Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClare Wilkinson Modified over 6 years ago
1
Warm Up #8 How are photosynthesis and chemosynthesis different?
2
Ch. 6 Interactions Within Ecosystems
Lesson 2: Energy and Matter
3
Essential Questions How does energy move through an ecosystem?
How does matter move through an ecosystem?
4
Food Energy Producers – organisms that use an outside energy source, such as the Sun, and produce their own food Ex: plants and other organisms that use photosynthesis Chemosynthesis – organisms use chemicals instead of light (some bacteria)
5
Food Energy Consumers – organisms that can’t make their own food
Herbivores – eat producers Omnivores – eat producers and consumers Carnivores – eat herbivores, omnivores, and other carnivores Detritivores – consume the bodies of dead organisms and wastes produced by living organisms Decomposers – microscopic detritivores
6
The Flow of Energy Food Chains – simple model showing how energy moves from producer to 1 or more consumer BrainPOP – Food Chain Food Webs – a model of energy transfer that can show how the food chains in a community are interconnected
7
The Flow of Energy Energy Pyramids – a model that shows the amount of energy available in each link of a food chain There’s always a loss of energy at each level due to heat lost and the animal using some of it The reason why there’s more producers than carnivores in a community BrainPOP – Energy Pyramid
8
Warm Up #9 What are the parts of the nitrogen cycle?
9
Cycling Materials Nitrogen Cycle – describes how nitrogen moves from the atmosphere to the soil into the bodies of living organisms and back to the atmosphere nitrogen gas makes up 78% of Earth’s atmosphere
10
Cycling Materials Water Cycle – water moves from the Earth’s surface into the atmosphere and then back again
11
Cycling Materials Oxygen and Carbon Dioxide Cycles – cellular respiration releases carbon dioxide and plants take that in during photosynthesis releasing oxygen
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.