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Ecology Biomes and Ecosystems
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2 Ecosystems- Matter and Energy
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3 Primary Production http://www.bigelow.org/foodweb/chemosynthesis.jpg
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4 Visualizing Matter & Energy There are a variety of diagrams that help us visualize how energy, biomass, matter, and even number of organisms interact in a particular community or ecosystem. It is important that you look carefully at the diagrams and understand what it says about that ecosystem in terms of matter and/or energy.
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5 Primary Production made by Primary Producers Gross primary productivity is the total amount of energy that producers convert to chemical energy in organic molecules per unit of time. Then the plant must use some energy to supports its own processes with cellular respiration such as growth, opening and closing it’s stomata, etc. What is left over in that same amount of time is net primary productivity which is the energy available to be used by another organism.
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Primary Production 6
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Net Product Pyramid 7
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Trophic Level Human Population 8
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I think this slide should go up with the other pyramid slides even though it’s about populations 9 Biomass Pyramids
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Pyramid of Numbers 10
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Energy Transformation 12
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Biogeochemical Cycle 13
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Nitrogen Cycle 14
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Phosphorus Cycle 15
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Water Cycle 16
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Carbon Cycle 17
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Nutrient Cycling 18
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20 http://www.theenergylibrary.com/files/images/Energy_Allocation.screen.jp g
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21 Now that we have examined the flow of energy and the cycling of matter, let’s examine biomes from the biosphere.
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Aquatic Biome Distribution 22
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Lake Stratification 23
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Zonation 24 Marine Zonation Lake Zonation
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Freshwater 25
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Wetlands & Estuaries 26 Transitional Zones between freshwater and marine. This water tends to be a mix of both depending on its geographic location. The water is often referred to as brackish
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Tide Zone 27 Coral Reef Benthos Marine Biomes Black Smoker
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Terrestrial Biomes 28
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Tropical Rain Forest 29
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Savanna 30
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Desert 31
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Chaparral- also called Scrubland 32
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Temperate Grasslands 33
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Temperate Forest 34
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Taiga Also called Coniferous or Boreal Forest 1. precipitation usually snow 2. conifers like spruce, fir, hemlock 3. soil acidic and forms slowly 35
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Tundra 36
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Biosphere 37
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What happens when a cycle is out of balance? 38 Cycles can have an anthropogenic (man-made) or a non- anthropogenic (natural phenomena) impact that causes a cycle to become unbalanced. Additionally, this may just be the natural state of that ecosystem as a consequence of the availability of nutrients. Two examples involving imbalanced freshwater habitats include: Oligotrophic waters- low primary productivity Eutrophic waters- high primary productivity
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Eutrophic 39 Oligotrophic Lake
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Eutrophication- The Algal Bloom 40
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Experimental Data 41 Use the Station 1 data to calculate the Primary Productivity of a water sample. Report your answer in units of mg Carbon fixed/Liter The needed conversion factors are found on the student formula sheet
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Answers to Previous Slides 42 Station 1 4.2 mg O 2 /L 0.698 = 2.9 mL O 2 /L 2.9 mL O 2 /L 0.526= 1.6 mg Carbon fixed/L
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Created by: Susan Ramsey VASS Notable contributions by S. Meister
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