chapter 23 - ecosystems Flashcards

1
Q

What are ecosystems?

A
  • its the distrubution of organisms that are controlled biotic and abiotic factors
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2
Q

What is meant by tropic level?

A
  • each stage of the food chain
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3
Q

What is gross primary productivity and what is it made up of?

A
  • its the total amount of energy made by producers
  • its made up of respiratory loss and net primary production(biomass)
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4
Q

What is the difference between respiratory loss and net primary production?

A
  • respiratory loss, the energy used by organisms for respiration (e.g active transport, movement, heat)
  • net primary production, is the amount of chemical energy a producer stores as biomass
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5
Q

why is the energy tranfer from the sun to the producer very low(roughly 2%)?

A
  • wrong wavelength
  • light strikes non photosynthetic region
  • light reflected
  • lost as heat
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6
Q

why is energy tranfer from the producer to the primary consumer low(roughly 10%)?

A
  • there is respiratory loss, plant uses energy for metabolism(e.g active transport)
  • lost as heat
  • not all the plant is eaten(roots)
  • some food is not digested
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7
Q

Why is the energy tranfer from the primary consumer to the secondary consumer low(roughly 10-15%)?

A
  • there is respiratory loss, primary consumer uses energy for metabolism (e.g muscle contraction)
  • lost as heat
  • not all the animal is eaten
  • some of the food not digested (e.g faeces)
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8
Q

describe and explain the two ways in which we can increase energy tranfer in crop plants?

A
  • shorten the food web, reduce competition so the plant has more energy to create biomass(herbicide to kill weeds, fungicide to reduce infection, insecticide to chemically control pests)
  • fertilisers(e.g nitrates), prevent growth being limited by lack of nutrients
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9
Q

What four ways can we increase the energy transfer in animals and livestock?

A
  • reduce respiratory loss, restrict movement and so less respiration and more energy is used to make biomass
  • slaughter animal while growing
  • controlled diet, higher yield of food will be digested
  • keep predators away
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10
Q

What way can we increase energy transfer in both animals and plants?

A
  • artificially select organisms with a high yield
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11
Q

What are the two ways to measure biomass?

A
  • dry biomass
  • mass of carbon
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12
Q

How is dry biomass used to measure biomass?

A
  • a sample is taken of biomass and is warmed until the mass is constant (all the water has evapourated)
  • the temperature must be low to avoid combustion as there would be a loss of biomass/co2
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13
Q

Why isnt a wet sample used when using the dry biomass method in measuring biomass?

A
  • the amount of water in biomass samples varies a lot
  • and so dry biomass gives a more representative sample
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14
Q

How is energy stored in biomass calculated and explain how it works?

A
  • calorimetry
  • burn a sample of biomass completely
  • heat a known volume of water
  • measure the temperature change of water
  • calculate energy released
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15
Q

how is the mass of carbon used to measure biomass?

A
  • organisms are made from organic compounds
  • mass of carbon is a good indicator for biomass
  • difficult to measure
  • carbon is about 50% of the dry biomass
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16
Q

What is succession?

A
  • a series of changes in a species composition in a given place over time
17
Q

explain the process of succession

A
  • an area is colonised by pioneer species, this changes the enviornmental conditions to make it less hostile(increase in nutrients)
  • this allows other species to outcompete the preceeding species
  • continues until climax community is reached (woodland)
18
Q

What is a climax community?

A
  • final stage of succesion, few species dominate, and stable equilibrium of species
19
Q

As succession takes place what increaeses?

A
  • biodiversity
  • niches
  • plant height
  • soil depth
  • h20 + nutrients available
20
Q

As succession takes place what decreases?

A
  • light intensity at ground
21
Q

describe primary succession

A
  • starts from newly formed land (e.g volcanic rock)
  • harsh abiotic factors (e.g no soil, little H20/nutrients)
22
Q

describe secondary succession

A
  • starts from land where vegetation has been cleared (e.g human deforestation/forest fire)
  • less harsh abiotic factors(soil already exists, more h20/nutrients available)
  • much faster
  • pioneer species can be larger
23
Q

describe deflected succession

A
  • a community that remains stable because human activity prevents natural succession from taking place (mowing)
  • this stops succession and stops tall plants growing and these plants can outcompete low growing grass
  • grassland becomes climax community
24
Q

What are the 3 ways in which nitrogen fixation occurs?

A
  • industrially
  • with the use of bacteria
  • lightning
25
Q

What is the name of the bacteria used to fix nitrogen gas in the atmosphere into ammonium ions?

A
  • aztobacter
26
Q

What is the name of the bacteria used in denitrification?
what type of conditions does this bacteria live in?

A
  • pseudomonas
  • aerobic conditions
27
Q

How does the bacteria
Rhizobium convert nitrogen and hydrogen to ammonia

A
  • it contains an enzyme called hydrogenase
28
Q

To convert ammonium ions to nitrate what processes does it undergo?

A
  • undergoes nitrification twice
29
Q

What is saprobioutic nutrition?

A
  • digestion of dead organic matter by extracellular enzymes
30
Q

Where can nitrogen be found in animals and plants?

A
  • protein
  • dna
31
Q

What is the only way in which co2 is removed from the atmosphere?

A
  • photosynthesis by plants
32
Q

what are decomposers?

A
  • they are organisms that feed on dead plants or animal matter