Presented by Group 5
Presented by Group 5
Presented by Group 5
Levels of organization of
matter
Subatomic
particles
Organs
Tissue
s
Ecosyste
m
Organ
System
Atoms
Cells
Communities
Organis
m
Molecules
Protoplasm
Populatio
ns
1. Abiotic components
are such physical and chemical factors of an
ecosystem as light, temperature, atmosphere
gases(nitrogen, oxygen, carbon dioxide are the most
important), water, wind, soil. These specific abiotic
factors represent the geological, geographical,
hydrological and climatological features of a
particular ecosystem.
Temperature, which
should not exceed
certain extremes, even
if tolerance to heat is
significant for some
species
green plants that produce most of the organic nutrients for the
biosphere.
Autotrophs produce their own organic nutrients for themselves
and other members of the community; therefore, they are called
the producers. There are basically two kinds of autotrophs,
"chemoautotrophs and photoautogrophs.
Chemoautotrophs are bacteria that obtain energy by oxidizing
inorganic compounds such as ammonia, nitrites, and sulfides ,
and they use this energy to synthesize carbohydrates.
.
Heterotrophs, as consumers that are unable to produce, are
constantly looking for source of organic nutrients from
elsewhere.
FOOD WEBS
Important facts
A node represents an individual species, or a group of
related
species or different stages of a single species.
A link connects two nodes. Arrows represent links, and
always go from prey to predator.
The lowest tropic level are called basal species.
The highest tropic level are called top predators.
Movement of nutrients is cyclic but of energy is
unidirectional and non-cyclic.
TOPOLOGICAL
WEBS
FLOW WEBS
INTERACTION
WEB
Aquatic food
web
ood web in
orest
Grassland
Food Web
Volcano eruptions
Ecological Succession
The gradual process of change in
an ecosystem is called
ecological succession.
There are two types of
ecological succession.
Secondary succession is
another type of ecological
succession. Secondary
succession occurs where
an ecosystem has
previously existed. For
example, secondary
succession occurs when a
lake ecosystem gradually
fills in and grows into a
forest.
Primary succession is
succession that happens
where an ecosystem was not
present before. Another
example is an ecosystem that
develops in a very rocky area
or on a sand dune.
Ecosystem stability
Factors affecting
stability:
Disturbance frequency and intensity (how often and
what kind of tillage)
Species diversity (intercropping or rotations),
interactions (competition for water and nutrients from
weed species), and life history strategies (do the
species grow fast and produce many seeds or slow
with few seeds)
Tropic complexity (how many functions are
represented), redundancy (how
many populations perform each function), food web
structure (how do all of these groups interact)
Rate of nutrient or energy flux (how fast are nutrients
and energy moving in and out of the system or
input:output efficiency)
Conclusion
The ecosystem change can either recover from a disturbance or not. Its easier
to recover from a natural disturbances than man made disturbances
In other words, stability can apply to the number of species in an area or the
number of functions performed.