Chapter 55 Flashcards
Ecosystem
All the organisms living in a community, as well as the abiotic factors with which they interact
Ecosystems range from a _, such as the space under a fallen log, to a large area, such as a lake or island.
Microcosm
Regardless of an ecosystem’s size, its dynamics involve two main processes: _ and _.
Energy flow; chemical cycling
Energy flows _ ecosystems, while matter cycles _ ecosystem.
Through; within
Laws of physics and chemistry apply to ecosystems, particularly _.
Energy flow
The first law of thermodynamics states that _ cannot be created or destroyed; only transformed.
Energy
Ecologists study the _ of energy and matter within ecosystems.
Transformations
Energy enters an ecosystem as solar radiation, is _, and is released from organisms as heat.
Conserved
Autotrophs build molecules themselves using _ as an energy source.
Photosynthesis
Heterotrophs depend on the _ of other organisms.
Biosynthetic output
Energy and nutrients pass from _ (autotrophs) to primary consumers (herbivores) to secondary consumers (carnivores) to tertiary consumers (carnivores that feed on other carnivores).
Primary producers
In most ecosystems, _ is the amount of light energy converted to chemical energy by autotrophs during a given time period.
Primary production
Only a small fraction of _ actually strikes photosynthetic organisms, and even less is of a usable wavelength.
Solar energy
Energy flows into the biological world from the _.
Sun
_, _, and _ are among the most productive ecosystems per unit area.
Tropical rain forests; estuaries; coral reefs
_ ecosystems are relatively unproductive per unit area but contribute much to global net primary production because of their size.
Marine
In marine and freshwater ecosystems, both _ and _ control primary production.
Light; nutrients
_ of light penetration affects primary production of an ocean or lake.
Depth
More than light, _ (like nitrogen and phosphorus) limit primary production in most oceans and lakes.
Nutrients
In terrestrial ecosystems, _ and moisture affect primary production on a large scale.
Temperature
Primary production increases with _.
Moisture
Some plants form mutualistic relationships with nitrogen-fixing _.
Bacteria
Many plants form mutualistic relationships with mycorrhizal _; these supply plants with phosphorus and other limiting elements.
Fungi
Secondary production (of an ecosystem)
The amount of chemical energy in food converted to new biomass during a given period of time