Structure of an ecosystem
Energy pyramid
Decreases each level as 90% lost in living processes.
Only 10% available for next level, hence why number of living organisms decreases with each trophic level.
Where energy goes
Most to decomposers
Nutrient cycling
Nutrients stored in three components
Illustrated in gersmehl diagrams
Tropical rainforest nutrient cycle
Large biomass - rapid plant growth
Medium/small soil - fast reuptake for growth
Small litter - broken down quickly (hot+humid)
Tropical grasslands nutrient cycle
Large litter - lacks maoisture = slow decomposition
Small biomass - grasses die in dry season (limited accum)
Small soil - plant growth seasonal
Temperate deciduous woodland nutrient cycle
Large biomass - plant growth (not as fast as rainforest)
Medium soil - nutrients from litter in here by decomposers
Medium litter - slow decomposition in lower temps
Nitrogen Cycle
for construction of plant and animal matter
- present in atmosphere
- fixed in soil by some plants (taken up by roots of other plants, passes through ecosystem)
operates:
- over land/sea/in atmosphere
includes: inputs (volcanic eruptions), outputs (deep sea sediments)
Carbon Cycle
stored in: - coal/oil/gas/peat temporary stores: -plants/animals/soil burning fossil fuels + deforestation + destroy peat deposits = release C in atmosphere = greenhouse gases = global warming + climate change
food chains
link/show energy flow
trophic pyramids from simple FCs
most FCs interconnected = food webs
succession
change in a plant community through time
climatic climax
plant species living in perfect balance/equilibrium with the surrounding environmental conditions
primary succession
occurs on surfaces that have had no previous vegetation by the gradual colonisation of a lifeless abiotic surface.
e.g. lava flows, bare rock
xeroseres
form on dry land
lithoseres: bare rock
psammoseres: sand
hydroseres and haloseres
hydrosere: form in fresh water
halosere: form in salt water
two types of primary succession
xeroseres
hydroseres
secondary succession
follows destruction/modification of an existing plant community
sere
entire sequence of stages of a succession
seral stages
plagioclimax
when human influences prevent the ecosystem from developing further
stages (seres) of development of a succession
invasion pioneers compete colonisation domination decline (polyclimax theory)
Invasion sere of development of a succession
plants - bare ground - group/colony - 2 or more species survive (hardy plants/pioneer species)
e.g. long rooted, salt tolerant marram grass on sand dunes
Pioneers compete stage of development of a succession
as die, add organic matter - develop soil - affect microclimate
roots help weather surface - aid soil formation
Colonisation stage of development of a succession
immature soil - change balance of species - each stage better conditions for plant growth - inc no. species
Domination stage of development of a succession