APES Notes - Chapter Three: Ecosystems: How They Work

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Chapter Three: Ecosystems: How They Work

3.1 Matter, Energy, and Life


Matter in Living and Nonliving Systems
I. Matter is defined as anything that occupies space and has space.
A. The basic building blocks of matter are atoms.
B. Atoms can build a great variety of things and be reassembled into different
materials.
C. All chemical reactions involve rearranging atoms to form different kinds of
matter.
D. Atoms do not change during the disassembly and reassembly of different
materials. They are never created or destroyed during chemical reactions.
II. A molecule consists of two or more atoms bonded together in a specific way. The
properties of the material depend on the specific way in which atoms are bonded to
form molecules, as well as on the atoms themselves.
A. A compound consists of two or more different kinds of atoms bonded together.
III. The cycle of growth, reproduction, death, and decay of organisms is a continuous process
of taking various atoms from the environment, assembling them into living
organisms, disassembling them, and repeating the process.
Four Spheres
I. The lithosphere is earth’s crust, made up of rocks and minerals. The hydrosphere is water
in all of its liquid and solid compartments. The atmosphere is the thin layer of gases
separating earth from outer space. All of these spheres are contained in the biosphere.
II. Living things are characterized by six key elements: carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen,
phosphorus, and sulfur. These six elements are the essential ones in the organic
molecules that make up the tissues of plants, animals, and microbes.
III. The lower atmosphere is a mixture of molecules of three important gases—oxygen,
nitrogen, and carbon dioxide—along with water vapor and trace amounts of other
gases that have no immediate biological importance.
A. The gases in the atmosphere are usually stable, but under some circumstances
they react chemically to form new compounds.
IV. The hydrosphere is the main source of hydrogen.
V. All other elements are found in the Lithosphere, in the form of rock and soil minerals.
A. A mineral is any hard, crystalline, inorganic material of a given chemical
composition.
Organic Compounds
I. The chemical compounds making up the tissues of a living organisms are referred to as
organic.
A. The key chemical elements in living organisms bond to form very large, complex
organic molecules. Their potential diversity is infinite.
B. They are composed mainly from carbon atoms bonded together into chains, with
hydrogen and oxygen atoms attached. Hence, the carbon-based molecules that
make up the tissues of living organisms are called organic molecules.
C. Inorganic, then, refers to all other molecules or compounds—that is, those with
neither carbon-carbon nor carbon-hydrogen bonds.
D. The compounds making up living organisms are referred to as natural organic
compounds, and the human-made ones as synthetic organic compounds.
Energy Basics
I. The various forms of energy affect matter, causing changes in its position or state. Energy
is the ability to move matter.
A. Kinetic energy is energy in action or motion.
B. Potential energy is energy in storage. A substance or system with potential energy
has the capacity to release one or more forms of kinetic energy.
C. The potential energy contained in chemicals is called chemical energy.
II. Energy may be changed from one form to another in many ways.
III. If energy is defined as the ability to move matter, then no matter can be moved without
the absorption or release of energy. No change in matter can be separated from its
respective change in energy.
IV. Energy is neither created nor destroyed, but may be converted from one form to another.
A. In any energy conversion, some of the usable energy is always lost.
V. Underlying the loss of usable energy to heat is the principle of increasing entropy.
Entropy is a measure of the degree of disorder in a system, so increasing entropy
means increasing disorder.
A. Without energy inputs, everything goes towards increasing entropy.
B. The conversion of energy and the loss of usable energy to heat are both aspects of
increasing entropy.
C. Systems go spontaneously towards increasing disorder and decreasing potential
energy.
Energy Changes in Organisms
I. All organic molecules, which make up the tissues of living organisms, contain high
potential energy. When the molecules are burned, the heat and light of the flame are
the potential energy being released as kinetic energy.
A. Inorganic compounds have very low potential energy. Thus, the production of
organic material from inorganic material represents a gain in potential energy.
Conversely, the breakdown of organic materials releases energy.
II. This relationship between the formation and breakdown of organic matter, where energy
is gained and released, forms the basis of the energy dynamics of ecosystems.
A. Producers make high-potential-energy organic molecules for their needs from
low-potential-energy raw materials in the environment.
B. All consumers, detritus feeders, and decomposers obtain energy for movement
and growth from feeding on and breaking down organic matter made by
producers.
III. Producers use photosynthesis to make sugar from carbon dioxide, water, and light
energy. Chlorophyll in the cells of the plant absorbs the kinetic energy of light and
uses it to remove the hydrogen atoms from water molecules. The hydrogen atoms
combine with atoms from carbon dioxide to form a growing chain of carbons that
eventually becomes a glucose molecule.
A. After the hydrogen atoms are removed from water, the oxygen atoms that remain
combine with each other to form oxygen gas, which is released into the air.
B. The key energy steps in photosynthesis remove the hydrogen from water
molecules and join carbon atoms together to form carbon-carbon and carbon-
hydrogen bonds of glucose. These steps convert the low-potential-energy bonds in
water and carbon dioxide molecules to the high-potential-energy bonds of
glucose.
IV. The glucose produced in photosynthesis serves three purposes in the plant: 1) either by
itself or combined with nitrogen, phosphorous, sulfur, and other mineral nutrients
absorbed by plant’s roots, glucose is the raw material used for making all the other
organic molecules that make up the stem, roots, leaves, flowers, and fruit of the plant.
A. 2) The synthesis of all these organic molecules requires additional energy, as do
the plant’s absorption of nutrients from the soil and certain other functions. This
energy is obtained when the plant breaks down a portion of the glucose to release
its stored energy in a process called cell respiration.
B. 3) A portion of the glucose produced may be stored for future use.
C. None of these reactions takes place automatically. Each step is catalyzed by
specific enzymes, proteins that promote the synthesis or breaking of chemical
bonds.
V. Because the plants create new organic matter for the ecosystem, they are the primary
producers. Given suitable conditions and resources, the producers of an ecosystem
will maintain their photosynthetic activity over time in the process called primary
production.
A. The total amount of photosynthetic activity in producers is called gross primary
production; subtracting the energy consumed by plants themselves yields the net
primary production. Thus, net primary production is the rate at which new organic
matter is made available to consumers in an ecosystem.
VI. Consumers get their energy from the breakdown of organic molecules in food.
A. Inside each cell, organic molecules may be broken down through a process called
cell respiration to release the energy required for the work done by that cell. Cell
respiration involves the breakdown of glucose. The purpose of cell respiration is
to release the potential energy contained in organic molecules to perform the
activities of the organism.
B. Oxygen is released in photosynthesis but consumed in cell respiration.
C. Organic matter is broken down in cell respiration only as it is needed to meet the
energy needs of the body. Excess calories are converted to fat and stored.
VII. Whereas 60-90% of the food that consumers eat, digest, and absorb is oxidized for
energy, the remaining 10-40% which is converted to the body tissues of the
consumer, is no less important. This is the fraction that enables the body to grow,
maintain, and repair itself.
A. A portion of what is ingested by consumers is not digested, but simply passes
through the digestive system and out as fecal wastes. For consumers that eat
plants, this waste is largely cellulose, the material of plant cell walls.
VIII. Organic material eaten by any consumer follows one of three pathways: 1) more than
60% of what is digested and absorbed is oxidized to provide energy, and waste
products are released back to the environment; 2) the remainder of what is digested
and absorbed goes into body growth, maintenance and repair, or storage; and 3) the
portion that is not digested or absorbed passes out as fecal waste.
A. In an ecosystem, therefore, only that portion of the food which becomes the body
tissue of the consumer can become food for the next organism in the food chain.
This process is often referred to as secondary production, and can be expressed as
a rate over time.
IX. Detritus is largely cellulose because it consists mostly of dead leaves, the woody parts of
plants, and animal fecal wastes. Nevertheless, it is still organic and high in potential
energy for those organisms that can digest it.
A. Beyond having the ability to digest cellulose, decomposers act as any other
consumer, using the cellulose as a source of energy and nutrients.
B. Most decomposers use oxygen for cell respiration, which breaks the detritus down
into carbon dioxide, water, and mineral nutrients. Likewise, there is a release of
waste heat.
C. The release of nutrients by decomposers is vitally important to the primary
producers, because it is the major source of nutrients in most ecosystems.
D. Some decomposers can meet their energy needs through the partial breakdown of
glucose that can occur in the absence of oxygen. This modified form of cell
respiration, called fermentation, results in such end products as ethyl alcohol,
methane gas, and acetic acid.
E. In nature, anaerobic, or oxygen-free, environments commonly exist in the
sediments of lakes, marshes, or swamps and in the guts of animals. Methane gas
is commonly produced in these locations.
X. The different biotic components of ecosystems function on the basis of two common
processes: a) the flow of energy, using sunlight as the basic energy source, and b) the
cycling of nutrients.
III.2 Energy Flow in Ecosystems
I. In most ecosystems, sunlight, or solar energy, is the initial source of energy absorbed by
producers through the process of photosynthesis. Primary production captures only
about 2% of incoming solar energy.
A. In a given ecosystem, the actual biomass of primary producers at any given time
is referred to as the standing-crop biomass. Both biomass and primary production
vary greatly in different ecosystems.
II. The productivity of different types of ecosystems has been examined to evaluate their
contribution to global productivity and to investigate why some are more productive
than others.
A. Tropical rainforests are both highly productive and contribute considerably to
global productivity; they cover a large area of the land and are characterized by
ideal climatic conditions for photosynthesis—warm temperatures and abundant
rainfall.
B. The open oceans cover about 65% of the Earth’s surface, so they account for a
large portion of global productivity, yet their actual rate of production is low
enough that they are veritable biological deserts. Primary production in oceans is
limited by the scattering of nutrients.
III. Energy flow in an ecosystem can be characterized by how the energy moves from one
trophic level to another. At each trophic level, some energy goes into growth, and
some is given off as waste or is not consumed. As energy moves from one trophic
level to the next, only a small fraction is actually passed on.
A. Much of the preceding trophic level is standing biomass and is not consumed.
Much of what is consumed is used for energy, and some of what is consumed is
undigested and passes through the organism.
B. A very large proportion of the primary-producer trophic level is not consumed in
the grazing food web. As this material dies, it is joined by the fecal wastes and
dead bodies from higher trophic levels and represents the starting point for a
separate food web, the detritus food web. In most cases, the preponderance of the
energy in an ecosystem flows through the detritus food web.
IV. Because energy is lost when it is transferred to the next higher trophic level, each
successive trophic level captures only a fraction of the energy that entered the
previous trophic level and is usually represented by a much smaller biomass.
A. There is an approximate 90% loss of energy as it moves from one trophic level to
the next. This loss gets increasingly critical at increasingly higher trophic levels
and is the reason carnivores are much less abundant than herbivores, carnivores
are much less abundant than herbivores, etc.
V. Most of the solar energy entering an ecosystem is absorbed by the atmosphere, oceans,
and land, thus heating them in the process. The small fraction captured by living
plants is either passed on to the next trophic level or degraded into the lowest and
most disordered form of energy—heat—as the plant decomposes.
A. Eventually, all the energy entering ecosystems escapes as heat.
B. So many energy conversions are taking place in ecosystem trophic activities, that
entropy is increased and all the energy is degraded to a form unable to do further
work. The ultimate result is that energy flows in a one-way direction through
ecosystems.
VI. No system can run without an input of energy, and living systems are no exception. For
all major ecosystems, the initial source of energy is sunlight. As a basic energy
source, sunlight is highly sustainable because it is both nonpolluting and
nondepletable.
A. Light from the sun is a form of pure energy; it contains no substance that can
pollute the environment.
B. The sun’s energy output is remarkably constant. How much or how little of this
energy is used on earth will neither influence nor deplete the sun’s output.
III.3 The Cycling of Matter in Ecosystems
I. The various inputs and outputs of producers, consumers, detritus feeders, and
decomposers fit together remarkably well. The products or by-products of each group
are essential nutrients for the other.
A. This kind of recycling is fundamental to sustainability, for two reasons: a) it
prevents the accumulation of wastes that would cause problems, and b) it
guarantees that the ecosystem will not run out of essential elements.
B. Recycling is the only way to maintain a dynamic system. Because these pathways
all lead in circles and involve biological, geological, and chemical processes, they
are known as biochemical cycles.
II. It is convenient to start the carbon cycle with the “reservoir” of carbon dioxide molecules present
in the air. Through photosynthesis and metabolism, carbon atoms from C02 become the
carbon atoms of the organic molecules making up a plant’s body.
A. The carbon atoms then move into food webs and become part of the tissues of
all the other organisms in the ecosystem. Respiration by soil decomposers
returns about 60Gt/yr of carbon to the atmosphere.
B. The cycle is different in the oceans: photosynthesis by phytoplankton and
macroalgae removes CO2 from the huge pool of inorganic carbonates in
seawater, and feeding moves the organic carbon through marine food webs.
Respiration by the biota and decomposers returns the CO2 to the inorganic
carbonates in solution.
III. Some processes other than trophic transfer are significant. 1) diffusion exchange between the
atmosphere and the oceans; oceans absorb more than they release 2) the combustion of
fossil fuels, which releases some 7.2 Gt/yr of CO2 to the atmosphere.
A. Ancient fossil fuel is buried by biological systems, limestone is formed by
marine organisms, and is weathered.
B. Because the total amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere is about 765 Gt,
and photosynthesis in terrestrial ecosystems removes about 120 Gt/yr, a
carbon atom cycles from the atmosphere through one or more living things
and back to the atmosphere every six years.
IV. Human intrusion into the carbon cycle is significant. We are diverting and
canceling out 40% of terrestrial primary production in order to support human
enterprises. And by burning fossil fuels, we have increased atmospheric carbon
dioxide by 35% over preindustrial levels.
V. The phosphorous cycle is representative of the cycles of all the biologically
important mineral nutrients—those elements that have their origin in the rock and
soil minerals of the lithosphere. Phosphorus tends to be a limiting factor in a
number of ecosystems and its excess can seriously stimulate unwanted algal
growth in freshwater systems.
A. Phosphorus exists in various rock and soil minerals as the inorganic ion
phosphate. As rock gradually breaks down, phosphate and other ions are
released. This slow process is the normal means of replenishing phosphorus
that is lost to runoff.
B. Plants absorb phosphate from the soil or from a water solution, and once the
phosphate is incorporated into organic compounds by the plant, it is referred
to as organic phosphate. Moving through food chains, organic phosphate is
transferred from producers to the rest of the ecosystem.
C. As with carbon, at each step it is highly likely that the organic compounds
containing phosphate will be broken down in cell respiration or by
decomposers, releasing phosphate in urine or other waste material. The
phosphate may then be reabsorbed by plants to start the cycle again.
D. Phosphate enters into complex chemical reactions with other substances. For
example, phosphate forms insoluble chemical precipitates with a number of
cations. If these cations are in significantly high concentration in soil or
aquatic systems, the phosphorus can be bound up in chemical precipitates and
rendered largely unavailable to plants.
VI. There is an important difference between the carbon cycle and the phosphorus
cycle. No matter where CO2 is released, it will mix into and maintain the
concentration of CO2 in the atmosphere. Phosphorus, however, does not have a
gas phase, so it is recycled only if the wastes containing it are deposited in the
ecosystem from which it came.
A. In natural ecosystems, wastes are deposited in the same area, so recycling
occurs efficiently.
VII. The most serious human intrusion into the phosphorus cycle comes from the use
of phosphorus-containing fertilizers. Phosphorus is mined in several locations and
is then made into fertilizers, animal feeds, detergents, and other products. A
common limiting factor in soils, phosphorus added to croplands can greatly
stimulate production.
A. Much of the phosphorus applied to agricultural croplands and lawns makes its
way into waterways. There is essentially no way to return this waterborne
phosphorus to the soil, so the bodies of water end up overfertilized. This leads
to severe water pollution.
B. We are accelerating the natural phosphorus cycle as we mine it from the earth
and as it subsequently moves from the soil into aquatic ecosystems, creating
problems as it makes its way to the oceans.
VIII. The nitrogen cycle has aspects of both the carbon cycle and the phosphorus cycle.
Like carbon, nitrogen possesses a gas phase; like phosphorus, it acts as a limiting
factor. The nitrogen cycle is otherwise unique. Most notably, bacteria in soils,
water, and sediments perform many of the steps of the cycle.
A. The main reservoir for nitrogen is in the air, which is about 78% nitrogen gas.
This is called nonreactive nitrogen; only a small number of microbes can use
it. the remaining forms of nitrogen are called reactive nitrogen because they
readily move between organisms and environmental systems and are
responsible for many changes in those systems.
B. Plants in terrestrial ecosystems take up Nr as ammonium ions or nitrate ions.
The plants incorporate the nitrogen into essential organic compounds such as
proteins and nucleic acids. The nitrogen then follows the classic food web
from producers to herbivores to carnivores and decomposers.
C. At various points, nitrogen wastes are released, primarily as ammonium
compounds. A group of soil bacteria the nitrifying bacteria, oxidizes the
ammonium to nitrite in a chemosynthetic process that yields energy for the
bacteria. At this point, the nitrate is once again available for uptake by green
plants—a local ecosystem cycle within the global cycle. In most ecosystems,
the supply of Nr is limited.
D. A number of bacteria and cyanobacteria can use nonreactive N through a
process called biological nitrogen fixation. In terrestrial ecosystems, the most
important among the nitrogen-fixing organisms are bacteria in the genus
Rhizobium, which live in nodules on the roots of legumes. From the legumes,
nitrogen enters the food web. Every major terrestrial ecosystem has its
representative legume species, and legumes are generally the first plants to
recolonize a burned-over area. Without them, all production would be
impaired due to a lack of available nitrogen.
E. Three other processes also “fix” nitrogen. One is the conversion of nitrogen
gas to the ammonium form by discharges of lightning in a process known as
atmospheric nitrogen fixation; the ammonium then comes down in rainfall.
The second is the industrial fixation of nitrogen in the manufacture of
fertilizer. The third is a consequence of the combustion of fossil fuels, during
which nitrogen from coal and oil is oxidized; some nitrogen gas is also
oxidized during high-temperature combustion. Both of these processes lead to
nitrogen oxides in the atmosphere, which are soon converted to nitric acid and
then brought down to Earth as precipitation.
F. Denitrification is a microbial process that occurs in soils and sediments
depleted of oxygen. A number of microbes can take nitrite (which is highly
oxidized) and use it as a substitute for oxygen. In so doing, the nitrogen is
reduced to nitrogen gas and released back into the atmosphere. Large amounts
of organic matter are decomposed in this manner.
IX. Human involvement in the nitrogen cycle is substantial. Many agricultural crops
are legumes, so they draw nitrogen from the air, thus increasing the rate of
nitrogen fixation on land. Crops that are nonleguminous are heavily fertilized with
nitrogen derived from industrial fixation. Fossil fuel combustion fixes nitrogen in
the air.
A. We are more than doubling the rate at which nitrogen is moved from the
atmosphere to the land.
B. Acid deposition has destroyed thousands of lakes and ponds and caused
extensive damage to forests. Nitrogen oxides in the atmosphere contribute to
ozone pollution, global climate change, and stratospheric ozone depletion.
C. Surplus nitrogen has led to “nitrogen saturation” of many areas, whereby the
nitrogen can no longer be incorporated into living matter and is released into
the soil. There, it leaches cations, which leads to mineral deficiencies in trees
and other vegetation.
D. Nitrogen makes its way to estuaries and coastal oceans, where it promotes rich
“blooms” of algae, some of which are toxic to fish and shellfish. When algal
blooms die, they sink to deeper water or sediments, where they reduce the
oxygen supply and kill bottom-dwelling organisms, creating “dead zones.”
This complex of ecological and human health effects has been called the
nitrogen cascade.
III.4 Implications for Human Societies
I. Ecosystems have existed for millions of years, maintaining natural populations of
biota and the processes that they carry out, processes that in turn sustain the
ecosystems.
II. It is the sun that energizes the processes of energy flow and nutrient cycling, and
then the biological, geological, and chemical interactions within and between
ecosystems are the drivers of change. Humans make heavy use of the energy that
starts with sunlight and flows through natural and agricultural ecosystems.
III. Nutrients are replenished in ecosystems through the breakdown of organic
compounds and release of the chemicals that make them up. This maintains the
sustainability of ecosystems indefinitely.

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