0% found this document useful (0 votes)
492 views8 pages

Ecosystem

This document summarizes key concepts about ecosystems: - There are two basic ecosystems - terrestrial (e.g. forests, grasslands) and aquatic (e.g. ponds, lakes). Ecosystems are made up of biotic and abiotic interactions between living organisms and their environment. - Ecosystem structure includes stratification of different species occupying vertical layers. Components include productivity, decomposition, energy flow, and nutrient cycling. - Productivity refers to the production of biomass. Primary productivity is by producers like plants, secondary productivity is by consumers. Rates depend on species, photosynthesis, and nutrient availability. - Decomposition breaks down dead organic matter via fragmentation, leaching,

Uploaded by

Harsha Hinkles
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
492 views8 pages

Ecosystem

This document summarizes key concepts about ecosystems: - There are two basic ecosystems - terrestrial (e.g. forests, grasslands) and aquatic (e.g. ponds, lakes). Ecosystems are made up of biotic and abiotic interactions between living organisms and their environment. - Ecosystem structure includes stratification of different species occupying vertical layers. Components include productivity, decomposition, energy flow, and nutrient cycling. - Productivity refers to the production of biomass. Primary productivity is by producers like plants, secondary productivity is by consumers. Rates depend on species, photosynthesis, and nutrient availability. - Decomposition breaks down dead organic matter via fragmentation, leaching,

Uploaded by

Harsha Hinkles
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 8

Ecosystem | CBSE Biology Class XII Notes

Introduction
 An ecosystem can be visualised as a functional unit of nature, where living organisms
interact among themselves and also with the surrounding physical environment.
 Ecosystem is the interaction of living things among themselves and with their
surrounding environment.
 There are two basic ecosystems
o Terrestrial
 Forest, grassland and desert ecosystem
o Aquatic
 Pond, lake, wetland, river and estuary ecosystem

Ecosystem- Structure and Function


 The interactions between the various biotic and abiotic factors of an ecosystem lead to
the maintenance of the ecosystem.
 Stratification : Vertical distribution of different species occupying different levels.
o trees occupy top vertical strata or layer of a forest,
o shrubs the second and
o herbs and grasses occupy the bottom layers.
 The components of the ecosystem
o Productivity;
o Decomposition;
o Energy flow; and
o Nutrient cycling
 Example of pond ecosystem:
o Abiotic component: the water with all the dissolved inorganic and organic
substances and the rich soil deposit at the bottom of the pond.
o Producers : autotrophic components that include the phytoplankton, some
algae and the floating, submerged and marginal plants found at the edges.
o Decomposers: the fungi, bacteria and flagellates especially abundant in the
bottom of the pond.
o The pond performs all the functions of any ecosystem and of the biosphere as
a whole,i.e.,
 Conversion of inorganic into organic material with the help of the
radiant energy of the sun by the autotrophs;
 Consumption of the autotrophs by heterotrophs;
 decomposition and mineralisation of the dead matter to release them
back for reuse by the autotrophs.
o There is unidirectional movement of energy towards the higher trophic levels
and its dissipation and loss as heat to the environment.

Productivity
 A constant input of solar energy is the basic requirement for any ecosystem to
function and sustain.
 Primary production: The amount of biomass or organic matter produced per unit
area over a time period by plants during photosynthesis. [Unit: weight (g – 2 ) or
energy (kcal m – 2 )].
 Productivity: The rate of biomass production. [Unit: g –2 yr –1 or (kcal m – 2 ) yr –
1]
 Gross primary productivity (GPP): The rate of production of organic matter during
photosynthesis.
 Net primary productivity (NPP): Gross primary productivity minus respiration
losses (R). GPP – R = NPP
 Secondary productivity: The rate of formation of new organic matter by consumers.
 Primary productivity depends upon-
o type of plant species inhabiting a particular area
o photosynthetic capacity of plants
o nutrient availability

Decomposition
 Decomposition: Break down complex organic matter into inorganic substances like
carbon dioxide, water and nutrients by the decomposers.
 Detritus: Dead plant remains such as leaves, bark, flowers and dead remains of
animals, including fecal matter.
 Detritus acts as the raw materials for the decomposition.
 The important steps in the process of decomposition are fragmentation, leaching,
catabolism, humification and mineralisation.
o Fragmentation: Break down of detritus into smaller particles by detrivores
(earthworm)
o Leaching: Water- soluble inorganic nutrients go down into the soil horizon
and get precipitated as unavailable salts.
o Catabolism: Bacterial and fungal enzymes degrade detritus into simpler
inorganic substances.
o Humification: Accumulation of humus (a dark coloured amorphous
substance).
 Humus is highly resistant to microbial action.
 It undergoes decomposition at an extremely slow rate.
 It serves as a reservoir of nutrients.
o Mineralisation: Degradation of humus to release inorganic nutrients.
 Decomposition is largely an oxygen-requiring process.
 Rate of decomposition is controlled by:
o chemical composition of detritus
 decomposition rate is slower if detritus is rich in lignin and chitin.
 quicker, if detritus is rich in nitrogen and water-soluble substances like
sugars.
o climatic factors
 Warm and moist environment favour decomposition.
 Low temperature and anaerobiosis inhibit decomposition.

Energy Flow
 Photosynthetically active radiation (PAR) : Of the incident solar radiation less than
50 % of solar radiation; that can be used by autotrophs to make food from simple
inorganic materials.
 Plants capture only 2-10 per cent of the PAR.
 Producers: The green plant in the ecosystem that produces the food.
o In terrestrial ecosystem: herbaceous and woody plants
o In aquatic ecosystem: various species like phytoplankton, algae and higher
plants.
 Consumers: All animals depend on plants (directly or indirectly) for their food needs.
 Food Chain:
 Grazing food chain (GFC): A food chain that begins with producers.
 Detritus food chain (DFC): A food chain that starts with dead organic matter.
o It is made up of decomposers which are heterotrophic organisms, mainly fungi
and bacteria.
o They meet their energy and nutrient requirements by degrading dead organic
matter or detritus.
o Secrete digestive enzymes that breakdown dead and waste materials into
simple, inorganic materials, which are subsequently absorbed by them.
(saprophytes)
 Food Web:
 Trophic level: Every organism occupies a specific level in their food chain known as
the trophic level.
o Producers – first trophic level
o Herbivores (primary consumer) – second trophic level
o Carnivores (secondary consumer) – third trophic level
 Standing crop: The mass of living material (biomass) that is present in a trophic level
at a particular time.
 10% law: Only 10 per cent of the energy is transferred to each trophic level from the
lower trophic level;
o as a result of which the number of trophic levels in the grazing food chain is
restricted.

Ecological pyramids:
 An ecological pyramid is a graphical representation of the food or energy relationship
between organisms at different trophic level.
 The relationship is expressed in terms of number, biomass or energy.
 The base of each pyramid represents the producers or the first trophic level while the
apex represents tertiary or top level consumer.

Pyramid of numbers in a grassland ecosystem:


 Only three top-carnivores are supported in an ecosystem based on production of
nearly 6 millions plants.

Pyramid of biomass:

 Sharp decrease in biomass at higher trophic levels.

Inverted pyramid of biomass:

 Small standing crop of phytoplankton supports large standing crop of zooplankton.


 e.g.- Number of insects feeding on a big tree.
o Pyramid of biomass in sea – biomass of fishes far exceeds that of

phytoplankton.

An ideal pyramid of energy:


 Only 1% of the energy in the sunlight available to them into NPP.

 Pyramid of energy is always upright, can never be inverted-


o Because when energy flows from a particular trophic level to the next trophic
level, some energy is always lost as heat at each step.
 A trophic level represents a functional level and not a single species as such. Also, a
single species may become a part of more than one trophic level in the same
ecosystem at the same time depending upon the role it plays in the ecosystem.

Limitations of ecological pyramids:

 The ecological pyramids do not take into account the same species belonging to more
than one trophic level.
 It assumes a simple food chain that almost never exists in nature. It does not explain
food webs.
 Saprophytes are not given a place in ecological pyramids even though they play a
vital role in ecosystem.

Ecological Succession
 The gradual and fairly predictable change in the species composition of a given area.
 The composition and structure of a community constantly change in response to the
changing environmental conditions.
 These changes lead finally to a climax community.
 Climax community: The community that is in near equilibrium with the
environment.
 Sere: The entire sequence of communities that successively change in a given area.
 Seral stages / seral communities : The individual transitional communities.
 Primary succession: The succession that happens in areas where no life forms ever
existed as in bare rocks, cool lava, etc.
o It takes hundreds to thousands of years as developing soil on bare rocks is a
slow process.
 Secondary succession: The succession that happens in areas which have lost all life
forms due to destructions and floods, etc.
o Since some soil or sediment is present, succession is faster than primary
succession.

Successions of plants
 Hydrarch succession: It takes place in wetter areas and the successional series
progress from hydric to the mesic conditions.
 Xerarch succession: It takes place in dry areas and the series progress from xeric to
mesic conditions.
 Both hydrarch and xerarch successions lead to medium water conditions (mesic) –
neither too dry (xeric) nor too wet (hydric).
 Pioneer species: The first species that invade a bare area.

Primary succession on rocks:

 Lichens are the pioneer species.


 They secrete acids to dissolve rock, helping in weathering and soil formation.
 This later helps the plants like bryophytes to grow there.
 The bryophytes with time gets succeeded by bigger plants.
 After several more stages, ultimately a stable climax forest community is formed.
 The xerophytic habitat gets converted into a mesophytic one.

 The climax community remains stable as long as the environment remains unchanged.

Primary succession in water :

 Pioneer species are the small phytoplanktons.


 They are replaced with time by rooted-submerged plants.
 Rooted-floating angiosperms are replaced by free-floating plants
 The free-floating plants are replace by reed-swamp, marsh-meadow, scrub and finally
the trees.
 The climax community here is forest.
 With time the water body is converted into land.

Secondary Succession:

 The pioneer species depends on the following factors:


o Condition of the soil
o Availability of water
o The environment
o The seeds or other propagules present
 As the soil is present at the beginning the climax community is reached much quickly.

Nutrient Cycling
 The amount of nutrients present in the soil at a given time is known as the standing
state.
 Nutrients are never lost from the ecosystem. They are only recycled from one state to
another.
 The movement of nutrients through the various components of the ecosystem is called
nutrient cycling or biogeochemical cycles. They are of two types:
o Gaseous − Reservoir for these types of cycles exist in the atmosphere.
o Sedimentary − Reservoir for these types of cycles exist in the earth’s crust.
Ecosystem-Carbon Cycle

 About 49% of the dry weight of living organisms is made up of carbon.


 The ocean reserves and fossil fuels regulate the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere.
 Plants absorb CO2 from the atmosphere for photosynthesis, of which a certain amount
is released back through respiratory activities.
 A major amount of CO2 is contributed by the decomposers who contribute to the CO2
pool by processing dead and decaying matter.
 The amount of CO2 in the atmosphere has been increased considerably by human
activities such as burning of fossil fuels, deforestation.

Ecosystem-Phosphorous Cycle

 Phosphorus is a major constituent of biological membranes, nucleic acids and cellular


energy transfer systems.
 Many animals also need large quantities of this element to make shells, bones and
teeth.
 The natural reservoir of phosphorus is rock, which contains phosphorus in the form of
phosphates.
 When rocks are weathered, some of the phosphate gets dissolved in the soil solution
and is absorbed by plants.
 The consumers get their phosphorus from the plants.
 Phosphorus returns back to the soil by the action of phosphate- solubilising bacteria
on dead organisms.

Ecosystem Services
 The products of ecosystem processes are named as ecosystem services:
o healthy forest ecosystems purify air and water, mitigate droughts and floods,
cycle nutrients, generate fertile soils, provide wildlife habitat, maintain
biodiversity, pollinate crops, etc.
 Robert Constanza and his colleagues tried to put price tags on nature’s life-support
services.
 The Average price tag was calculated to be of US $ 33 trillion a year on these
fundamental ecosystems services.

You might also like