE
- Movement of
phosphorus among
Earth's rocks and
waters
- Limiting factor
on plant growth
- It's a component of all
nucleic acids and
phospholipids
- NITROGEN CYCLE
- Most organisms
cannot use this
gaseous form
- DNA
RNA
Proteins
- Nitrogen fixation:
incorporation of nitrogen
from nitrogen gas into
ammonia
- Bacteria break the bonds in N2.
Form ammonia, then dissolves to
form ammonium NH4
- Plants take ammonium
from soil water
- Consumer obtain
nitrogen by eating
them
- Bacteria and fungal
descomposer return
ammonium to the soil
by a ammonification
- Ammonification: breakdown of
nitrogen-containing organic material
resulting in the release of ammonia
and ammonium ions
- Nitrification: converts ammonium to nitrates
- Denitrification: ecosystems lose nitrogen
- Disruption of the Nitrogen Cycle
- Burning fossil fuels and use of
industrially produced trinitrogen
fertilizers have altered the nitrogen
cycle
- Nitrous Oxide
- N2O can remain in the
atmosphere for more than
100 years
- Nitrate Pollution NO3
- Water pollutant
- Ingest nitrate has negative effects.
-Cancer -Respiratory infections. -Diabetes
- GREEN HOUSE GASES AND
CLIMATE CHANGE
- Green house effect: ability to absorb and
reradiate heat energy. Helps to keep Earth
warm enough
- Changing Carbon Dioxide
Concentrations
- CO2 annual level in increasing
- Analysis of ices cores has provided a
history that extends back 800,00 years
- Also fossil foraminiferan
shells helped in the
research
- Global climate change
- A long-term of Earth's
climate. Example global
warming
- Intergovermental Panel on Climate concluded
that is very likelly that a human-induced
increase in atmospheric greenhouse gases is
responsible for the current warming trend