Chapter 55 Flashcards

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1
Q

Ecosystem

A

All the organisms living in a community, as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact

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2
Q

Ecosystems range from a _, such as the space under a fallen log, to a large area, such as a lake or island.

A

Microcosm

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3
Q

Regardless of an ecosystem’s size, its dynamics involve two main processes: _ and _.

A

Energy flow; chemical cycling

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4
Q

Energy flows _ ecosystems, while matter cycles _ ecosystem.

A

Through; within

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5
Q

Laws of physics and chemistry apply to ecosystems, particularly _.

A

Energy flow

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6
Q

The first law of thermodynamics states that _ cannot be created or destroyed; only transformed.

A

Energy

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7
Q

Ecologists study the _ of energy and matter within ecosystems.

A

Transformations

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8
Q

Energy enters an ecosystem as solar radiation, is _, and is released from organisms as heat.

A

Conserved

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9
Q

Autotrophs build molecules themselves using _ as an energy source.

A

Photosynthesis

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10
Q

Heterotrophs depend on the _ of other organisms.

A

Biosynthetic output

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11
Q

Energy and nutrients pass from _ (autotrophs) to primary consumers (herbivores) to secondary consumers (carnivores) to tertiary consumers (carnivores that feed on other carnivores).

A

Primary producers

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12
Q

In most ecosystems, _ is the amount of light energy converted to chemical energy by autotrophs during a given time period.

A

Primary production

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13
Q

Only a small fraction of _ actually strikes photosynthetic organisms, and even less is of a usable wavelength.

A

Solar energy

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14
Q

Energy flows into the biological world from the _.

A

Sun

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15
Q

_, _, and _ are among the most productive ecosystems per unit area.

A

Tropical rain forests; estuaries; coral reefs

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16
Q

_ ecosystems are relatively unproductive per unit area but contribute much to global net primary production because of their size.

A

Marine

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17
Q

In marine and freshwater ecosystems, both _ and _ control primary production.

A

Light; nutrients

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18
Q

_ of light penetration affects primary production of an ocean or lake.

A

Depth

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19
Q

More than light, _ (like nitrogen and phosphorus) limit primary production in most oceans and lakes.

A

Nutrients

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20
Q

In terrestrial ecosystems, _ and moisture affect primary production on a large scale.

A

Temperature

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21
Q

Primary production increases with _.

A

Moisture

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22
Q

Some plants form mutualistic relationships with nitrogen-fixing _.

A

Bacteria

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23
Q

Many plants form mutualistic relationships with mycorrhizal _; these supply plants with phosphorus and other limiting elements.

A

Fungi

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24
Q

Secondary production (of an ecosystem)

A

The amount of chemical energy in food converted to new biomass during a given period of time

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25
Q

An organism’s _ is the fraction of energy stored in food that is not used for respiration.

A

Production efficiency

26
Q

Birds and mammals have production efficiencies in the range of 1-3% because of the high cost of _.

A

Endothermy

27
Q

Fishes have production efficiencies of around _%.

A

10

28
Q

Insects and microorganisms have efficiencies of _% or more.

A

40

29
Q

When a caterpillar feeds on a leaf, only about _ of the leaf’s energy is used for secondary production.

A

One-sixth

30
Q

Approximately 0.1% of chemical energy fixed by photosynthesis reaches a _.

A

Tertiary consumer

31
Q

A _ of net production represents the loss of energy with each transfer in a food chain.

A

Pyramid

32
Q

Life depends on recycling chemical elements such as gaseous…

A

…carbon, oxygen, sulfur, and nitrogen.

33
Q

Carbon, oxygen, sulfur, and nitrogen cycle _ in terrestrial systems but more _ when dissolved in aquatic systems.

A

Locally; broadly

34
Q

Nutrient cycles in ecosystems involve biotic and abiotic components and are often called _.

A

Biogeochemical cycles

35
Q

Water is essential to all organisms; _ water is the primary physical phase in which water is used.

A

Liquid

36
Q

The _ contain 97% of the biosphere’s water; 2% is in _ and _, and 1% is in _, _, and _.

A

Oceans; glaciers; polar ice caps; lakes, rivers, groundwater

37
Q

Carbon-based _ molecules are essential to all organisms.

A

Organic

38
Q

CO2 is taken up and released through photosynthesis and _; additionally, volcanoes and the burning of fossil fuels contribute CO2 to the atmosphere.

A

Respiration

39
Q

Photosynthetic organisms convert _ organic molecules that are used by heterotrophs.

A

CO2

40
Q

Carbon reservoirs include:

A
  • Fossil fuels, soils, and sediments
  • Solutes in oceans
  • Plant and animal biomass
  • The atmosphere
  • Sedimentary rocks
41
Q

Phosphorus is a major constituent of _, phospholipids, and ATP.

A

Nucleic acids

42
Q

_ is the most important inorganic form of phosphorus.

A

Phosphate (PO4 3-)

43
Q

The largest reservoirs are _ of marine origin, the oceans, and organisms.

A

Sedimentary rocks

44
Q

Phosphate binds with soil particles, and movement is often _.

A

Localized

45
Q

Nitrogen is a component of amino acids, _, and nucleic acids.

A

Proteins

46
Q

The main reservoir of nitrogen is the atmosphere (N2), though this nitrogen must be converted to NH4 + or NO3 - for uptake by plants, via _ by bacteria.

A

Nitrogen fixation

47
Q

Organic nitrogen is decomposed to NH4 +; NH4 + is decomposed to NO3 -; NO3 - is converted back to _.

A

N2

48
Q

Decomposers (detritivores), which derive their energy from _, or nonliving organic matter, play a key role in the general pattern of chemical recycling.

A

Dedritus

49
Q

Rates at which nutrients cycle in different ecosystems vary greatly, mostly as a result of differing rates of _.

A

Decomposition

50
Q

The rate of decomposition is controlled by:

A
  • Temperature
  • Moisture
  • Nutrient availability
51
Q

_ decomposition results in relatively low levels of nutrients in the soil; cold and wet ecosystems store large amounts of undecomposed organic matter as decomposition rates are _.

A

Rapid; low

52
Q

_ return degraded ecosystems to a more natural state.

A

Restoration ecologists

53
Q

Given enough time, biological communities can recover from many types of _.

A

Disturbances

54
Q

Restoration ecology seeks to _ the recovery of degraded ecosystems.

A

Initiate/speed up

55
Q

Two key strategies of restoration ecology are _ and _ of ecosystem processes.

A

Bioremediation; augmentation

56
Q

Bioremediation

A

The use of organisms to detoxify ecosystems

57
Q

The organisms most often used for bioremediation are:

A
  • Prokaryotes
  • Fungi
  • Plants
58
Q

The organisms used for bioremediation can take up, and sometimes metabolize, _ molecules.

A

Toxic

59
Q

The bacterium Shewanella oneidensis can metabolize _ and other elements to insoluble forms that are less likely to leach into streams and groundwater.

A

Uranium

60
Q

Biological augmentation

A

Uses organisms to add essential materials to a degraded ecosystem

61
Q

Nitrogen-fixing plants can increase the available nitrogen in soil, and adding _ can help plants to access nutrients from soil.

A

Mycorrhizal fungi