APES Chapter 3 Notes
Ecosystems: What Are They and How Do They Work?
Core Case Study: Tropical Rain Forests Are Disappearing
Tropical rain forests near the earth’s equator
o only ~2% of the earth’s land but contains ~½ of world’s known terrestrial plant & animal species
Major harmful effects of disruption Natural Capital Degradation!
o Reduces biodiversity
o Accelerates climate change
o Changes regional weather patterns
3.1 How Does the Earth’s Life-Support System Work?
Major components of the earth’s life-support system:
o Atmosphere (air)
Innermost layer = troposphere contains the air we breathe
Stratosphere contains ozone layer
filters sun’s harmful UV radiation
o Hydrosphere (water)
All water vapor, liquid water, and ice
Oceans = 97% of Earth’s water
o Geosphere (rocks, minerals, and soil)
Upper portion of crust contains nutrients organisms
need to live, grow, & reproduce
Contains nonrenewable fossil fuels
o Biosphere (living things)
Parts of atmosphere, hydrosphere, and geosphere where life is found
Three Factors Sustain the Earth’s Life
One-way flow of high-quality energy from the sun
o Supports plant growth and warms troposphere
Cycling of nutrients through parts of the biosphere
Gravity holds the earth’s atmosphere
o Enables mvmt & chem. cycling through air, H2O, soil & organisms
3.2 What Are the Major Components of an Ecosystem?
Ecologists study 5 levels of matter:
o biosphere, ecosystems, communities, populations, organisms
Feeding level (trophic level)
o organisms classified as producers/consumers based on
nutrient source
Producers (autotrophs) make needed nutrients from their environment
Ecosystems Have Living and Nonliving Components
Abiotic: Water, Air, Nutrients, Rocks, Heat, Solar Energy
Biotic: Living and once living
o Decomposers
Consumers that release nutrients from wastes/remains
of plants or animals
o Nutrients return to soil, water, and air for reuse
o Bacteria, fungi
o Detritivores
Soil Is the Foundation of Life on Land
Soil = complex mixture of rock, particles, mineral nutrients, organic matter, water, air, & living organisms
Soil is a renewable resource, but renewed very slowly
3.3 What Happens to Energy in an Ecosystem?
Energy flows through ecosystems in food chains and webs
o Food chain = movement of energy and nutrients from one trophic level to the next
o Food web = Network of interconnected food chains
Every use and transfer of energy involves energy loss as heat
Pyramid of energy flow
o 90% of usable energy lost with each transfer (ex: 10,000 kcal 1,000 kcal 100 kcal 10 kcal)
o chemical energy for higher trophic levels
Biomass = total mass of organisms in a given trophic level
Some Ecosystems Produce Plant Matter Faster than Others Do
Gross primary productivity (GPP)
o Rate at which an ecosystem’s producers convert solar energy to stored chemical energy
o Measured in units such as kcal/m2/year
Net primary productivity (NPP)
o Rate at which an ecosystem’s producers convert solar energy to chemical energy, minus the rate at
which they use the stored energy for aerobic respiration
o Terrestrial ecosystems and aquatic life zones differ in their NPP
o The planet’s NPP ultimately limits the number of consumers (including humans) that can survive on
the earth
3.4 What Happens to Matter in an Ecosystem?
Nutrients cycle within and among ecosystems
o Cycles driven by incoming solar energy and gravity
o Can be altered by human activity
CYCLES YOU NEED TO KNOW: water, carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus
Water Cycle Sustains all Life
Hydrologic cycle collects, purifies, and distributes earth’s fixed supply of water
Incoming solar energy causes evaporation
Gravity draws water back as precipitation
o Surface runoff evaporates to complete the cycle
o Some precipitation stored as groundwater
Ways Humans Alter the Water Cycle:
o Withdrawing large amounts of freshwater at rates faster than nature can replace it
o Clearing vegetation increases runoff
o Draining and filling wetlands for farming and urban development
Wetlands provide flood control
Absorb and hold overflows of water
Carbon Cycles among Living and Nonliving Things
Carbon basic building block of carbohydrates, fats, proteins, DNA, and other organic compounds
Photosynthesis from producers removes CO2 from the atmosphere
o Aerobic respiration by producers, consumers, and decomposers adds CO2
Some CO2 dissolves in the ocean (stored in marine sediments)
Human Disruption of the Carbon Cycle:
o Humans have added large quantities of CO2 to the atmosphere
Faster rate than natural processes can remove
Levels have been increasing sharply since about 1960
Result = warming atmosphere & changing climate
o Clearing vegetation reduces ability to remove excess CO2 from the atmosphere
Nitrogen Cycle: Bacteria in Action
Useful forms of nitrogen
o Created by lightning and specialized bacteria in topsoil and bottom sediment of aquatic systems
o Used by plants to produce proteins, nucleic acids, and vitamins
Bacteria convert nitrogen compounds back into nitrogen gas
Human Alteration of the Nitrogen Cycle:
o Burning gasoline and other fuels create nitric oxide, which can return as acid rain
o Removing large amounts of nitrogen from the atmosphere to make fertilizers
o Adding excess nitrates in aquatic ecosystems
Human nitrogen inputs to the environment have risen sharply and are expected to continue rising
Phosphorous Cycles through Water, Rock, and Food Webs
Phosphorus cycles [SLOWLY] through water, the earth’s crust, and living organisms
o Major reservoir is phosphate rocks
Human Activities and Impacts:
o Clearing forests
o Removing large amounts of phosphate from the earth to make fertilizers
o Erosion leaches phosphates into streams