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Published byKatrina Craig Modified over 8 years ago
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Photosynthesis – energy from the sun enters an ecosystem when a plant uses sunlight to make sugar molecules. From Producers to Consumers ◦ A producer is an organism that makes its own food. Also called autotrophs. ◦ A consumer is an organism that gets its energy by eating other organisms. Also called heterotrophs. ◦ All organisms get their energy from the sun. An exception to the rule: deep ocean ecosystems ◦ Exist in total darkness – photosynthesis does not occur Bacteria – use hydrogen sulfide (thermal vents) to produce food.
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Herbivores – plant eaters – rabbit Carnivores – flesh eaters – tiger Omnivores – plant and flesh eaters – bear Decomposers – break down dead organisms – bacteria and fungi
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The process of breaking down food to yield energy. Reverse the equation for photosynthesis. Sugar and oxygen yield carbon dioxide, water and energy. Use this energy to walk, breathe, play sports, ride bikes Excess energy is stored as fat.
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Each time an organism eats another organism, a transfer of energy occurs. Food chain – a sequence in which energy is transferred from one organism to the next as each organism eats another organism. Food Web – shows many feeding relationships that are possible in an ecosystem. Trophic levels – each step through which energy is transferred in a food chain.
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Energy Pyramids – each layer represents one trophic level. How Energy Loss Affects an Ecosystem 1.Because so much energy is lost = fewer organisms at higher trophic levels Zebras and other herbivores outnumber lions on the African savanna by about 1,000 to 1. 2.Loss of energy limits number of trophic levels Ecosystems rarely have more than 4 or 5 trophic levels
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Plants takes CO 2 from atmosphere and make carbohydrates during photosynthesis – consumers eat producers – undergo cellular respiration some carbon released back into atmosphere as CO 2. ◦ Fossil fuels are made up of carbon compounds from the bodies of organisms that died millions of year ago. How Humans Affect the Carbon Cycle – burning fossil fuels leads to increased levels of CO 2 – global warming
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Nitrogen Cycle 1.Plants and animals need nitrogen to make protein. Bacteria on the roots of plants change nitrogen in air to useful form for plant. 2.Living things die – decompose – nitrogen to nitrates 3.Nitrates left in soil – used by plants as source of nitrogen 4.Some nitrates in soil changed back into nitrogen gas by plants. Released into air. 5.Cycle repeats
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Ecological Succession – a gradual process of change and replacement of some or all of the species in a community. ◦ Primary Succession – occurs in places where an ecosystem has never existed. Rocks or sand dunes ◦ Secondary Succession – the process that begins in an ecosystem when something has disturbed or destroyed the natural community. Abandoned farmlands, burned or cut forests, heavily polluted streams, floods
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◦ Pioneer species – first to establish itself at the start of succession. Colonizes area – breaks down rock – forms soil – dies – adds nutrients to soil. ◦ Climax community – one that forms in last stages of succession Oak-hickory forest of PA
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1988 – lightning strikes started fires ◦ Burned about 36% of forest – 2.2 million acres ◦ Secondary succession occurred
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Erupted in May 1980 Burned thousands of acres of surrounding forest. Secondary succession
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