39
MATTER AND ENERGY IN THE ECOSYSTEM Chapter 4 (52-71) Mrs. Paul

Matter and Energy in the Ecosystem

  • Upload
    adia

  • View
    45

  • Download
    4

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Chapter 4 (52-71) Mrs. Paul. Matter and Energy in the Ecosystem. 4.1 Roles of Living Things. All organisms need energy to live. In ecosystem, energy moves in ONE direction: Sun Organisms Energy from sun enters ecosystem via PHOTOSYNTHESIS! Organisms gather food by: - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Citation preview

Page 1: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

MATTER AND ENERGY IN THE ECOSYSTEM

Chapter 4 (52-71)Mrs. Paul

Page 2: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

4.1 Roles of Living Things

All organisms need energy to live. In ecosystem, energy moves in ONE

direction:Sun Organisms

Energy from sun enters ecosystem via PHOTOSYNTHESIS!

Organisms gather food by:Producing, Consuming, Decomposing

Page 3: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Producers Producers: organisms that make their own

food using the sun’s energy. Produce sugar using carbon dioxide, sunlight

and water (in a process called Photosynthesis).

Examples: plants, algae, some bacteria.

Page 4: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Consumers Consumers: organisms that

cannot make their own food. Must eat other organisms. Examples: fungi, many

protists and bacteria, animals.

4 ways consumers gather food:1.Herbivores2. Carnivores3. Omnivores4.Scavengers

Page 5: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Herbivores: only eat plants; called primary consumers. Examples: many insects and birds, grazing

animals (cows, buffalo, antelope).

Page 6: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Carvivores: eat herbivores or other carnivores (eat animals); called secondary or tertiary consumers.Examples: lions,

snakes, hawks, spiders.

Page 7: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Omnivores: eat plants and animals; could be primary, secondary or tertiary consumers.Examples: humans,

bears, chimpanzees.

Page 8: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Scavengers: feed on the bodies of dead plants or dead animals; secondary, tertiary or higher consumer. Return nutrients to the environment.Examples: vultures,

hyenas, many insects.

Page 9: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Decomposers

Decomposers: bacteria and fungi that consume the bodies of dead plants and animals or other organic waste. Recycle nutrients back into environment.

Page 10: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

In your notes: Make a list of 10 organisms

(living things) you saw on your way to school today.

Label each one as a producer, consumer, or decomposer.

Page 11: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Trophic Levels Trophic Level: a layer in the structure of

feeding relationships in an ecosystem. Levels get smaller and smaller.Producers, primary consumers, secondary

consumers, tertiary consumers, etc. Producers

Autrotrophs: make their own food.Puts energy into the ecosystem.

ConsumersHeterotrophs: cannot make own food, must

obtain nourishment by eating other organisms.

Page 12: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem
Page 13: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Check for Understanding:1. List the different groups of organisms in

an ecosystem, and explain how each type gathers food.

2. How do autotrophs and heterotrophs differ?

3. In most ecosystems, the first trophic level contains more organisms than the second trophic level. Can you suggest a reason that explains this pattern?

Page 14: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

4.2 Ecosystem Structure

Page 15: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Producers and consumers depend on each other.

Changes in population of one organism affect all other organisms in the ecosystem.

Food Chain: a series of organisms that transfer food between the trophic levels of an ecosystem.Producersherbivorescarnivoresdecomposers

Page 16: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem
Page 17: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem
Page 18: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Food Web: a network of food chains representing feeding relationships among organisms in an ecosystem.More complex and more realistic.Show interdependence of organisms.

Page 19: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Biological Magnification

Humans affect environment-add pollution.

This is magnified in a food web.The higher up the trophic levels you

look, the more pollution you will find (it accumulates).

Example: DDT and bald eagles. Biological Magnification: the

increasing concentration of a pollutant in organisms at higher trophic levels in a food web.

Page 20: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Check for Understanding:1. What are food chains and food webs

and how are they related?2. Explain the process of biological

magnification.

Page 21: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

4.3 Energy in the Ecosystem Energy from sun enters ecosystem via

photosynthesis. Energy then passed from producers to

consumers. No food = no survival. Amount of energy available limits the

structure of the food web.

Page 22: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Energy and Food Producers absorb only 1% of

sunlight that reaches earth to make 170 billion tons of food per year!

Energy used to make cells. Biomass: total amount of

organic matter present in a trophic level. The amount of energy available to the next level.

Page 23: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Much of energy in each level is lost before it can reach following level (power the animal, in the form of heat, to make shells, fibers, bones, etc)Only 10% energy transfer.Limits the length of food chains.

Page 24: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem
Page 25: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Ecological Pyramids Ecological Pyramid: diagram that shows

amount of energy in different trophic levels in ecosystem.Can show energy, biomass, number of

organisms in each level.Producers are on the bottom (largest level).Tertiary consumer are on the top (smallest level).

Growth of producers limited by lack of elements (carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen) – not by energy from the sun.

Page 26: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Check for Understanding:1. How much of the energy that appears

in one trophic level will appear in the next?

2. What is an ecological pyramid?3. Where is energy lost between trophic

levels? Where does this energy ultimately go?

Page 27: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

4.4 Chemical Cycles Most important elements: oxygen,

carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen. Elements must be in form cells can use. Three important cycles:

1. Water Cycle2. Carbon Cycle3. Nitrogen Cycle

Page 28: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Water Cycle

Page 29: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Movement of water between ocean, the atmosphere, and the land.

Parts of the water cycle:Evaporation (Transpiration)CondensationPrecipitationRunoff

Page 30: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Evaporation: movement of water into the atmosphere as it changes from liquid to gas.

Transpiration: evaporation of water from leaves of plants.

Page 31: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Condensation: change of water from gas to water as it cools; leads to formation of clouds.

Page 32: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Precipitation: the product of condensation falling to the earth in the form of rain, snow, sleet, hail, etc.

Page 33: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Runoff: water flowing downhill and eventually returning to the ocean.

Page 34: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Carbon Cycle

Page 35: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem
Page 36: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Movement of carbon from the atmosphere, into the food chain, into the environment and back into the atmosphere.

Photosynthesis and Respiration are the most important parts.Photosynthesis uses carbon dioxide and sunlight to

make sugars.Respiration breaks down the sugars to remake

carbon dioxide and energy. Ocean and rocks are another good source of

carbon.

Page 37: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Nitrogen Cycle

Page 38: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Organisms need nitrogen to make amino acids. Movement of nitrogen from the atmosphere, into

the food chain and back into the atmosphere. Steps:

Nitrogen-fixing bacteria use nitrogen to make ammonia.

Ammonia gets consumed by more bacteria to make nitrogen compounds plants can use.

Animals get the nitrogen we need from proteins in the plants we eat.

Decomposers return nitrogen to the soil in the form of ammonia.

Page 39: Matter and Energy in the     Ecosystem

Check for Understanding:1. What are the four most common

elements in the human body?2. How do transpiration and evaporation

differ?3. Humans are releasing large amounts of

carbon dioxide into the air by burning fossil fuels like coal and oil. What effect might this carbon have on the carbon cycle?