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Energy Flow in an Ecosystem

Energy Flow in an Ecosystem. Energy Flow. Energy in an ecosystem originally comes from the sun Energy flows through Ecosystems from producers to consumers Producers (make food) Consumers (use food by eating producers or other consumers). Producers.

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Energy Flow in an Ecosystem

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  1. Energy Flow in an Ecosystem

  2. Energy Flow • Energy in an ecosystem originally comes from the sun • Energy flows through Ecosystems from producers to consumers • Producers (make food) • Consumers (use food by eating producers or other consumers)

  3. Producers • Sunlight is the main source of energy for most life on earth. • Producers contain chlorophyll & can use energy directly from the sun

  4. Autotrophs • An Autotroph is any organism that can produce its own food supply! • Autotrophs are also called Producers • Plants, algae, some protists, & some bacteria are examples

  5. Niche of a Producer • Captures energy and transforms it into organic, stored energy for the use of living organisms. • May be photo-autotrophs using light energy (e.g. plants) • May be chemo-autotrophs using chemical energy (e.g. cyanobacteria)

  6. Photoautotroph Producer That Captures Energy from the sun by: • Photosynthesis • Adds Oxygen to the atmosphere • Removes Carbon Dioxide from the Atmosphere Algae

  7. Photosynthesis – 6CO2 + 6H2O + chlorophyll C6H12O6 + 6O2

  8. 6O2 + C6H12O6 ---> 6H2O + 6CO2 + energy CELLULAR RESPIRATION is the chemical reaction that releases the energy (ATP) in glucose.

  9. Cellular respiration reactions

  10. Habitat of Photoautotrophs • On Land • Plants • In The Sea • Algae • Tidal Flats & Salt Marshes • Cyanobacteria

  11. Chemoautotrophs • Capture energy from the bonds of inorganic molecules such as Hydrogen Sulfide • Process is called Chemosynthesis • Often occurs in deep sea vents or gut of animals Called a Black smoker (thermal vent)

  12. Tube Worms living in Black Smoker

  13. Some energy in the primary consumer is STORED& not lost to the atmosphere or used by the consumer itself. This energy is available for another consumer (predator).

  14. Consumers Heterotrophs eat other organisms to obtain energy. (e.g. animals) • Herbivores • Eat Only Plants • Carnivores • Eat Only Other Animals

  15. Consumers Heterotrophs eat other organisms to obtain energy. Omnivores (Humans) Eat Plants & Animals Detritivores (Scavengers) Feed On Dead Plant & Animal Remains (buzzards) Decomposers Fungi & Bacteria

  16. Feeding Relationships Energy flows through an ecosystem in one direction from producers to various levels of consumers

  17. The transfer of energy from the sun to producer to primary consumer then to higher order consumers can be shown in a FOOD CHAIN.

  18. Feeding Relationships • Food Chain • Simple Energy path through an ecosystem • Food Web • More realistic path through an ecosystem made of many food chains

  19. Food Chain 3rd Order consumer 2nd Order Consumer 1st order Consumer 4th Order Consumer Producer(trapped sunlight & stored food)

  20. Name the Producer, Consumers & Decomposers in this food chain:

  21. Food Web

  22. Trophic Levels Each Level In A Food Chain or Food Web is a Trophic Level. • Producers • Always The First Trophic Level • How Energy Enters The System • Herbivores • Second Trophic Level

  23. Trophic Levels • Carnivores/Omnivores • Make Up The Remaining Trophic Levels Each level depends on the one below it for energy.

  24. Ecological Pyramids Graphic Representations Of The Relative Amounts of Energy or Matter At Each Trophic Level May be: Energy Pyramid Biomass Pyramid Pyramid of Numbers

  25. Energy Pyramid

  26. Biomass Pyramid

  27. An energy pyramid follows the 10% rule – only 10% of the energy available at one trophic level is transferred to the next trophic level.

  28. Trophic levels- 10% rule

  29. Pyramid of Numbers

  30. Identify the Producers, Consumers, & Decomposers: Count the Food Chains!

  31. Carbon Cycle • All living things are made of carbon. Carbon is also a part of the ocean, air, and even rocks. Because the Earth is a dynamic place, carbon does not stay still. It is on the move! • Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas and traps heat in the atmosphere. Without it and other greenhouse gases, Earth would be a frozen world. But humans have burned so much fuel that there is about 30% more carbon dioxide in the air today than there was about 150 years ago, and Earth is becoming a warmer place.

  32. Nitrogen fixation • Three processes are responsible for most of the nitrogen fixation in the biosphere: • atmospheric fixation by lightning • biological fixation by certain microbes — alone or in a symbioticrelationship with some plants and animals • industrial fixation

  33. What are some ways that humans disturb ecosystems? • Humans upset the homeostasis of ecosystems • Monoculture • destruction of habitats • biocides – bioaccumulation • pollution – (acid rain)

  34. Why is biodiversity so important? • More healthy ecosystems with more links • Preservation of genetic diversity – ensures survival • Some plants are providing medicines that are very useful • Chance to learn about many different species is lost

  35. What are we doing to preserve our natural areas? • Establishing wilderness areas – no engines allowed • Replanting deforested areas • Establishing breeding population, reintroducing species, relocating • Genetic diversity preserved in freezers! • Crossing species

  36. Resources • fig.cox.miami.edu/Faculty/Dana/105F00_13.html • http://www.factmonster.com/images/photosynthesis.gif • www.eo.ucar.edu/kids/green/cycles6.htm • http://users.rcn.com/jkimball.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/N/NitrogenCycle.html

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