Ecosystem: unit that
includes all the living parts
(plants and animals) and
the non living (physical)
parts (soil and climate) in
an area.
Organisms in
ecosystems can be
classed as producers,
consumers or
decomposers
Producer: an
organism that
uses sunlight
energy to
produce food
Consumer: an organism that
uses that gets its energy by
eating other organism – it eats
producers or other consumers!
FOOD CHAIN: shows what eats what!
FOOD WEB: shows
lots of food chains and
how they overlap
Decomposer: an organism
that gets its energy by
breaking down dead material.
Bacteria and Fungi for
example!
When dead material is decomposed,
nutrients are released into the soil. The
nutrients are then taken up from the soil
by plants. The plants may be eaten by
consumers. When the plants or
consumers die, the nutrients are returned
to the soil. The transfer of nutrients is
called the nutrients cycle
A change in one part of the ecosystem has an impact on other
parts - eg. hot, dry summers or having a hedgerow trimmed
Global Distributions
Tropical
Rainforests
Found near
EQUATOR
AREAS
Central America, Amazon, central Africa and south east Asia
Climate
hot, wet climate with no definite seasons
Soil
isn't very fertile as
heavy rainfall washes
nutrients away, nutrients
at the surface due to
decayed leaf fall, but
this layer is very thin as
decay is fast in the
warm, moist conditions
Vegetation Structure
Three tree layers and a shrub layer
canopy 30m trees
emergents 40m branches most light
undercanopy 15 m
Shrub 10m - little light
Plant Adaptation
thick waxy leaves that have pointed tips - run off - adapt to heavy rainfall
tall trees have buttress roots to support trunks in very shallow soil
Trees = deciduous - drop leaves in drier periods to reduce water loss
Hot Deserts
Found - 15 and 30
degrees north and south of
the equator - less rainfall
AREAS
North Africa, the
Middle East, South
West USA, large
parts of Australia
Climate
Little rainfall - rain once
every 2 or 3 years. hot
days (45 degrees) cold
nights 5 degrees
Soil
shallow with a coarse,
gravelly texture. hardly
any leaf fall so soil isn't
very fertile
Vegetation
Structure
Plant growth is sparse due
to lack of rainfall. Plants
that do grow include cacti
and thorn bushes
Plant Adaptation
roots are extremely long
to reach deep water
Cacti have
swollen
stems to
store water
and have
thick waxy
skin to
reduce
water loss
Cacti have small, spiky leaves
to reduce water loss
Temperate Deciduous Forests
Found between 40 and
60 degrees north and
south of the equator - 4
distinct seasons
AREAS
Most of Europe,
South east USA,
China and Japan
Climate
4 distinct seasons -
rainfall all year round
Soil
The solid is deep
and very fertile
because theres
think layer of leaf
fall
Vegetation Structure
three main plant layers
30 m - top layer (oak)
Shrub layer - 20m (hawthorn)
undergrowth 5m - (brambles)
Plant Adaptation
trees are deciduous -
reduces water loss from
leaves in months where
water is harder to get
Tropical
Rainforest
Deforestation
Farming
Mineral Extraction
Commercial Logging
Population pressure
Road Building
Deforestation
Environmental
Impacts
fewer trees =
fewer habitats
no trees to hold solid together -
heavy rain washes away the soil
(soil erosion)
soil from
deforestation is
washed into rivers
without trees = no leaf fall+ no
nutrients supply to the soil = less
fertile
Trees remove CO2 = more C02 in the atmosphere = adds to Global
Warming
Social Impacts
quality of life for
locals improves as
more jobs
Native tribes
forced out
causing conflict
Economic Impacts
Logging, farming and mining create jobs
Money made from selling timber, mining and commercial farming
Political Impacts
Theres pressure
from foreign
governments to
stop deforestation