Ecosystems Flashcards
Define habitat
The environment in which a species usually lives
Define population
- Group of organisms of the same species
- Who live in the same area at the same time
Define community
Populations of different species living and interacting with each other
Define ecosystem
Interactions between all living organisms in an area and the surrounding abiotic environment
Define abiotic factors
Non-living factors
- e.g. temperature, pH, light levels, humidity
Define biotic factors
Living factors
- e.g. competition for food, breeding sites, disease, predators
Discuss how abiotic factors can affect the distribution of species in an ecosystem
Organisms have limits of tolerance and zones of stress
- e.g. high temperature will melt arctic ice - less hunting grounds for polar bears
Why are ecosystems defined as ‘dynamic’?
Biotic and/or abiotic factors are constantly changing
Where does most energy originate from?
The Sun
How is light energy converted to chemical energy?
By photosynthesis in green plants
Define producer
Organisms that convert light energy to chemical energy
- e.g. plants
Define consumer
Organisms that feed on other organisms
- e.g. bird, cat, fox
Define trophic level
- Position in a food chain / web
- e.g. producer, primary consumer, secondary consumer, tertiary consumer
What is meant by a food chain or food web?
- Shows feeding relationships
- By showing which organism eats which organism
- Shows the flow of energy from producer to top consumer through trophic levels
How does chemical energy flow through food chains/webs?
By feeding
What do arrows in a food chain/web represent?
Direction of energy transfer
How is energy supplied to ecosystems?
- In the form of light energy from the Sun
- Converted to chemical energy by producers (producing carbohydrates)
- Chemical energy is used by all organisms and is eventually converted to heat
Explain how energy and nutrients are transferred in ecosystems
- Energy enters ecosystems from the Sun
- Light energy is converted into chemical energy by producers
- Energy flows through food chains by means of feeding
- Nutrients are recycled within ecosystems
- Nutrients not lost but transformed into different compounds
What is biomass?
Total amount of living material in a particular place or in particular organisms
How is biomass calculated?
- ‘Dry mass’ measured - Mass of organism without any water
- Units = g m-2
What happens to biomass along food chains?
Decreases due to loss of carbon dioxide, water and other waste products e.g. urea
How does the flow of energy differ from the flow of inorganic nutrients in an ecosystem?
Chemical nutrients and energy tend to flow in the same direction for most of an ecosystem, but the main difference is that the nutrient cycle is recycled in the ecosystem while the energy flow is ultimately lost from the ecosystem to the universe at large.
What is a pyramid of biomass?
- Representation of total biomass
- At each level of a food chain
What is a pyramid of energy?
- Representation of energy lost at each level of a food chain
- Approximately 90% of energy lost at each tropic level