1 / 11

Unit 18: Energy and Nutrient Transfer

Section 18.1 Food chains and food webs? Section 18.2 Pyramids of numbers and biomass Section 18.3 Energy Flow in Ecosystems Section 18.4/18.5 Cycles of Matter. Unit 18: Energy and Nutrient Transfer. Numbers in a Food Web. Number Pyramid:

mizell
Télécharger la présentation

Unit 18: Energy and Nutrient Transfer

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Section 18.1 Food chains and food webs? Section 18.2 Pyramids of numbers and biomass Section 18.3 Energy Flow in Ecosystems Section 18.4/18.5 Cycles of Matter Unit 18:Energy and Nutrient Transfer

  2. Numbers in a Food Web • Number Pyramid: • Shows the numbers of organisms in a trophic level for a specific food chain • Example: • 1 fox eats 25 birds • 25 birds eat 250 grasshoppers • 250 grasshoppers eat 3000 grass plants • Does not show the size of the individuals • 2) Size Pyramid: • Shows the relative size of each organism in the food chain • Example: • 1 tree supports 1500 caterpillars • 1500 caterpillars feed 100 birds • 100 birds feed 1 sparrowhawk 1 100 1500 1

  3. Biomass in a Food Web • 3) Biomass Pyramid • All living material in a trophic level is its biomass • Average dried of weight of all organisms in an area • 35% of animals weight • 20% of plant weight • Remove H2O to see real weight of organic molecules • biomass of the levels decreases • Why does the Energy Pyramid explain this? • There is less energy to keep more complex organisms alive • The since every trophic level depends on the one under it, they are also limited by them • Land ecosystems rarely have more than 4 trophic levels

  4. Energy and the Future • Based on what we have talked about, what is the based diet for a growing poor nation? • Vegetarian • Why? • It is more efficient. Eating producers cuts out 90% of wasted energy in the ecosystem • If eating plants is more efficient, why do we need to eat so much? • Most of the energy is in cellulose, which we can’t digest, so it is waste • Meat gives us more energy but costs more: • 0.5 kg or beef needs 2.5kg of plant material • What would be a better alternative to meat? • Insects 80kgs for every person

  5. State which type of pyramid each is Energy Pyramid Number Pyramid Biomass Pyramid

  6. Recycling Matter • Energy must be transferred through trophic levels to power an ecosystem • Stability comes from constant supply of new building materials • Members in the food chain need to reproduce • Need elements (C, N, H, P, S) to build organic molecules • 4 Biogeochemical Cycles • Biological processes living things breaking down material • Geological processes geologic activity breaking down rocks and minerals • Chemical/Physical processes clouds, lighting, rain, snow and other weather • Human Activity Human development; building and farming

  7. Natural Cycles on Earth • Water Cycle: • Evaporation • Water absorbs energy from the Sun and evaporates to water vapor; also transpiration • Condensation • Water vapor slowly collects over time to form clouds • Precipitation • Clouds grow heavy and rain, snow, hail, etc… falls to the Earth • Accumulation • Water runs together on the ground to form lakes, rivers, stream, and underground reservoirs • Repeat • Water eventually moves back to the oceans or evaporates and the cycle starts again

  8. Natural Cycles on Earth • 2)Carbon Cycle: • Animals, fire, and geothermic activity send CO2into the atmosphere • Living things die and return carbon to the environment • CO2dissolves into rain clouds and oceans • CO2 is pulled into plants/algae and used in photosynthesis • Other living things feed on carbon compounds like carbohydrates • Carbon returns to the cycle

  9. Natural Cycles on Earth • 3) Nitrogen Cycle: • All living things need Nitrogen but most is in N2gas which cant be used; need nitrates (nitrogen containing molecules) • Nitrogen fixation changing N2 to NH3, NO2-, and NO3- • Sources • Decomposers:release ammonia (NH4+) as they break down material • Nitrifying bacteria: change ammonia (NH4+) to nitrates • Nitrogen-fixing bacteria: live in the soil or root nodules of plants; change N2 into NH4+ • Lightning: energy reacts N2 with O2 to form Nitrates; leach into soil through rainwater • Denitrifying bacteria balance N2 in air by changing excess nitrates back into N2

  10. Natural Cycles on Earth • 4) Phosphate Cycle: • All living things need phosphates to build DNA and RNA • Most phosphate is trapped in rocks and sediment layers in the Earth (Geological uplifting) • Rivers and water sources breakdown rocks over time and leach phosphates into water sources • Decaying organisms recycle phosphates into the ecosystem

  11. Limits to Growth • Why don’t we see a much larger biomass on Earth? • Every environment has a limit keeping it in check • Energy and nutrients can limit growth, however more often limited amounts of nitrogen or phosphorous stop excessive growth • Nitrogen is less common in saltwater environments • Phosphorous is the less common in freshwater environments

More Related