Unit 10 Ecology Energy, Cycles, & Human Impact By: Brandy McClain.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Unit 1 Ecosystems Cycles of Matter.
Advertisements

Ecology Energy, Cycles, & Human Impact. The sun is the main energy source for life on earth!
Matter and Energy in the Ecosystem
Chapter 5 How Ecosystems Work
Carbon, Nitrogen, and H2O. Energy Flow  Without a constant flow of energy, living systems cannot function. Sunlight is the main energy source for life.
Matter and Energy in the Ecosystem
How Ecosystems Work Chapter 5.
Unit 10 Ecology Energy, Cycles, & Human Impact By: Brandy McClain.
Chapter 3: The Biosphere
1.The ultimate source of energy for life is the SUN 2.Plants use the sun’s energy to manufacture food in a process known as PHOTOSYNTHESIS.
Unit 10: Energy, Cyles in Nature and Human Impact.
Chapter 5 Review.
Unit 10 Ecology Energy, Cycles, & Human Impact. Where does most of the energy in an ecosystem originate from? The sun is the main energy source for life.
Copyright © by Holt, Rinehart and Winston. All rights reserved. ResourcesChapter menu Life Depends on the Sun Energy from the sun enters an ecosystem when.
1 2 Feeding Relationships 3 Energy Flow 4 Chemical Cycles.
Ch 5 Energy Flow through Ecosystems
WARM UP  What do you call the first level of a food pyramid? –Primary consumer –Producer –Secondary consumer –Tertiary consumer.
2. Name two of the four biogeochemical cycles.
Energy Flow in Ecosystems Chapter 3. Life Depends on the Sun Plants, algae, and some bacteria –Photosynthesis –Convert solar energy from sun into food.
Ecology the study of the interactions of living organisms with one another and with their physical environment.
Unit 2 Ecology Ch. 5 How Ecosystems Work. Section 5-1: Energy Flow in Ecosystems.
Ecology Energy, Cycles, & Human Impact
Ecology.
Chapter 2 Principles of Ecology 1.
How Ecosystems Change:
Chapter Five: How Ecosystems Work
Biogeochemical Cycles
Ch 5. How Ecosystems Work Section 1- Energy flow in ecosystems
Ch 3. Matter and Energy in the Ecosystem
Ecology 4.3 Notes.
I. Recycling in the Biosphere
Chapter 13: Ecology.
Energy Flow and Matter Cycles!
Life Depends on the Sun Energy from the sun enters an ecosystem when plants use light energy to make sugar molecules. This happens through a process called.
Chapter 3: The Biosphere
Chapter 55 Ecosystems.
Principles of Ecology: Relationships
3.3 Energy Flow in Ecosystems
The Biosphere.
Environmental Science
Define the term Biotic, then give an example
Ecology Energy, Cycles, & Human Impact
How Ecosystems Work.
Ch. 3 The Biosphere.
Ecology.
Chapter 5 How Ecosystems Work
Chapter 5 How Ecosystems Work.
Chapter 5 Page 98 Trophic Levels.
How Ecosystems Work.
Ecosystems.
Ecology.
3.3 Energy Flow in Ecosystems
Unit 2 Ecology Ch. 5 How Ecosystems Work.
The Carbon Cycle The carbon cycle is the movement of carbon from the nonliving environment into living things and back. Carbon Essential part of proteins,
The Biosphere- Chapter 8
The Biosphere Chapter 3 Mrs. Yanac Biology 1A.
Biology Ecology Jeopardy.
Populations & Communities and Ecosystem Dynamics
CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE 3-1 WHAT IS ECOLOGY?
What is Ecology? The study of how organisms interact with each other and their environment. Environmental conditions include: Biotic factors (living) Abiotic.
Ecology Ch. 3 – The Biosphere.
Chapter 5 How Ecosystems Work
Section 5.1: Energy Flow in Ecosystems What Powers Life?
Ecology.
Chapter 18: Ecology.
Ecology Review #1.
Chapter 3 The Biosphere.
The Biosphere.
Cycles of Matter What are our 4 main biological elements that make up living things??? H, O, N, C Other elements we find… Sulfur and Phosphorus (REMEMBER:
Chapter 3: The Biosphere
Presentation transcript:

Unit 10 Ecology Energy, Cycles, & Human Impact By: Brandy McClain

Where does most of the energy in an ecosystem originate from? The sun is the main energy source for life on earth!

How do organisms get their energy? There are 2 ways: 1. Autotrophs : Organism that captures energy from sunlight or inorganic substances to produce its own food; also called producers.

How do organisms get their energy? There are 2 ways: 2. Heterotrophs : Organism that cannot make its own food and gets its nutrients and energy requirements by feeding on other organisms; also called consumers.

What are 6 different types of consumers? Herbivores : Eat Plants

What are 6 different types of consumers? Carnivores : Eat Meat

What are 6 different types of consumers? Omnivores : Eat plants & meat

What are 6 different types of consumers? Detritivore : Eat organic matter/poop – detritus

What are 6 different types of consumers? Scavenger : Eats animals that are already dead.

What are 6 different types of consumers? Decomposers : Breaks down all the rest (bones, feathers, dead trees…)

What is the difference between a food chain & food web? Food Chain : A simple model that shows how energy flows through an ecosystem.

What is the difference between a food chain & food web? Food Web : A model representing the MANY interconnected food chains and pathways in which energy flows through a group of organisms.

What are trophic levels? Each step in a food chain/web is called a trophic level.

What are ecological pyramids? Ecological Pyramid : Another model used to show how energy flows through ecosystems. Can show: * Amount of Energy * Amount of Biomass * Number of organisms

What are ecological pyramids? Ecological Pyramid : Another model used to show how energy flows through ecosystems. What is this one showing? * Amount of Energy * Amount of Biomass * Number of organisms

What are ecological pyramids? What is this one showing? * Amount of Energy * Amount of Biomass * Number of organisms Biomass: The total mass of living matter at each trophic level.

What are ecological pyramids? What is this one showing? * Amount of Energy * Amount of Biomass * Number of organisms

What is the 1/10 th Rule? * The reason that each trophic level can support only 1/10 of the amount of living tissue as the level below it is because each trophic level harvests only about one tenth of the energy from the level below. * Only 10% of energy moves up to the next trophic level The rest of the energy (90%) is LOST as HEAT Running● Hunting for food Breathing ● Sleeping Reproducing ● Maintaining body heat

What is the 1/10 th Rule? 100,000 J 10,000 J 1,000 J 100 J 10 J 1 J 90% Lost

What are 4 different types of cycles in the biosphere? Nutrient : Is a chemical substance that an organism obtains from the environment to sustain life. Biogeochemical Cycle : Cycles that involves organisms (bio), geological processes (geo), and chemical processes (chemical). 4 Main Types: * Water Cycle * Carbon Cycle * Nitrogen Cycle * Phosphorus Cycle 4 Main Types: * Water Cycle * Carbon Cycle * Nitrogen Cycle * Phosphorus Cycle

What is the Water Cycle? Water is constantly evaporating into the atmosphere from bodies of water, soil, & organisms. Transpiration : When water evaporates from the surface of plants.

What is the Carbon Cycle? * All living things have carbon in them. * Carbon is in proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, nucleic acids. * Carbon dioxide is used by plants to make energy (carbohydrates) * Carbon is released into the atmosphere when we burn fossil fuels. * Carbon can be trapped in the ground as coal, oil, and gas deposits

What is the Nitrogen Cycle? Most of the atmosphere has Nitrogen in it (78%) Organisms CAN’T use Nitrogen GAS!!...so it needs to be “fixed” “Fixing” nitrogen, is turning it from a gas into NITRATES (usable) Nitrogen Fixation : Process in which nitrogen gas is captured and converted into a form plants can use (nitrates)

How is Nitrogen “fixed”? There are 2 main ways to “Fix” nitrogen 1.Lightning changes nitrogen gas into nitrates

How is Nitrogen “fixed”? There are 2 main ways to “Fix” nitrogen 2. Nitrogen Fixing Bacteria changes gas into nitrates Found on roots of Legums only! * Peanuts * Peas * Clover * Beans * and many more…

What is the Phosphorus Cycle? Phosphorus is essential for growth & development When organisms poop or die, they return phosphorus back to the cycle.

What is ecological succession? Ecological Succession - The series of changes that occur in a community over time.

What is ecological succession?

What are the 2 types of ecological succession? 1 st Primary Succession – Occurs when there was no soil for regular plants to grow. Examples: Volcano eruptions & glaciers retreating

What are the 2 types of ecological succession? Volcanoes can create new islands... No soil is Available for plants to grow

What are the 2 types of ecological succession? When glaciers retreat, they leave exposed rock… No soil for plants to grow in.

How is soil created so plants can grow in the area? Pioneer Species : A species that will colonize previously uncolonized land. Are organisms that colonize barren rock or lava during ecological succession. They are the FIRST to arrive! They physically break up the rocks, extract minerals, and provide organic matter that will decompose and become the soil for later successional species.

How is soil created so plants can grow in the area? Example: Lichens Lichens: A symbiotic relationship between a fungus and an algae.

How is soil created so plants can grow in the area? Lichens help break rocks to form soil so that other plants can grow there later.

What is a climax community? Climax Community : Stable, mature ecological community with little change in the composition of species. This is when the community reaches equilibrium, and change very little over time.

2 nd Secondary Succession : Orderly change that occurs in a place soil remains after a community of organisms has been removed. What are the 2 types of ecological succession?

When a disturbance changes a community without removing the soil, secondary succession will follow. What are the 2 types of ecological succession?

What are some examples of secondary succession? Examples of Secondary Succession –Forest Fire –Farm land –Flood –Hurricane –Logging Occurs after a climax community has been destroyed… soil is already there.

Can there be too much of a good thing? YES! Eutrophication : Occurs when fertilizers, animal waste, sewage, or other substances rich in Nitrogen & Phosphorous flows into waterways, causing algae growth.

What is biomagnification? Biological Magnification : Is the increasing concentration of toxic substances in organisms as trophic levels increase in a food chain or food web.

What is an example of the use of a toxin that caused biomagnification? DDT: A pesticide used between the 1940s s

We sprayed DDT EVERYWHERE! What is an example of the use of a toxin that caused biomagnification?

DDT causes bird eggs to be brittle, and break when parents try to sit on them to incubate them What is an example of the use of a toxin that caused biomagnification?

Acid Rain When fossil fuels are burned in industrial processes, sulfur dioxide is released into the atmosphere. Automobile exhaust releases nitrogen oxides into the air. In the atmosphere, these compounds react with water to form sulfuric acid & nitric acid, which eventually fall back to earth in the form of “acid rain”.

Effects of Acid Rain

Habitat Destruction Clearing land for development – For example, deforestation of tropical rain forests.

Habitat Disruption Removal of Keystone Species K

Keystone Species

A keystone species is a species that has a disproportionately large effect on its environment relative to its abundance. Such species play a critical role in maintaining the structure of an ecosystem.

Introduced (Invasive) Species Southeastern US – Examples: Fire ants, kudzu Great Lakes region – Example: Zebra Mussels

Kudzu

Zebra Mussels

Global Warming

Increased carbon emissions from vehicles, industrial pollution, power generating plants have increased the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere This has occurred since the Industrial Revolution, but has recently seemed to speed up. Is this just part of a natural cycle, or will it keep going?

Ice Cores

Global Warming

The End