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Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Dec 30, 2015

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Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles. Objectives. Discuss energy flow through different ecosystems Trace cycles of Carbon, Nitrogen, and water. Ecosystem. All the energetic interactions and material cycling that link organisms in a community with one another and with their environment. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles
Page 2: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Page 3: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Objectives

• Discuss energy flow through different ecosystems

• Trace cycles of Carbon, Nitrogen, and water

Page 4: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Ecosystem

All the energetic interactions and material cycling that link organisms in a community with one another and with their environment

Page 5: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Energy and Production

Page 6: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Laws of Thermodynamics

Energy is not created or destroyed. It changes form and place

When energy changes form some of it is lost as entropy (heat)

Page 7: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Production

Primary Production = energy accumulated by plants

Gross Primary Production = total photosynthesis

Net Primary Production = energy remaining after Respiration and stored as organic matter.

NPP=GPP-R

Standing crop biomass = accumulated organic matter on a given are at a given time

Page 8: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Difference in productivity

• Species efficiency• Efficiency = NPP/GPP• Corn .85• Deciduous trees .42• Prairie grass .66

• Physical environment– Water

– Heat

Page 9: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Secondary ProductionAnimals

Energy, once consumed goes to maintenance, and waste. Little is left for production.

10% rule .

Page 10: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Homeotherms

High assimilation, high metabolism, thus low production efficiency

Page 11: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Poikilotherms

Low metabolism, low assimilation, thus even lower production efficiency

Page 12: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Food Chains and Food Webs

Page 13: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Definitions

Food Chain– series of steps by which energy stored in plants is passed through an ecosystem

Fig. 5.14

Page 14: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Definitions

• Food web – several interrelated food chains

Fig. 5.15

Page 15: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Components

• Producers – plants

• Herbivores – convert plant tissue into animal tissue

• Carnivores – eat other animals, levels

• Omnivores – eats both plants and animals

Page 16: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Components

• Scavengers – animals that eat dead plant and animal matter

• Saprophytes – plant and fungi that absorb dead material

• Decomposers – everything is a decomposer

Page 17: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Another way of viewing energy relationships

(Heterotrophs)

Biophages – use living matter

Saprophages – use nonliving matter

Page 18: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Two Major Food Chains

• Grazing food chain – energy flows through the biophages

• Detrital food chain – energy flows through the saprophages.

Fig. 23.3

Fig. 23.4

Fig. 23.5

Page 20: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Water cycle

• Fig. 16.3

Page 21: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Water Cycle

Page 22: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Carbon Cycle

• Fig 5.16

Page 23: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Carbon Cycle

Page 24: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Nitrogen cycle

• Fig. 5.17

Page 25: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

Nitrogen cycle

Page 26: Energy Flow and Chemical Cycles

The End

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