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ENVIRONMENTAL ECOLOGY
1. Introduction To Ecology
● Ecology is the study of organisms and how they interact with the environment around them.
● The term was coined by the German zoologist, Ernst Haeckel, in 1866 to describe the economies of living
forms.
● It comes from the Greek word ‘Oikos’ meaning home or place to live in and ‘logos’ meaning study.
1.1. Types of Ecology
Global Ecology
● It is the study of the Earth’s ecosystems among the land, oceans, and atmosphere.
Landscape Ecology
● It deals with spatial distribution, patterns, and behaviors across large geographical areas.
● Landscape ecologists might study the impact of development on a particular species of native grass in a specific area.
Population Ecology
● It studies the rise and fall in the number of a species.
● Population ecologists may compare the population of a species near a new food source to a population that
lacks access to that food source.
Microbial Ecology
● It looks at the smallest fundamental levels of life, that is, the cellular level.
● Involves mainly the first two life kingdoms: Kingdom Monera and Kingdom Protista.
● Connections are made between microbes and their relationships with each other and their environments.
Behavioral Ecology
● It studies the different ways organisms evolve and adapt to changes in their habitat.
● Behavioral ecologists often study mating patterns, or what characteristics male and female animals prefer
when seeking to reproduce.
Community Ecology
● It focuses on how interactions between living things alter community structure.
● Community ecologists study interspecific interactions, like predator-prey and competition.
Ecosystem Ecology
● It is the study of interactions between living (biotic) and non-living (abiotic) elements within an ecosystem
framework.
● It includes understanding how things like climate and soil composition affect the behaviours and interactions
of populations from different species.
Deep Ecology
● A new area of study which proposes that human beings function as a part of the environment, not in opposition to it.
● It is more related to philosophy and political science than other branches of ecology.
1.2. Autecology and Synecology
Autecology Synecology
Study of an individual organism or individual species or Study of groups of organisms or many species or
a population in relation to their environment. communities in relation to their environment.
Also called population ecology. Also called community ecology.
Comparatively simple experimental and inductive. Complex, philosophical and deductive.
Example: Study of Zebra population in relation to its
Example: Study of the entire grassland ecosystem.
environment
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Uniform
● Organisms are evenly spaced over the area they occupy.
● This is typical of species in which individuals compete for a scarce environmental resource, such as water in a desert.
Random
● Organisms have an unpredictable distribution.
● This is typical of species in which individuals do not interact strongly.
Clumped
● Organisms are clustered together in groups and this may reflect a patchy distribution of resources.
● This is the most common pattern of population distribution.
3.1.3. Factors Affecting Population Growth
● Natality: Refers to the number of births during a given period in the population that are added to the initial density.
● Mortality: Number of deaths in the population during a given period.
● Immigration: Number of individuals of the same species that have come into the habitat from elsewhere
during the time period under consideration.
● Emigration: Number of individuals of the population who left the habitat and gone elsewhere during
the time period under consideration.
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resulting in an exponential
(J-shaped) curve.
● Can be seen in populations that
are very small or in regions that
are newly colonized by a species.
● If a population of size N and
birth rate be represented as b,
death rate as d, then the rate of
change of N can be given by the
equation:
dN/dt = rN, where r = intrinsic
rate of natural increase
Figure.3. Growth pattern Logistical
Growth (K-Adapted Growth)
● Occur when population numbers begin to approach a finite carrying capacity.
● Carrying capacity (K) defines the limit of the resources beyond which they cannot support any number of organisms.
● A population growing in a habitat with limited resources shows initially a lag phase, followed by phases of
acceleration and deceleration and finally an asymptote.
● This is known as Verhulst-Pearl Logistic Growth and is represented using theequation:
dN/dt = rN((K-N) /K)
3.2. Community
3.2.1. Characteristics of a Community
3.2.1.1. Species Diversity
● Species diversity is a product of richness and evenness; it is species richness weighted by species evenness.
● Species richness is the number of species in a community and the distribution of individuals among the
species is called species evenness.
● Whittaker (1965) described three types of diversity:
D α-index diversity (diversity within one community,
D β-index diversity (diversity between communities), and
D γ-index diversity (diversity in the ranges of communities).
Diversity Indices
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Symbiosis
● An interaction characterized by two
or more species living purposefully in Figure.4. Interspecific Interactions in a Community
direct contact with each other.
● Example: Symbiosis in lichens (combination of a fungal partner (mycobiont) and an algal partner (phycobiont).
● Three major types: mutualism, commensalism and parasitism.
Mutualism
● Mutualism can be either obligate or facultative.
● Species involved in obligate mutualism cannot survive without the relationship. Example: leafcutter ants
and certain fungi have an obligate mutualistic relationship.
● Facultative mutualistic species can survive individually when separated but often not as well. Example:
relationship between mycorrhizal fungi and plant roots.
Commensalism
● Commensalism can be difficult to identify because the individual that gets benefit may have indirect effects
on the other individual that are not readily noticeable or detectable.
● Example: Epiphytes widely found in tropical rainforests grow on the branches of trees in order to access light,
but the presence of them does not affect the trees.
Parasitism
● Parasitism is a good example of how species interactions are integrated.
● Parasites typically do not kill their hosts, but can significantly weaken them.
● Example: trematode that parasitizes certain aquatic snails.
3.2.1.7. Energy flow in a Community
● Through the series of steps of eating and being eaten, energy flows from one trophic level to another.
● Green plants or other photosynthesizing organisms use light energy from the Sun to manufacture
carbohydrates for their own needs.
● This stored energy is transferred to the second trophic level, which comprises grazing herbivores,
decomposers, and detritus feeders.
D Detritivore is a heterotrophic organism, which obtains its nutrition by feeding on detritus, i.e., decomposing
plant and animal parts. Example: beetles, butterflies, earthworms, millipedes, woodlice, etc.
● Most of the energy assimilated at the second trophic level is again lost as heat in respiration, as energy used
for movement, and energy is lost as waste.
● Organisms in each trophic level pass much less energy than they receive as biomass.
● The decomposers break down the bodies of the animals and plants when they die, releasing and utilizing much
of the energy stored within them.
● In general, the more steps between producer and final consumer, the less energy remains available.
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● Eventually, all energy flowing through the trophic levels is dissipated as heat. The process whereby energy
loses its capacity to do useful work is called entropy.
● Occurs in essentially lifeless areas—regions in which the soil is incapable of sustaining life as a result of such
factors as lava flows, newly formed sand dunes, or rocks left from a retreating glacier.
Secondary Succession
● Occurs in areas where a community that previously existed has been removed; it is typified by smaller-scale
disturbances that do not eliminate all life and nutrients from the environment.
Nutrients exchange amongst organisms, detritus and soil Poor initially. Later becomes important.
Plant Succession
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Types of Succession
Based on origin
● Primary succession: Formation of an ecosystem from bare rock, sand or clear glacial pool where previous life
does not exist.
● Secondary succession: Formation of a new ecosystem after the disturbance of an existing ecosystem.
D The succession progressing on such an area is also termed as subsere. The climax is reached very quickly
in the secondary succession.
D Causes of destruction of the previous community: landslides, earthquakes,volcanic eruption, fire, or cut
down by farmers for cultivation.
Based upon factors responsible for environment changes
● Autogenic succession: Organisms themselves bring change in the environment during succession.
● Allogenic succession: External environmental factors cause change in the environment during succession.
Example: application of nitrogenous fertilizers, which increases the growth of vegetation.
Based on habitat
● Hydrosere: when the succession starts in aquatic environments such as ponds, lakes, swamps, etc.
● Xerosere: the successional stages occur in the desert area or in dry habitats.
D Lithosere: succession occurs in the rocky area; and
D Psammosere: succession occurs in the sand.
● Halosere: succession starting on saline soil or water.
● Oxylosere: Succession on acidic soil
Hydrosere: 7 stages
● Phytoplankton stage
D Aquatic plants (phytoplankton) and animals (zooplankton) add large amounts of organic matter and nutri-
ents in water due to their various life activities.
D After their death, they settle at the bottom of the pond to form a layer of muck.
● Submerged Stage
D The developing layer on the bottom creates a substrate for rooted submerged hydrophytes such as Hydril-
la, Elodea, etc.
D These plants reproduce an increasing number and add organic matter after their death.
● Floating Stage
D Broad-leafed plants of floating type grow and provide shade, and due to the absence of light, algal growth
is reduced and ultimately eliminated.
D These broad leaves intercept more soil particles from the air, evaporate more water. Ultimately, water
height is reduced, and the pond becomes shallower.
● Reed Swamp Stage
D Vegetations are finally anchored in the bottom muck by spreading their fibrous roots and rhizomes.
D Shoots of the plants are partly entirely exposed to the air, and they intercept more soil particles, and the
water body silt up.
● Marsh Meadow Stage
D The remnant land of the open pond dries up in summer and freezes in winter.
D Drainage improves, the soil lies above the water, and organic matter exposed tothe air decomposes rapidly.
The meadow starts to grow there.
● Woodland Stage
D This stage is characterized by the plants that can tolerate water-logged soil around their roots.
D By this time, a mass accumulation of humus and mineralization of soil favors the new tree species.
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● Climax
D Vegetation gets the ultimate shape in this stage. The vegetation may be of any type, depending upon pre-
vailing environmental conditions.
Xerosere: 6 Stages
● Crustose-lichen stage
D These are able to withstand extreme desiccation due to excessive dryness.
D During the rainy season they absorb large quantities of water and flourish rapidly.
D Crustose lichens produce some acids which bring about weathering of rocks.
D The organic matter of algae becomes mixed with the small particles of rocks to form the very thin layer of
soil on the rocks.
● Foliose-lichens Stage
D As soon as little soil is formed, higher forms of lichens (foliose-lichens) appear.
D They overlap the crustose-lichens and cause their gradual death and decay.
D More and more humus accumulates and gradually a thin layer of soil is formed.
D Associated with the lichens a few mites and then spiders make their appearance in cracks and crevices of
the rock.
● Mosses Stage
D The development of a thin humus-rich soil layer on the rock surface favors the growth of some xerophytic mosses.
D These mosses grow, compete with the lichens and add more organic matter to the soil after death and decay.
D The accumulated thick layer of soil retains a greater amount of water.
D It provides suitable habitat for the invasion of herbs, grasses, and ferns.
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● Shrub Stage
D On the soil, thus prepared by lichens, mosses, and herbs, shrubs find favorable conditions for their growth.
D They over-sheds the herbaceous vegetation and produce more organic matter.
● Climax Stage/Vegetation
D With the establishment of shrubs, more and more soil is formed and the environment becomes increasingly
humid. This favours the growth of woody trees.
D In the beginning, trees show stunted growth and are sparsely placed. Then a climax forest community is
established.
3.3. Ecosystem
3.3.1. Components of the Ecosystem
Biotic Components
● Living components or factors that affect an ecosystem or other organisms living in that ecosystem.
● Divided into three categories: Autotrophs, Heterotrophs and Saprotrophs.
Autotrophs
● Derived from the two Greek words ‘auto’, meaning self, and ‘trophe’, meaning nutrition.
● An autotroph is an organism that can make its own food.
● They synthesize organic nutrients from inorganic materials, using energy from sunlight or a chemical source
to drive the process.
● Photolithoautotrophs: Plants, algae, cyanobacteria and some eubacteria that derive energy from light.
● Chemolithoautotrophs: Bacteria that utilize the oxidation of inorganic compounds such as hydrogen sulfide
or ferrous iron as an energy source.
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Heterotrophs
● A heterotroph (Greek heteron = (an) other and trophe = nutrition) is an organism that requires organic
substrates to get its carbon for growth and development.
● All animals are heterotrophic, as well as fungi and many bacteria.
● Heterotrophs are unable to synthesize organic, carbon based compounds independently from the inorganic
environment’s sources.
Decomposers
● Decomposers are organisms (often fungi or bacteria) that break down organic materials to gain nutrients and energy.
● When an organism dies, it leaves behind nutrients that are locked tightly together.
● A scavenger may eat the carcass, but its feces still contains a considerable amount of unused energy and
nutrients.
● Decomposers such as fungi will later induce further breakdown. This last step releases raw nutrients in a form
usable to plants, which quickly incorporate the chemicals into their own cells.
● This process greatly increases the nutrient-load of an ecosystem, in turn allowing for greater biodiversity.
Abiotic Components
● Abiotic components are non living chemical and physical factors in the environment.
● Important Abiotic Components are 7 in number: Light, temperature, water, atmospheric gases, wind, soil
(edaphic) and physiographic (nature of land surface) factors.
Light
● Light energy (sunlight) is the primary source of energy in nearly all ecosystems.
● It is the energy that is used by green plants during the process of photosynthesis.
● Plants which grow well in bright sunlight are called heliophytes and plants which grow well in shady conditions
are known as sciophytes.
● Factors such as quality of light, intensity of light and the length of the light period (day length) play an important
part in an ecosystem.
Phototaxis
● Movement of the whole organism in response to a unilateral light source, where the stimulus determines the
direction of movement.
Photokinesis
● Variation in intensity of locomotory activity of animals which is dependent on the intensity of light stimulation,
and not the direction.
Photonasty
● Movement of parts of a plant in response to a light source, but the direction of the stimulus does not determine
the direction of the movement of the plant.
Temperature
● The distribution of plants and animals is greatly influenced by extremes in temperature for instance the warm season.
● The occurrence or non-occurrence of frost is a particularly important determinant of plant distribution since
many plants cannot prevent their tissues from freezing or survive the freezing and thawing processes.
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Water
● Plant and animal habitats vary from entirely aquatic environments to very dry deserts.
● Plants can be classified into 3 groups according to their water requirements:
D Hydrophytes: plants which grow in water, e.g. water-lilies and rushes.
D Mesophytes: plants with average water requirements, e.g. roses, sweet peas.
D Xerophytes: plants which grow in dry environments where they often experience a shortage of water, e.g.
cacti and often succulents.
Atmospheric Gases
● The most important gases used by plants and animals are oxygen, carbon dioxide and nitrogen.
Wind
● Winds or air currents arise on a world-wide scale as a result of a complex interaction between expanding and
rising hot air and the various effects of the rotation of the earth.
● Hot air rises mostly because of convection at the equator and at mid-latitudes.
● The earth’s rotation results in a centrifugal force at mid- latitudes. This force is known as the Coriolis force and
tends to deflect winds.
● Winds carry water vapour which may condense and fall in the form of rain, snow or hail.
● Wind plays a role in pollination and seed dispersal of some plants, as well as the dispersal of some animals,
such as insects.
Physiographic factors
● These factors are those associated with the physical nature of the area, such as altitude, slope of land and the
position of the area in relation to the sun or rain-bearing winds.
Aquatic Ecosystem
● All such ecosystems that are primarily located on or inside water bodies.
● Sub-divided into: Freshwater Ecosystem and Marine Ecosystem.
Terrestrial Ecosystem
● All such ecosystems which are mainly located on land.
● Sub-divided into: Forest, grassland, mountain and desert ecosystem.
Producer Level
● The fundamental source of energy in almost all ecosystems is energy from the sun.
● The energy of sunlight is used by the ecosystem’s autotrophic organisms.
● Autotrophs use the energy stored within the simple carbohydrates to produce the more complex organic
compounds.
● The autotrophic segment of the ecosystem is commonly referred to as the producer level.
● Organic matter generated by autotrophs directly or indirectly sustains heterotrophic organisms.
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Flow of Energy
● The flow of energy through the ecosystem drives the movement of nutrients within the ecosystem.
● Unlike energy, which is continuously lost from the ecosystem, nutrients are cycled through the ecosystem,
oscillating between the biotic and abiotic components in what are called biogeochemical cycles.
● Decomposers play a key role in many of these cycles, returning nutrients to the soil, water, or air, where they
can again be used by the biotic constituents of the ecosystem.
Ecological Pyramid
● An ecological pyramid (or trophic pyramid) is a concept related to ecosystem energetics.
● It is a graphical representation designed to show the biomass or productivity at each trophic level in a given
ecosystem.
● Biomass pyramids show the abundance or biomass of organisms at each trophic level, while productivity or
energy pyramids show the production or turnover in biomass.
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Process of Bioaccumulation
● Small amounts of toxic substances - often pesticides or pollution from human activity - are absorbed by plants.
● These plants are eaten by primary consumers in low concentrations.
● The toxin cannot be excreted so when the primary consumers are eaten by secondary consumers all the toxin
is absorbed by the secondary consumers.
● This repeats as secondary consumers are eaten by higher level consumers.
● At each trophic level of the food chain, the toxins remain in the tissues of the animals - so the concentration of
toxin becomes most concentrated in the body tissues of the animals at the top of the food chain.
Pyramid of Numbers
● It is a graphic representation of the number of individuals per unit area of various trophic levels stepwise with
producers at the base and carnivores at the top.
● In most cases, the pyramid of numbers is upright with members of successive higher trophic levels being less
than the previous one.
● The maximum number of individuals occurs at the producer level.
● The producers support comparatively fewer numbers of herbivores, the latter fewer number of primary
carnivores and so on. Top carnivores are very few in number.
● In a grassland, a larger number of grass plants or herbs support a fewer number of grasshoppers that support a
still smaller number of frogs, the latter still smaller number of snakes and the snakes very few peacocks or falcons.
● A similar case is found in a pond ecosystem where a large number of phytoplankton support a comparatively
smaller number of zooplanktons the latter fewer number of small-sized fIshes, the small-sized fishes become
food of still fewer larger-sized fishes or water birds.
● The number of pyramids in a higher trophic level is generally smaller than that of the lower trophic level
because the organisms of the higher trophic level are dependent for their food and energy on the organisms
of the lower trophic level.
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Pyramid of Biomass
● It is a graphic representation of biomass present sequence-
wise per/unit area of different trophic levels with producers
at the base and top carnivores kept at the tip.
● It is more accurate than the pyramid of numbers because
the pyramid of numbers does not take into consideration
the size of the individual.
● Maximum biomass occurs in producers. There is a
progressive reduction of biomass found in herbivores,
primary carnivores, secondary carnivores, etc.
● It is found that about 10-20% of the biomass is transferred
from lower trophic level to higher level.
● The rest is consumed in providing energy for giving heat,
overcoming entropy and performing various body activities. Figure.8. Upright pyramid of biomass for terrestrial
habitats
● Pyramid of biomass is upright for terrestrial habitats.
● Inverted or spindle-shaped pyramids are obtained in aquatic
habitats where the biomass of a trophic level depends upon
reproductive potential and longevity of its members.
● Thus the biomass of phytoplankton may be smaller than that
of zooplankton and that of the latter less than of primary
carnivores.
● However, if total biomass produced per unit time is
calculated, the pyramid of biomass shall always be
upright.
Pyramid of Energy
● It is a graphical representation of the amount of energy
trapped per unit time and area in different trophic levels of Figure.9. Inverted pyramid of biomass in an aquatic
a food chain. system Pyramid of Energy
● The energy content is expressed as Kcal/m2/year or KJ/m2/
year. Maximum energy content is present in producers.
● They obtain the energy from solar radiation. The energy is
converted in chemical form and stored inside organic matter
manufactured by the producers.
● As the energy passes into higher trophic level along with food,
its amount decreases because of its dissipation as heat and
used in overcoming entropy as well as for performing various
body activities.
Figure.10. Pyramid of energy in a fish pond
3.3.6. Ecosystem Productivity
● Productivity within an ecosystem can be defined as the percentage of energy entering the ecosystem
incorporated into biomass in a particular trophic level.
● Biomass is the total mass, in a unit area at the time of measurement, of living or previously living organisms
within a trophic level.
● The productivity of the primary producers is especially important in any ecosystem because these organisms
bring energy to other living organisms.
● The rate at which photosynthetic primary producers incorporate energy from the sun is called gross primary
productivity.
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● Net primary productivity is the energy that remains in the primary producers after accounting for the
organisms’ respiration and heat loss.
● The net productivity is then available to the primary consumers at the next trophic level.
Measuring Ocean Productivity
● Ocean productivity largely refers to the production of organic matter by phytoplankton.
● The total productivity of a region or system is the gross primary productivity. Some of this organic material is
used to sustain phytoplankton.
● The amount leftover is known as the net productivity, which is the amount of organic material available to
support the heterotrophs of the ocean.
● Net primary production is the gross primary production minus energy used for growth and development of
the plant.
● Primary productivity is calculated by measuring the uptake of CO2, or the output of oxygen.
● Production rates are expressed as grams of organic carbon per unit area per unit time.
Factors Affecting Ocean Productivity
Nutrient Availability
● Phytoplankton require relatively uniform amounts of Nitrogen and Phosphorus.
● The dissolved N:P ratio in the deep ocean is close to the 16:1 ratio of planktonbiomass.
● Iron is found in biomass in trace amounts, but it is used for essential purposes inorganisms.
● Scarcity often affects productivity in oceans, especially in regions of upwelling.
● Although they occupy less than 2% of the oceans, they support high biodiversity and provide 20% of the
world’s fish harvest.
Light
● Sunlight is the energy source for phytoplankton. However, very little sunlight penetrates below a depth of 80m.
● Photosynthesis is restricted to the upper, light-penetrated part of the ocean - known as the photic zone.
● Also, sunlight causes surface water to be much warmer than underlying water.
● Warm water has a lower density than colder water, so it stays above it, creating a thermocline.
● The two layers experience limited mixing, restricting primary production to the warmer surface waters.
Seasonality
● In some temperate and subpolar regions, productivity reaches a maximum during the spring as the
phytoplankton transition from light to nutrient limitation.
3.4. Biomes
Factors affecting distribution of biomes
● Temperature and sunlight (angle of the sun and how the sun’s rays hit the earth affect heating of the planet)
● Water and precipitation (ranges from dry to wet areas)
● Wind patterns (affects temperature and water loss)
● Rocks and soil (pH, mineral content, salinity, etc.)
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Very wet - heavy rainfall, soil - poor in nutrients, Large trees- broad-leaved
Temperature constant throughout the year evergreens, Epiphytes, not
8. Tropical Highest diversity of
much forest Floor vegetation
rainforest Wet and dry seasons, Location: equatorial, animals
(little sunlight).Canopy 30
23.5 degree N latitude, 23.5 degree S latitude - 40 m above ground
Aquatic Biome Freshwater and marine
1. Marine Various birds, large
Deep ocean, dependent on upwellings Algae
Pelagic Zone mammals, fish
2. Marine Detritus feeders,
Ocean floor, no light None
Benthic predatory fish
Where rivers flow into the ocean, mix of
3. Marine Aquatic vegetation, marsh
saltwater and freshwater, marshes rich in Rich variety
Estuaries plants
plants and animals
Marine worms,
4. Marine
Shoreline to shallow waters Algae clams, oysters,
Intertidal zone
crustaceans
5. Coral, reefs Tropical oceans Algae Coral, fish
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3.5. Biosphere
● The biosphere is made up of the parts of Earth where life exists.
● Components of biosphere:
D Lithosphere (solid surface layer)
D Atmosphere (layer of air that stretches above the lithosphere)
D Hydrosphere (water—on the surface, in the ground, and in the air)
● Since life exists on the ground, in the air, and in the water, the biosphere overlaps all these spheres. It has
existed for about 3.5 billion years.
● The biosphere’s earliest life-forms, called prokaryotes, survived without oxygen.
● Some prokaryotes developed a unique chemical process. They were able to use sunlight to make simple sugars
and oxygen out of water and carbon dioxide, a process called photosynthesis.
● These photosynthetic organisms were so plentiful that they changed the biosphere.
● The addition of oxygen to the biosphere allowed more complex life-forms to evolve.
● Animals, which consume plants (and other animals) evolved. Bacteria and other organisms evolved to
decompose, or break down, dead animals and plants.
● The biosphere benefits from this food web. The remains of dead plants and animals release nutrients into the
soil and ocean. These nutrients are reabsorbed by growing plants.
● This exchange of food and energy makes the biosphere a self-supporting and self-regulating system.
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Carbon can be released back into the atmosphere in many different ways
● Through the respiration performed by plants and animals.
● Through the decay of animal and plant matter.
● Through combustion of organic material which oxidizes the carbon it contains, producing carbon dioxide (as
well as other things, like smoke).
● Production of cement: lime, is produced by heating limestone, which produces a substantial amount of carbon
dioxide.
● At the surface of the oceans where the water becomes warmer, dissolved carbon dioxide is released back into
the atmosphere
● Volcanic eruptions and metamorphism release gases into the atmosphere. These gases include water vapor,
carbon dioxide and sulfur dioxide.
In the Biosphere
● Carbon is transferred within the biosphere as heterotrophs feed on other organisms or their parts (e.g., fruits).
● Most carbon leaves the biosphere through respiration. When oxygen is present, aerobic respiration occurs,
which releases carbon dioxide into the surrounding air or water, following the reaction:
C6H12O6 + 6O2 → 6CO2 + 6H2O
● Otherwise, anaerobic respiration occurs and releases methane into the surrounding environment, which
eventually makes its way into the atmosphere or hydrosphere.
● Burning of biomass can also transfer substantial amounts of carbon to the atmosphere
● Carbon may also be circulated within the biosphere when dead organic matter becomes incorporated in the geosphere.
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In the Ocean
● The sea contains carbon mostly in the form of bicarbonate ions.
● Inorganic carbon, that is carbon compounds with no carbon-carbon or carbon-hydrogen bonds, is important
in its reactions within water.
● This carbon exchange becomes important in controlling pH in the ocean and can also vary as a source or sink
for carbon.
● Carbon is readily exchanged between the atmosphere and ocean. In regions of oceanic upwelling, carbon is
released in the atmosphere.
● Conversely, regions of downwelling, transfer carbon (CO2) from the atmosphere to the ocean.
● When CO2 enters the ocean, carbonic acid is formed:
CO2 + H2O ⇌ H2CO3
Human Impact
● Felling of forests, coal-burning power plants, automobile exhausts, factory smokestacks,and other waste vents
of the human environment contribute billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the earth’s atmosphere. This alters
the Carbon Cycle drastically.
● The atmospheric concentration of CO2 has reached around 417ppm – a 50% increase over the 1750-1800
average. Pre-industrial levels were about 278ppm.
● This imbalance in the Carbon cycle is responsible for phenomena like greenhouse effect, global warming and
climate change.
Nitrogen Fixation
● Nitrogen fixation is the process by which nitrogen is taken from its relatively inert molecular form (N2) in the
atmosphere and converted into nitrogen compounds useful for other chemical processes (such as, notably,
ammonia, nitrate and nitrogen dioxide).
Three processes of nitrogen fixation in the biosphere:
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● The most fundamental enzyme required for nitrogen fixation is Nitrogenase, which is present only in the
diazotrophic (nitrogen fixing) bacteria.
● Important diazotrophs are:
1. Cyanobacteria: Anabaena, Nostoc, Gloeotheca, Calothrix
2. Others: Azotobacter, Azomonas, Agrobacterium,
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Denitrification
● Denitrification reduces nitrates to nitrogen gas, thus replenishing the atmosphere.
● Once again, bacteria are the agents, for example Thiobacillus denitrificans, Bacillus denitrificans
Anammox
● In this biological process, nitrite and ammonium are converted directly into dinitrogen gas.
● This process makes up a major proportion of dinitrogen conversion in the oceans. The overall catabolic reaction is:
NH4+ + NO2- → N2 + 2H2O.
Leaching and Weathering of Rocks
● A small amount of Nitrate is leached down to ground water deposits causing pollution. The situation is
aggravated by indiscriminate use of nitrogen fertilizers.
● Excess nitrate in drinking water reacts with hemoglobin and forms nonfunctional methaemoglobin that impairs
oxygen transport. This is called Methemoglobinemia or Blue-baby syndrome.
● The weathering of rocks releases fixed nitrogen ions into the soil but the process is so slow that it has a
negligible effect on the availability of fixed nitrogen.
Algal bloom
● An algal bloom is a rapid increase in the density of algae in an aquatic system.
● Algae can multiply quickly in waterways with an overabundance of nitrogen and phosphorus, particularly when
the water is warm and the weather is calm.
● Algal blooms can create dead zones beneath them. They prevent light from penetrating the water’s surface.
● They also prevent oxygen from being absorbed by organisms beneath them.
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● When rocks are weathered, minute amounts of these phosphates dissolve in soil solution and are absorbed by
the roots of the plants.
● Herbivores and other animals obtain this element from plants.
● Unlike the carbon cycle, there is no respiratory release of phosphorus into the atmosphere.
Four Major Components
● Tectonic uplift and exposure of phosphorus-bearing rocks to the forces of weathering.
● Physical erosion and chemical weathering of rocks producing soils and providing dissolved and particulate
phosphorus to rivers.
● Riverine transport of phosphorus to lakes and the ocean.
● Sedimentation of phosphorus associated with organic and mineral matter and burial in sediments.
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● It describes the movement of sulfur through the atmosphere, mineral forms, and through living things.
● Most of the earth’s sulphur is tied up in rocks and salts or buried deep in the ocean in oceanic sediments.
Steps Involved in Sulphur Cycle
Weathering
● Sulfur is released from geologic sources through the weathering of rocks. Once sulfur is exposed to the air, it
combines with oxygen, and becomes sulfate (SO4).
Sulphur Assimilation
● Plants and microbes assimilate sulfate and convert it into organic forms.
● As animals consume plants, the sulfur is moved through the food chain and released when organisms die and decompose.
● Some bacteria – for example Proteus, Campylobacter, Pseudomonas and Salmonella – have the ability to
reduce sulfur.
● These bacteria get their energy by reducing elemental sulfur to hydrogen sulfide. This process is known as
dissimilatory sulfate reduction.
In the Atmosphere
● Sulphur enters the atmosphere through both natural and human sources.
● Natural sources include volcanic eruptions, bacterial processes, evaporation from water, or decaying organisms.
● Sulphur enters the atmosphere through human activity mainly as a consequence of industrial processes where
sulphur dioxide (SO2) and hydrogen sulphide (H2S) gases are emitted on a wide scale.
● When sulphur dioxide enters the atmosphere it reacts with oxygen to produce sulphur trioxide gas (SO3), or
with other chemicals in the atmosphere, to produce sulphur salts.
● Sulphur dioxide may also react with water to produce sulphuric acid (H2SO4).
D Sulphuric acid may also be produced from dimethyl sulphide, which is emitted to the atmosphere by plankton species.
● All these particles will settle back onto earth, or react with rain and fall back onto earth as acid deposition.
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