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Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproducti on through generation s resources ?
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Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Jan 12, 2016

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Dale Mathews
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Page 1: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical

environment as an integrated system.

a population

reproductionthrough generations

resources

?

Page 2: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Ecosystem ecology divides the world into pools and fluxes of materials and energy:

N

N N

N

N

N

NNN N

N

NN

N

N

Pools are quantities of materials such as carbon & nitrogen, that are contained in certain subdivisions of the ecosystem.

They are measured in g or moles per m2.

Pool of all forms of N in living plant

biomass

Pool of inorganic N in the soil (NO3

and NH4).

N

Fluxes are rates of material transfer between pools, measured in g or

moles per m2 per day or year.

Page 3: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

water vapor release

More live biomass

litter

O2 release

CO2 uptake

Absorbs light

Water uptake

Soil nutrient uptake:

N,P,S,K,…

root exudates (complex sugars, allelochemicals?,

leached N

Matter fluxes through a typical primary producer:

Page 4: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Matter fluxes through a typical primary consumer:

C, N, H2O, etc. in dung

C, N, H2O, etc. in milk

C, N, H2O, etc. in grass

C, N, H2O, etc. in the dead cow

C, N, H2O, etc. in a calf

C, N, H2O, etc. in urine

O2 of air intake

CO2 of air expelled

Methane, CO2

Page 6: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Matter fluxes through a decomposer, detritivore, or scavenger:

More decomposers, detritivores or scavangers

simpler organic waste

CO2 release

O2 uptake

C, N, H2O, etc in dead organic matter

C, N, H2O, etc. in the dead decomposer

Page 7: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Dead organic matter from

carrion, litter,

feces & urine

Net primary production:(the biomass produced by autotrophs)

Herbivores(primary consumers)

Scavengers,Detritivores &Decomposers

(primary consumers)

Carnivores I(secondary consumers)

Carnivores I(secondary consumers)

Carnivores II(tertiary consumers)

Carnivores II(tertiary consumers)

Generalized trophic web

is eaten by adds

Page 8: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Questions we can address only through ecosystem ecology:

“Budget questions” (How do all the fluxes and the changes in

pool size add up?)

• What happens to the portion of the nitrogen that is added to the

farmers field but is not harvested with the crop?

• What is the fate of CO2 expelled to the atmosphere from burning

fossil fuels?

• How much of the annual rainfall is returned to the atmosphere

via plant transpiration, soil evaporation, and how much goes to

groundwater?

Page 9: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

“Comparative questions” (Why do ecosystems differ in pool sizes and

fluxes? What are the controls over ecosystem processes?)

• Why do ecosystems differ in the %carbon that sits in living

plants versus in the soil organic matter? (E.g. : tropical forests =

most carbon in biomass, tundra = most carbon in soil.)

• How does plant species composition and diversity affect the

productivity of grasslands and forests?

• How will climate change (=warmer temperatures, different

precipitation patterns) affect productivity and species diversity?

Questions we can address only through ecosystem ecology:

Page 10: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Climate Vegetation Feedbacks:

VegetationVegetation

amount and compositionamount and composition

Local weatherLocal weather

patternspatterns

Earth’s climate systemEarth’s climate system

Land Land managementmanagement

Changes in Changes in atmospheric atmospheric compositioncomposition

Page 11: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Energy and material cycles:

Solar energy drives:

• The hydrologic cycle

• The carbon cycle

• The nitrogen and most other mineral cycles

Page 12: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Earth Energy Balance

Page 13: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Hydrologic cycle

Page 14: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

The Nitrogen Cycle

Page 15: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Carbon cycle

Page 16: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Global carbon pools and residence times

Page 17: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Photosynthesis:The rate of carbon assimilation per area of photosynthetic area.

6H2O + 6CO2 + light ----------> C6H12O6+ 6O2

respiration

O2 CO2

root exudates

new biomass

Page 18: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

The rate of plant

respiration per unit area (Rp)

The rate of carbon fixation per unit area:

Gross Primary Production

(GPP) Net Primary Production

into the trophic web

Net Primary Production (NPP)

Net carbon gain in biomass(= total carbon absorbed by plants (GPP) – carbon released by

plant respiration Rp)

Page 19: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

NPP is primarily controlled by precipitation and temperature:

Page 20: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

DESRT: desertTUNDR: tundraWDLND: woodlandBOENL: boreal evergreen,

needle-leafedBODBL: boreal decciduous,

broad-leafedBODNL: boreal deciduous, needle-leafedGRSTE: temperate grasslandGRSTR: tropical grasslandTEDBL: temperate deciduous

broad-leafedTEENL: temperate evergreen,

needle-leafedTEEBL: temperate evergreen,

broad-leafedTRDBL: tropical deciduous,

broad-leafedTREBL: tropical evergreen,

broad-leafed

The major earth biomes differ in NPP with precipitation. A

bove

-gro

und

NP

P g

m-2 y

r-1

Page 21: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Global distribution of primary productivity

Page 22: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE)

= Carbon absorbed or released by the entire ecosystem(GPP – ecosystem respiration)

The rate of ecosystem respiration (RP+Rs)

The rate of carbon/energy fixation: Gross

Primary Productivity

(GPP) Net Ecosystem Exchange

This is the carbon that stays in the

ecosystem.

Page 23: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

The rate of ecosystem respiration (RP+Rs)

The rate of carbon/energy fixation: Gross

Primary Productivity

(GPP) Net Ecosystem Exchange

This is the carbon that comes out of the ecosystem.

Net Ecosystem Exchange (NEE)

= Carbon absorbed or released by the entire ecosystem(GPP – ecosystem respiration)

Page 24: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Carbon Sequestration:

The long-term storage of carbon in the terrestrial biosphere or the oceans, thus removing CO2 from the atmosphere.

Page 25: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

(Negative fluxes indicate net CO2 uptake by the ecosystem)Data courtesy of Jim Heilman, Texas A&M and Marcy Litvak, University of New Mexico.

Net Ecosystem Exchange at Freeman Ranch

Page 26: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

Net Ecosystem Exchange at Freeman Ranch

Grassland site

Woodland site

Transition site

Page 27: Ecosystem ecology studies the flow of energy and materials through organisms and the physical environment as an integrated system. a population reproduction.

(Freeman Ranch is taking up carbon)Data courtesy of Jim Heilman, Texas A&M and Marcy Litvak, University of New Mexico.

Cumulative ecosystem carbon gain