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CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE
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CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Dec 31, 2015

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Page 1: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE

Page 2: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

3-1 What is Ecology?

Page 3: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Interactions and Interdependence•Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between organisms and their environment, or surroundings.•Biosphere – The largest environment. It contains the combined portions of the planet in which all of life exists, including land, water, and air.

Page 4: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

•The biosphere goes from about 8 km above Earth’s surface to as far as 11 km below the surface of the ocean.•The interdependence of life on Earth contributes to an ever-changing biosphere.

Page 5: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Levels of Organization•To understand relationships within the biosphere, ecologists ask questions about events and organisms that range in complexity from a single individual to the entire biosphere.•The study of ecology ranges from the study of an individual organism to populations, communities, ecosystems, biomes and to the entire biosphere.

Page 6: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 7: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

• Species – a group of organisms so similar to one another that they can breed and produce fertile offspring• Populations – groups of individuals that belong to the same

species and live in the same area• Communities – groups of different populations that live

together in a defined area• Ecosystem – collection of all the organisms that live in a

particular place, together with their nonliving physical environment• Biome – a group of ecosystems that have the same climate

and similar dominant communities.• The biosphere is the highest level of organization that

ecologists study.

Page 8: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Ecological Methods•Regardless of the tools they use, scientists conduct modern ecological research using three basic approaches: observing, experimenting, and modeling. All of these approaches rely on the application of scientific methods to guide ecological inquiry.

Page 9: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

3-2 Energy Flow

Page 10: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Producers• Sunlight is the main energy source for life on Earth. • Some types of organisms rely on the energy stored

in inorganic chemical compounds.For example, mineral water that flows underground or boils out of hot springs and undersea vents is loaded with chemical energy.•Autotroph (producer) – an organism that can

capture energy from sunlight or chemicals and use it to produce its own food from inorganic compounds (plants, some algae, certain bacteria)

Page 11: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Energy from the Sun•Photosynthesis – when autotrophs use light energy to power chemical reactions that convert carbon dioxide and water into oxygen and energy-rich carbohydrates such as sugars and starches.•Photosynthesis adds oxygen to and removes carbon dioxide from Earth’s atmosphere.

Page 12: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 13: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

•Chemosynthesis – process by which some organisms use chemical energy to produce carbohydrates•Plants who do not get light can use chemosynthesis

Page 14: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Consumers

•Heterotroph (consumer) – organisms that rely on other organisms for their energy and food supply

Page 15: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Many different types of heterotrophs:

•Herbivores – eat only plants (cows, caterpillars, deer)•Carnivores – eat animals (snakes, dogs, owls)•Omnivores – eat both plants and animals (humans,

bears, crows)•Detritivores – feed on plant and animal remains and

other dead matter (mites, earthworms, snails, crabs)•Decomposers – break down organic matter (bacteria,

fungi)

Page 16: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Feeding Relationships•Energy flows through an ecosystem in one direction, from the sun or inorganic compounds to autotrophs (producers) and then to various heterotrophs (consumers)•Food Chain – series of steps in an ecosystem in which organisms transfer energy by eating and being eaten•Food chains show the one-way flow of energy in an ecosystem

Page 17: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 18: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

•Food Webs – network of complex interactions formed by the feeding relationships among the various organisms in an ecosystem•More complex than a food chain. A food web links all the food chains in an ecosystem together.

Page 19: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 20: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Each step in a food chain is called a trophic level. Producers make up the first trophic level. Consumers make up the second, third, or higher trophic levels. Each consumer depends on the trophic level below it for energy.

Page 21: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Ecological Pyramids

•Ecological pyramid – a diagram that shows the relative amounts of energy or matter contained within each trophic level in a food chin or food web.

Page 22: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

There are three different types of ecological pyramids:

energy pyramids, biomass pyramids, and pyramids of numbers

Page 23: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Energy pyramid – •Only about 10% of the energy available within one trophic level is transferred to organisms at the next trophic level

Page 24: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Biomass pyramid - •Biomass – the total amount of living tissue within a given trophic level. Usually expressed in terms of grams of organic matter per unit area.•A biomass pyramid represents the amount of potential food available for each trophic level in an ecosystem.

Page 25: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Pyramid of numbers – •Based on the numbers of individual organisms at each trophic level.

Page 26: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

3-3 Cycles of Matter

Page 27: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Recycling in the Biosphere•Unlike the one-way flow of energy, matter is

recycled within and between ecosystems.•Biogeochemical cycles – process in which

elements, chemical compounds, and other forms of matter are passed from one organism to another and from one part of the biosphere to another•Matter can cycle through the biosphere because

biological systems do not use up matter, they transform it.

Page 28: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

The Water Cycle•All living things need water to survive. Water moves between the ocean, atmosphere, and land

Page 29: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 30: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

•Evaporation – the process by which water changes from liquid form to an atmospheric gas•Transpiration – the process by which water enters the atmosphere by evaporating from the leaves of plants

Page 31: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Nutrient Cycles•Nutrients – all the chemical substances that an organism requires to live•Every living organism needs nutrients to grow and carryout essential life functions. Like water, nutrients are passed between organisms and the environment through biogeochemical cycles.

Page 32: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Three nutrient cycles play important roles in the biosphere: the carbon cycle, the nitrogen cycle, and the phosphorus cycle

Page 33: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

The Carbon Cycle•Carbon is the key ingredient in all living organisms. It is also found in the oceans, in the air, and in certain types of rocks.

Page 34: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

There are four different kinds of processes involved in the carbon cycle:•Biological processes, such as photosynthesis,

respiration, and decomposition of plants and animals•Geochemical processes, such as the release of carbon

dioxide gas to the atmosphere by volcanoes•Mixed biogeochemical processes, such as the burial of

carbon-rich remains or organisms and their conversion into coal and petroleum by the pressure of the overlying earth•Human activity, including mining, burning fossil fuels,

and cutting and burning forests

Page 35: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 36: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

The Nitrogen Cycle•All organisms need nitrogen to make amino acids, which are used to build proteins

Page 37: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 38: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

• Some bacterial convert nitrogen gas into ammonia, known as nitrogen fixation.•Nitrogen fixation – process of converting nitrogen gas

into ammonia•When organisms die, decomposers return nitrogen to

the soil as ammonia. The ammonia may be taken up again by producers. Other soil bacteria convert nitrates into nitrogen gas in a process called denitrification.•Denitrification – conversion of nitrates into nitrogen

gas

Page 39: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

The Phosphorus Cycle•Phosphorus is essential to living organisms because it forms part of important life-sustaining molecules such as DNA and RNA. •Phosphorus does not enter the atmosphere. It remains mostly on land in rock and soil minerals and in ocean sediments.

Page 40: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.
Page 41: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Nutrient Limitation•Primary Productivity – the rate at which organic matter is created by producers.•The amount of available nutrients affects primary productivity. •Limiting nutrient – when an ecosystem is limited by a single nutrient that is scarce or cycles very slowly

Page 42: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

Farmers apply fertilizers to their crops to boost their productivity. Fertilizers contain three important nutrients: nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium. These nutrients help plants grow larger and more quickly than they would in unfertilized soil.

Page 43: CHAPTER 3 THE BIOSPHERE. 3-1 What is Ecology? Interactions and Interdependence Ecology – the scientific study of interactions among organisms and between.

When an aquatic ecosystem (ex – oceans) receives a large input of a limiting nutrient (ex – runoff from heavily fertilized fields) the result is often an immediate increase in the amount of algae and other producers. This is called algal bloom.