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You Need To Learn To Laugh At Yourself In Order to Survive. Have Fun And Enjoy Life.. A BCC Professor. This year's class is really in for it.. 30 years of teaching can get to you.. It makes one really go ape.. The Biosphere. In general, it consists of all the species on Earth, along with their environments and considered as one vast ecosystem.Separate local ecosystems which are individual units of sustainability are interconnected and form the biome and the biosphere..
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1. Environmental Sciences Towards a Sustainable Future Chapter 2 Ecosystems: What They Are
Version 1.2 Term 20051
3. A BCC Professor
4. 30 years of teaching can get to you.
5. It makes one really go ape.
6. The Biosphere
7. Ecosystem Services and Functions
8. Important Definitions Biosphere the overall ecosystem of the earth.The sum total of all the biomes and smaller ecosystems.
Biome a group of ecosystems that are related by having a similar type of vegetation governed by similar climatic conditions.
Ecosystem a group of plants, animals, and other organisms interacting with each other and their environment.
Deserts, grasslands, tundra, and deciduous forests and tropical rain forests
9. What Are Ecosystems? A grouping of plants, animals and microbes occupying an explicit unit of space and interacting with each other and their environment.
Environment a combination of all things and factors external to the individual or population of organisms in question.
10. The Authors Style of Presentation
11. More about Authors Style of Presentation
12. Biotic - A really important term. Biotic living
Biotic community includes all vegetation and animals from the largest to the smallest including microbes.
Biotic Communities
The plant community
The animal community
The microbial community
13. More Important Terms Abiotic non living factors which support or limit a biotic community.
Water, temperature, salinity, etc.
Species entirety of a population that can interbred and produce fertile offspring.
Population individuals of a certain species that live within a given area.
Ecology study of ecosystems and the interactions that occur among organisms and between organisms and their environment.
14. Autotrophs and HeterotrophsTwo Categories of the Biosphere The distinction is made on the basis of whether they do or do not produce the organic compounds they need to survive. (Compounds containing carbon.)
Autotrophs do produce organic compounds
Green plants and chemosynthetic bacteria
Heterotrophs do not produce organic compounds
Must feed on organic materials
Cattle, deer, humans, etc.
Major Categories
Consumers animals such as cows, sheep, wolves, humans, etc.
Detritus feeders (decomposers)
15. How Ecosystems Are Formed?Given a specific set of conditions (moisture and temperature), certain plants and animals will develop. This can predict if there is life on other planets.
16. Transitions of Ecosystems Ecotones on land
17. Land to Aquatic ecosystems ecotone
18. 3 Views of the Biotic Structure of an EcosystemThe text looks at the same material 3 different ways. Dont get confused.
Food chain
Who eats who and in what order
Nuts are eaten by squirrels and foxes eat squirrels
Food Webs
Interconnected food chains
Trophic (feeding) levels
All organisms belong to various feeding levels
Producers, herbivores, carnivores
19. Major Trophic Categories Producers use sunlight to convert C02 and water into glucose and organic matter (via photosynthesis).
Consumers feed on producers and other consumers.
Detritus feeders (decomposers) feed on dead organisms or their products.
20. Trophic Categories and Terminology
21. A categorization depending on whether the organisms produce organic compounds or use them.
22. Predators, Parasites & Pathogens
23. Green Plant Photosynthesis
24. Organic vs Inorganic
25. Inorganic and Organic Characteristics Inorganic
Oxygen
Carbon dioxide
Nitrogen
Water
pH Organic
All living things
Products of living things
Molecules proteins, lipids & carbohydrates
26. Inorganic Materials and Organic Organisms
27. Consumers Based on Trophic Category Primary Consumers (Herbivores) feed directly on Producers plant eaters.
Secondary Consumers (Carnivores) feed on primary consumers animal eaters
Omnivores feed on both plants and animals.
Parasites organisms considered as neither plant or animal.
Have an intimate relationship with their prey and feed on it over an extended period of time. Usually without killing it.
28. Symbiotic Relationships: Living Together Mutualism non-feeding
A relationship beneficial to both species.
For example flowers and insects.
Parasitism - feeding
one in which a parasite obtains benefits from a host without killing it.
Lichens composed of a fungus and alga. The fungus protects the alga in dry habitats and the alga produces food for the fungus
29. Trophic relationships Among Producers and Consumers
30. The Detritus Food Web
31. Trophic (feeding) Levels
32. Trophic Categories
33. Terrestrial Food Webs A food web is the transfer of energy through food chains.
34. Marine Food Web
35. Trophic Level Energy Exchanges On the average 10% of the energy is passed to the upper levels.
36. I want meat! I am a secondary consumer, a Carnivore.
37. Biomass and the Pyramid Defined as the total combined mass (weight) of all the organisms at each trophic level.
Usually 3 or 4 trophic levels per ecosystem
Each trophic level produces much less biomass (energy) than it consumes.
In terrestrial systems the biomass is about 90-99% less at each higher trophic level.
Grasslands produce approximately 20,000 pounds of biomass per acre. A herbivore ( for example a cow) will be approximately 2,000 pounds of biomass. A human who eats herbivores will be about 200 pounds of biomass. Perhaps we should skip the middle man and just eat grass. It would be much more energy efficient.
38. The Biomass PyramidIt takes a lot of mass from a lower lever to feed and upper lever.
39. Trophic Levels: Pyramid of Biomass
40. Trophic Levels: Pyramid of Energy
41. Nutrient Cycles and Energy Flow
42. MutualismA relationship that provides benefit to both species.
43. A Symbiotic Mutualistic Relationship Lichens composed of a fungus and an alga
44. Resource PartitioningBirds fly at different heights
45. Factors to which organisms respond Conditions abiotic factors that vary in space and time
Not used up by an organism
Temperature, wind, acidity, salinity, fire
Resources abiotic or biotic factors that are consumed by organisms.
Objects of competition by organisms
Water, chemical nutrients, light, oxygen.
46. Organism Growth Factors Different organisms thrive under different environmental conditions.
Optimum level A condition at which an organism thrives best. Sufficient light, water, etc.
Range of Tolerance The range in which organisms will survive and grow.
Zones of Stress the extremes of a range of tolerance for an organism.
47. Law of Limiting FactorsYes, you can have too much of a good thing.There is an optimal level at which organisms respond best.
48. The Role of Climate in Global Biomes Climate the average temperature and precipitation.
Different temperature and rainfall conditions occur in almost any combination.
The amount of rainfall and temperature will effect the particular biome.
Examples
Temperate deciduous forest biomes are found where the annual rainfall is 30-80 inches.
Grassland biomes are found where the rainfall is 10-60 inches.
Desert biomes are found where the rainfall is less then 10 inches per year.
49. Major Terrestrial Biomes Deserts
Hot and dry
Grasslands and Prairies
Seasonal rainfall & warm
Tropical Rain Forests
Daily rainfall & warm
Temperate (deciduous) Forests
Seasonal rainfall & warm
Coniferous Forests
Seasonal rainfall & cold
Tundra
Cold and dry
50. Distribution of Terrestrial Biomes
51. Distribution of Terrestrial Biomes
52. Major Biomes related to Temperature & Rainfall
53. Effects of Latitude and Altitude on GrowthAssume that you are in a rain forest and then go up a nearby mountain.
54. Microclimates Shade and Sunlight
55. Historical Progression of Systems Natural Systems
Developed by Mother Nature.
Human Systems
Created by Humans
A total system including animal husbandry, agriculture and all human developments.
56. Human Ecosystems Differs from Natural Systems in several ways. Produce abundant food
Control water flow rate and direction
Overcome predation and disease
Construct our own sub-ecosystems
Overcome competition with other species
Destroy natural systems
Pollution, agriculture, development, etc.
57. Three Revolutions Human Ancestry -100,000 years ago.
Start of present day human evolution
Neolithic Revolution ~12,000 years ago
The thinking human. Logic, organization
Animal husbandry and agriculture started
Industrial Revolution 17th & 18th Century
Scientific and technological beginnings
Environmental Revolution Today??
Stewardship and sustainability
58. Calculate Your Own Ecological Footprint
64. Using the PrtScn Key
65. The EndChapter 2