U1T4 - Ecosystems (2) Flashcards
Ecological Energetics + Nutrient Cycling
What is the rule about energy?
Energy cannot be created or destroyed, only changed from one form into another. It flows through an ecosystem.
What does an ecosystem need to exist?
Must have an external source of energy (sunlight) which is harnessed + converted into other forms.
How is sunlight energy harnessed?
Plants trap light energy using chlorophyll and convert into chemical energy by producing organic molecules from inorganic. This means they provide energy for all other organisms in ecosystem.
What do food chains indicate?
Feeding relationships in ecosystems, energy flow through ecosystems + trophic levels.
What happens through the trophic levels?
Energy lost at each level so less available to transfer to next. Chem energy is passed to detritivores + decomposers.
What do pyramids represent?
Flow of energy + energy losses at each trophic level in food web/chain.
What are the rules when drawing a pyramid?
Producers (TL1) always at pyramid base, pyramids drawn symmetrical about centre, bar width in proportion to numbers/biomass of organisms involved at each trophic leel + bars always same depth.
How is the data collected for a pyramid of numbers?
Small area randomly sampled for organisms under study + multiplied up to give estimate of total pop size. e.g. quadrat analysis, nets, humane trapping.
What are the issues with pyramids of numbers?
When large numbers involved, nearly impossible to accurately scale bars. Gives quantitative info but doesn’t indicate relative mass of organisms at each trophic level. Leads to inverted pyramids.
How do we measure biomass?
Random quadrats have all organisms harvested + weighed. Wet/fresh mass. Average mass calculated for each TL, multiplied by num organisms. Can also use dry mass.
What are the issues with pyramids of biomass?
Only shows standing crop, doesn’t account for changes in biomass over time + can lead to inverted pyramids. e.g. marine ecosystems. Hard to get biomass of oak tree + should they just weigh the leaves?
Give an example of a marine ecosystem which has difficulty in terms of biomass pyramids.
In Spring, biomass of zooplankton exceeds phytoplankton because primary production of phyto is v.high + rapidly repro so temp support larger biomass of zoop feeding on them. However, phyto overall exceeds zoop.
What are the benefits of pyramids of energy?
Energy content of diff tissue varies so give more accurate info than biomass. Never inverted, useful in comparing ecosystems.
What are the issues with pyramids of energy?
Data harder to obtain as values need to be obtained over time period to compare before and after.
How much energy do primary producers use?
0.5 - 1% of the incipient energy from sunlight, converting it into chemical energy by photosynthesis. Not all solar energy falling on plant is used to make new tissue.
In what ways does the plant lose solar energy?
Some wavelengths can’t be absorbed by chlorophyll, some energy transmitted through leaf (misses chloroplasts), some light reflected from leaf surface or by dust/clouds, absorbed by water vapour/dust, some lost from photosynthetic reactions (inefficient) in from of heat + some lost in water evap.
What is the equation for photosynthetic energy?
Photosynthetic Energy = Amount of energy incorporated into carbs/amount of energy falling on plant
What are GPP + NPP indicators of?
Productivity of ecosystem +, in terrestrial ecosystems, may be limited by temp and moisture.
What is the equation for net primary production?
Net Primary Production = Gross Primary Production - Respiration