28
Ch 36 Energy in Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ecosystems 36.1 Food 36.1 Food Chains & Chains & Food Webs Food Webs

Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Ch 36 Energy in Ch 36 Energy in EcosystemsEcosystems

36.1 Food 36.1 Food Chains & Food Chains & Food

WebsWebs

Page 2: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

34.1 Biotic and Abiotic Factors

What are biotic and abiotic factors?

The biological influences on organisms are called biotic factors. Physical components of an ecosystem are called abiotic factors.

Page 3: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Biotic Factors

A biotic factor is any living part of the environment with which an organism might interact, including animals, plants, mushrooms and bacteria.

Biotic factors relating to a bullfrog might include algae it eats as a tadpole, the herons that eat bullfrogs, and other species competing for food or space.

Page 4: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Abiotic Factors

An abiotic factor is any nonliving part of the environment, such as sunlight, heat, precipitation, humidity, wind or water currents, soil type, etc.

For example, a bullfrog could be affected by abiotic factors such as water availability, temperature, and humidity.

Page 5: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Biotic and Abiotic Factors Together

The difference between abiotic and biotic factors is not always clear. Abiotic factors can be influenced by the activities of organisms and vice versa.

For example, pond muck contains nonliving particles, and also contains mold and decomposing plant material that serve as food for bacteria and fungi.

Page 6: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Biotic and Abiotic Factors Together

In addition, trees and shrubs affect the amount of sunlight the shoreline receives, the range of temperatures it experiences, the humidity of the air, and even the chemical conditions of the soil.

A dynamic mix of biotic and abiotic factors shapes every environment.

Page 7: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

34.1 The Study of Ecology

Ecology: interactions among organisms and their environment

Biotic Factors: Living things found in the environments (bacteria, protists, fungi, animals, plants).

Abiotic Factors: the nonliving physical and chemical conditions (soil, water, air, sun….).

Page 8: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Organism- Smallest unit of ecological study. Ex. Blue Sweet lip fish

Ecologists might ask, “How do Blue Sweet lip fish adapt to the challenges posed by the environment?”

Population- a group of individual species living in a particular area . Ex. A group of Blue Sweet lip fish Ecologists might ask, “What factors limit the numbers of sweet lip fish living around this reef?”

Communities- All of the organisms that live in a particular area

make up a community. Ex. Coral reef is home to many living things including fish, coral animals, microscopic algae….

Ecologists might ask, “How might a disease that strikes the coral animals affect the other species in the community?”

Page 9: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Ecosystems- includes the living (biotic factors) and the nonliving (abiotic factors) things in an area.

Reef’s many living species, the temperature of the water, and the amount of sunlight An ecologist might ask, “ How does nitrogen move within the reef ecosystem?”

Biosphere- broadest level of ecological study. Sum of all Earth’s ecosystems. Envelope of air, water, land that supports and includes all life. Biosphere is a closed system, this means that chemicals in the biosphere’s living and nonliving things mostly

come from within the system, not from the outside.

An ecologist would study global issues, and the effects of climate change on living things.

Page 10: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Patchiness of the Biosphere

Biosphere is not uniform, it is unevenly spread out. Biosphere is like a quilt of many different environments (land,

oceans, lakes, ice)

You can find an uneven distribution of biomes on a continent.

You can find patches of woods, fresh water, and marshes in a smaller area of wilderness.

Patchiness creates a number of different habitats. Habitat: specific environment in which organisms live. All habitats have different abiotic and biotic factors.

Page 11: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs
Page 12: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Key Abiotic Factors- How it affects animals/ plants

1.)Sunlight- provides light and warmth, powers photosynthesis. Canopy of forest gets more light than the forest floor. Sea floor gets less light than the surface of the ocean

2.)Water- essential for all life. (we are 70% water)

3.)Temperature- most life exists between a narrow range of temperatures. (0 50 °C) Few organisms can maintain an active metabolism below 0 °C Most organisms enzymes are denatured above 50°C

Page 13: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Key Abiotic Factors- How it affects animals/ plants

4.) Soil- the product of abiotic forces (such as ice, rain, and wind) and the actions of the living things (microorganisms, plants and earthworms) on the rocks and minerals of the earth’s crust.

Chemical makeup of the soil and rock affect the types of plants that grow there.

Dry/ nutrient-poor soil = dominated by little bluestem grasses 5.) Wind- it can affect the distribution and organisms in several ways. It moves clouds and rain over the Earth’s surface. Stirs up water in ponds, lakes, and streams. Creates currents that bring up nutrients from the bottom. Helps to disperse pollen and seeds. 6.) Sever Disturbances- fires, hurricanes, tornadoes, droughts, floods,

and volcanic eruptions. Some are infrequent so organisms have not adapted to these

disturbances.

Page 14: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

36.1 Feeding relationships

Energy flow through ecosystems begins with producers.

Energy flows in 1 direction

Nutrients cycle

Page 15: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Consumers Consumers (Heterotrophs)(Heterotrophs)

HerbivoresHerbivores Eat only plants and fungi

OmnivoresOmnivores Eat both plants/fungi and animals

CarnivoresCarnivores Eat only animals

Detrivores/ Decomposers Detrivores/ Decomposers consumers that feed on detritus, the wastes and remains of

dead organisms. Nutrients returned back to the soil

Page 16: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Producers (Autotrophs)Producers (Autotrophs)

Photosynthetic organismsPhotosynthetic organisms Capture energy from sunlight, CO2 and H2O Most producers are photosynthetic

Chemosynthetic or chemoautotrophs Chemosynthetic or chemoautotrophs organismsorganisms Capture energy from chemical compounds in the

surroundings (DEEP SEA HYDROTHERMAL VENTS)

Page 17: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Energy is lost in each step up a food chain Only 10 % of the energy from one level on the food chain is available to the next level (90% lost as heat)

Page 18: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

The pathway of food transfer from one trophic level to another is called a food chain.

In all food chains, producers make up the trophic level that supports all other levels.

What’s missing from this food chain?

FOOD CHAINS

Page 19: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

FOOD WEBS

Consumers usually have many food sources. A hawk can eat a small bird, fish, mouse... The pattern made by interconnected and branching food chains

is a food web.

Page 20: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Food WebsFood Webs Many consumers and

decomposers have more than 1 food source

Movement of energy occurs in complex webs rather than in simple chains

Page 21: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

A food web shows a complex network of feeding relationships.

Page 22: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

A food web shows a complex network of feeding relationships.

An organism may have multiple feeding relationships in an ecosystem. A food web emphasizes complicated feeding relationships and energy flow

in an ecosystem.

Page 23: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

Trophic LevelsTrophic LevelsEach of the feeding organisms represents a trophic level in the ecosystem. Both energy and chemicals move from one organism to the next as organisms feed.

Producers/Primary ProducersProducers/Primary Producers Autotrophs (Photosynthesizers, Chemosynthetic organisms)

Primary consumers- 1Primary consumers- 1stst level level Herbivores and omnivores that eat producers

Secondary consumers- 2Secondary consumers- 2ndnd level level Carnivores and omnivores that eat herbivores- primary

consumer

Tertiary consumers- 3Tertiary consumers- 3rdrd level level Carnivore eats another carnivore- secondary consumer

Quaternary Consumers- 4th level

eats another carnivore- tertiary consumers

Page 24: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs
Page 25: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

                                             

                                                     

Figure 36-2Each of these food chains includes five trophic levels. The arrows indicate the direction of food transfer between trophic levels.

Page 26: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

A Simplified Food Web?

Page 27: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

36.1 Objectives p. 788 Contrast the flow of energy and chemicals in

ecosystems

Explain how trophic levels relate to food chains and food webs.

Thumbs Up? Thumbs Down?

Page 28: Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems Ch 36 Energy in Ecosystems 36.1 Food Chains & Food Webs

36.1 Concept Check p. 791 1. How are the movement of energy and the

movement of chemicals in ecosystems different?

2. In the following food chain, identify the trophic levels:

Berriesmouse owl

3. fig. 36-3 identify a food chain w/ 3 trophic levels