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Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles
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Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Dec 26, 2015

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Page 1: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Ecosystem Energetics

• Limits on primary production• Relationship between primary and secondary

productivity• Trophic efficiency• Nutrient Cycles

Page 2: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Energy flow in ecosystems

Page 3: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Ecosystem energetics - terminology

• Standing crop (=biomass) – amount of accumulated organic matter found in an area at a given time [g/m2]

• Productivity – rate at which organic matter is created by photosynthesis [g/m2/yr]

• Primary productivity – autotrophs

• Secondary - heterotrophs

• Gross versus net primary productivity

Page 4: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Ecological Efficiency

• Ecological efficiency (food chain efficiency) is the percentage of energy transferred from one trophic level to the next:– range of 5% to 20% is typical, mean = 10%– to understand this more fully, we must study

the utilization of energy within a trophic level

Page 5: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Intratrophic Energy Transfers

• Intratrophic transfers involve several components:– ingestion (energy content of food ingested)– egestion (energy content of indigestible materials

regurgitated or defecated)– assimilation (energy content of food digested and

absorbed)– excretion (energy content of organic wastes)– respiration (energy consumed for maintenance)– production (residual energy content for growth and

reproduction)

Page 6: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Fundamental Energy Relationships

• Components of an animal’s energy budget are related by:1) ingested - egested energy = assimilated energy

2) assimilated energy - respiration - excretion = production

Page 7: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Assimilation Efficiency

• Assimilation efficiency = assimilation/ingestion

• primarily a function of food quality:– seeds: 80%– young vegetation: 60-70%– plant foods of grazers, browsers: 30-40%– decaying wood: 15%– animal foods: 60-90%

Page 8: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Net Production Efficiency

• Net production efficiency = production/assimilation

• depends largely on metabolic activity:– birds: <1%– small mammals: <6%– sedentary, cold-blooded animals: as much as 75%

Page 9: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Production Efficiency in Plants

• The concept of production efficiency is somewhat different for plants because plants do not digest and assimilate food:– net production efficiency = net production/gross

production, varies between 30% and 85%– rapidly growing plants in temperate zone have net

production efficiencies of 75-85%; their counterparts in the tropics are 40-60% efficient

NPP = GPP - RNet Primary Gross Primary Respiration Productivity Productivity

Page 10: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Consumption efficiency = 200/1000

Assimilation efficiency 70/200

Production efficiency = 14/70

Amt produced by trophic level n-1

Amt ingested by trophic level n

Amt egested as feces (waste) by trophic level n

Amt assimilated (i.e. absorbed into body) by trophic level n

Amt respired by trophic level n

Secondary production by trophic level n

Efficiency of energy transfer

Page 11: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Detritus Food Chains

• Ecosystems support two parallel food chains:– herbivore-based (relatively large animals feed on

leaves, fruits, seeds)– detritus-based (microorganisms and small animals

consume dead remains of plants and indigestible excreta of herbivores)

– herbivores consume:• 1.5-2.5% of net primary production in temperate forests• 12% in old-field habitats• 60-99% in plankton communities

Page 12: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Exploitation Efficiency

• When production and consumption are not balanced, energy may accumulate in the ecosystem (as organic sediments).

• Exploitation efficiency = ingestion by one trophic level/production of the trophic level below it.

• To the extent that exploitation efficiency is <100%, ecological efficiency = exploitation efficiency x gross production efficiency.

Page 13: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Energy moves through ecosystems at different rates.

• Other indices address how rapidly energy cycles through an ecosystem:– residence time measures the average time a

packet of energy resides in storage:• residence time (yr) = energy stored in biomass/net

productivity

– biomass accumulation ratio is a similar index based on biomass rather than energy:

• biomass accumulation ratio (yr) = biomass/rate of biomass production

Page 14: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Biomass Accumulation Ratios

• Biomass accumulation ratios become larger as amount of stored energy increases:– humid tropical forests have net production of

1.8 kg/m2/yr and biomass of 43 kg/m2, yielding biomass accumulation ratio of 23yr

– ratios for forested terrestrial communities are typically >20 yr

– ratios for planktonic aquatic ecosystems are <20 days

Page 15: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Biomass Accumulation Ratios

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Ecosystem Energetics

• Comparative studies of ecosystem energetics now exist for various systems.

• Many systems are supported mainly by autochthonous materials (produced within system).

• Some ecosystems are subsidized by input of allochthonous materials (produced outside system).

Page 17: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Autochthonous versus Allochthonous Production

• In streams assimilation of energy by herbivores often exceeds net primary production - difference represents energy subsidy.– autochthonous production dominates in

large rivers, lakes, marine ecosystems– allochthonous production dominates in small

streams, springs, and caves (100%)

Page 18: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Ecosystem NPP

Page 19: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.
Page 20: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Energy allocation

Page 21: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Primary productivity limits secondary productivity

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Consumption efficiency determines pathways of energy

flow through ecosystem

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Note: • Detrital food chain accounts for

most biomass produced in a community

• Grazing plays greatest role in phytoplankton-based food chains

Page 24: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Energy loss between trophic levels

Page 25: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

General Rules for Energy Flow through Ecosystems

1) Assimilation efficiency increases at higher trophic levels

2) Ecological efficiencies average about 10%

Thus, only about 1% of NPP ends up as production in the third trophic level

Page 26: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Decomposition and Mineralization

• Most material is derived from plants• Involves:

• Release of chemical energy• Mineralization (= organic --> inorganic)

• Note immobilization = reverse of mineralization• Net mineralization rate = mineralization -

immobilization

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Terrestrial communities:Nutrient sources

• Weathering of rock (K, P, Ca and many others)• Fixation of CO2 (photosynthesis) and N2 • Dryfall (particles in the atmosphere)• Wetfall (snow & rain); contains

– Oxides of S, N– Aerosols

• particles high in Na, Mg, Cl, S• produced by evaporation of droplets

– Dust particles from fires, volcanoes• Ca, K, S

Page 28: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Terrestrial communities:Nutrient losses

• Release to atmosphere– CO2 from respiration– Volatile hydrocarbons from leaves– Aerosols– NH3 (decomposition), N2 (denitrification)

• Loss in streamflow– Dissolved nutrients– Particles

Page 29: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

Oceans

• No outflow• Detritus sinks --> mineralization --> nutrients

end up:1. Being carried back to surface in upwelling

currents, or2. Trapped in sediment (e.g., phosphorus: 1% lost

to sediment with each cycling)

Page 30: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

CARBON CYCLE CARBON CYCLE

4 PROCESSES MOVE CARBON THROUGH ITS CYCLE:

1) Biological

2) Geochemical

3) Mixed biochemical

4) Human Activity

CO2

CO2

Page 31: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.
Page 32: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

NITROGEN CYCLE NITROGEN CYCLE

Nitrogen-containing nutrients include:

1) Ammonia (NH3)

2) Nitrate (NO3-)

3) Nitrite (NO2-)

4) ORGANISMS NEED NITROGEN TO MAKE AMINO ACIDS FOR BUILDING PROTEINS!!!

N2 in Atmosphere

NH3

N03- &

N02-

Page 33: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

The nitrogen cycle

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PHOSPHORUS CYCLEPHOSPHORUS CYCLE

PHOSPHORUS FORMS PART OF IMPORTANT LIFE-SUSTAINING MOLECULES (ex. DNA & RNA)

Page 35: Ecosystem Energetics Limits on primary production Relationship between primary and secondary productivity Trophic efficiency Nutrient Cycles.

The phosphorus cycle

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We’re in the Driver’s Seat - Human Activities Dominate Many Biogeochemical Cycles

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