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Week 9: Energy Flows

Week 9: Energy Flows. Chapter 14. WEEK 9: Energy Flows. LEARNING OUTCOMES By the end of this week, you should: Be able to describe the ways in which energy flows through ecosystems. Recognise that matter cycles within ecosystems.

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Week 9: Energy Flows

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  1. Week 9: Energy Flows Chapter 14

  2. WEEK 9: Energy Flows LEARNING OUTCOMES By the end of this week, you should: • Be able to describe the ways in which energy flows through ecosystems. • Recognise that matter cycles within ecosystems. • Understand the key roles of producers and decomposers in ecosystems. • Become aware of trophic levels. • Give examples of biochemical cycles.

  3. What Am I? Discuss a definition for these 8 words with the person next to you. Check your understanding by choosing the correct definition from the next slide. • Producer • Consumer • Herbivore • Detritivore • Carnivore • Food chain • Food web • Sun

  4. What am I? • I make my own food using sunlight and raw materials. • I obtain my food by eating other living organisms. • I only eat plant material. • I obtain my food only from animals. • I eat dead plant or animal material. • I am a simple diagram showing the flow of energy as one organism eats another. • I am a more complicated (and more realistic) version of this diagram. • I am the original source of energy for all living things.

  5. New key terms for your glossary! • Producers • Primary consumers • Secondary consumers • Tertiary consumers • Trophic level

  6. What you need to know... • Energy can exist in many forms. • All ecosystems require an energy source. • The energy input into ecosystems is typically the radiant energy of sunlight. • Energy flows through an ecosystem and must be continually supplied. • Energy is captured and brought into an ecosystem by producers. 1 2 3 4 5

  7. What you need to know... (cont) • Producers transform radiant energy to chemical energy in organic matter. • Organisms in an ecosystem can be classified into different trophic levels. 6 7 7 8 Complete Quick-check questions on page 446 – Nature of Biology

  8. Energy Flows How do we lose energy to the environment? What is the effect of maintaining a constant body temperature?

  9. Energy is lost at each stage because… 1 • Not all organisms at one stage are eaten by the stage above. • Some energy is used for respiration (to maintain body heat). • Some energy is used to make heat and for movement (muscle contraction). • Some energy is used to produce biomoleculesand cells. • Some energy is used to transmit nervousimpulses. • Some material is passed as waste. 2 3 4 5 6 6 7

  10. The rule of thumb: the useful chemical energy leaving one trophic level is typically only 10% of the energy entering that level.

  11. Which of these needs to eat more food? Why?

  12. Summary • The amounts of ……………… and ……………… contained in living things always gets less at each stage of a ……………… from ……………… onwards. Biomass is lost as ……………… products and used to produce ……………… in ……………… . This is used for ……………… and to control ……………… . Only a small amount is used for ……………… . waste growth energy body temperature biomass plants respiration energy movement food chain

  13. Answers • The amounts of biomass and energy contained in living things always gets less at each stage of a food chain from plants onwards. Biomass is lost as waste products and used to produce energy in respiration. This is used for movement and to control body temperature. Only a small amount is used for growth.

  14. Showing Energy Flows Food Chains and Webs

  15. Food Chains Where does the energy originate from? What happens to this energy as you go through the food chain? What do the arrows represent? Where is energy lost?

  16. Food Web Complete the Quick-check questions – page 452

  17. Ecological Pyramids Numbers, Biomass, Energy

  18. Pyramid of Numbers • The population of each organism in a food chain can be shown in a sort of bar chart called a pyramid of numbers. • The more organisms there are, the wider the bar. • The producer in the food chain always goes at the bottom of the pyramid of numbers.

  19. clover snail thrush hawk • Think about this food chain: • Clover is a plant and it is the producer in this food chain. Its bar goes at the bottom of the pyramid:

  20. Pyramid of Numbers • Energy is lost to the surroundings as we go from one level to the next, so there are fewer organisms at each level in this food chain. • A lot of clover is needed to support the snail population. • A thrush eats lots of snails, and a hawk eats lots of thrushes, so the population of hawks is very small. • Sometimes the pyramid of numbers doesn't look like a pyramid at all. • This could happen if the producer is a large plant such as a tree, or if one of the animals is very small. • Still, whatever the situation, the producer always goes at the bottom of the pyramid.

  21. For example: 1) 2) An oak tree is very large so many insects can feed on it. Fleas are very small and lots of them can feed on a rabbit.

  22. Pyramids of Biomass • Biomass is the mass of living material in an animal or plant. • Biomass is made by plants from sunlight energy. • It is often measured as the dry mass of biological material in grams. • Biomass decreases as a food chain progresses (at each trophic level). • A pyramid of biomass gives a rough idea of the amount of biomass passed on at each stage.

  23. Pyramids of Energy • Shows the amount of energy input at each trophic level in a given area of an ecosystem over an extended period of time (usually one year). • The flow of energy is always reduced from one trophic level to the next, so a pyramid of energy is never inverted.

  24. Sketch pyramids for the following food chains: stinging nettles  caterpillars robin Number Biomass

  25. Sketch pyramids for the following food chains: Number Biomass marine plants  small fish  large fish  seals  polar bear

  26. Complete Quick-check questions page 454 Complete the worksheet

  27. Biogeochemical Cycles The Carbon Cycle

  28. The carbon cycle • How did the carbon get into this piece of coal? What would happen if we burnt it?

  29. Key terms • Photosynthesis • Respiration • Decomposition • Detritus • Producers • Consumers • Excretion

  30. The Carbon Cycle • All the time, a relatively small amount of available carbon is cycled between living things and their environment. • All of the main molecules that make up our bodies (carbohydrates, fats, proteins and DNA) are based on carbon atoms combined with other elements. • The amount of carbon on Earth is fixed. Some is found in fossil fuels and is only released when they are burnt. • Limestone and chalk contain huge amounts of carbon. • Found in CO2 in air. • Also dissolved in water. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 7 8 9

  31. Biogeochemical Cycles The Nitrogen Cycle

  32. Key terms • Nitrogen-fixation • Nitrification • Denitrification • Decomposition

  33. Biogeochemical Cycles The Water Cycle

  34. Key terms • Precipitation • Evaporation • Transpiration • Percolation • Ground water • Return flow • Surface run-off

  35. Bioaccumulation (Biomagnification)

  36. Bioaccumulation • Chemical enters ecosystem and into food chain. • If not readily broken down by organisms (ie. it is a persistent chemical), it accumulates in their tissues. • It becomes progressively concentrated as it enters organisms at higher trophic levels.

  37. Complete the Quick-check questions on page 467

  38. Complete the poster task on biochemical cycles

  39. Green plants use carbon dioxide in photosynthesis True

  40. Combustion removes carbon from the atmosphere False – combustion releases carbon dioxide gas

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