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Ecosytem
 The term Ecosystem was first proposed by ecologist
A. G. Tansely who defined ecosystem as “ the
system resulting from the integration of all the living
and non living factors in the environment”
• A community of living organisms interacting with
one another and with its non-living physical and
chemical environment.
 Or
• An Ecosystem is a region in which living organism
interact with their environment and these
interactions perpetuate the community and retain
stability under varying conditions.
Classification of ecosystem
Natural vs Artificial
Ecosystem
Structure of ecosystem:
Components
Producers
 Producers make their
own food
 Green plants use
energy from the sun
to make food
 Producers are on the
bottom of the food
chain
Consumers
 Consumers hunt, gather, and
store food because they cannot
make their own.
Three Types of Consumers
Herbivores
Carnivores
Omnivores
Herbivores
 Animals who eat plants such as:
 grasshoppers
 rabbits
 squirrels
 deer
 pandas
Carnivores (secondary
consumers)
 Meat eaters and feed on herbivores
are known as secondary consumers
 Eg dog, fox, wolf etc.
Carnivores (tertiary
consumers)
 Carnivores which prey upon other
carnivores but are not eaten
themselves. They constitute the
terminal end of predator of grazing
food chain
 tigers
 lions
 hawks
Omnivores
 Animals who eat both plants
and animals such as:
 humans
 bears
Decomposers
 Organism that feed on dead and decaying
matter and convert the organic material in to
organic material are called decomposers
 They help in nutrient recycling and known
as recycling agent of the nature
 In absence of recycling nutrients earth
would be converted in to a vast dump of
dead organism
 Microorganisms that are able to break down
large molecules into smaller parts
Abiotic components
 Physical factors: Sunlight, shade, intensity of
solar flux, length of day , temperature, annual
rainfall (precipitation), latitude, altitude, soil
type, water availability
 Chemical factors: Availability of essential
nutrients such as carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous,
potassium, oxygen, sulfur, percentage of water
and air in soil, salinity of water, oxygen dissolved
in water
Functioning of Ecosystem
 The function of ecosystem can be studied in
following terms
 Food chain
 Mineral nutrient cycle
 Energy flow
Food chain
 The transfer of food energy from the source
through a series of organism by regular
eating and eaten up
 In food chain each stage of transfer of food
energy is known as trophic level
 Therefore trophic level refers to successive
levels of energy flow that form the link of
food chain
Types of Food Chains
 Aquatic- Water-related food
chains with sea plants and
animals
 Terrestrial- Land-related food
chains with land plants and
animals
Type of food chain
 Grazing food chain: Common in nature. Producer form the
first link , herbivores as second and secondary consumer as
the third
 Detritus food chain: The organic waste and dead matter
derived from grazing food chain is termed as detritus.
Detrivores are the animal that consume detritus and in
doing so contribute to decomposition and recycling of
nutrient
 Eg algea, bacteria, earthworms, millipedes
 Organism in this food chain are generally smaller, and
functional role do not fall in catagories
 However grazing and detritus food chain are interlinked
Food webs
 It is not possible to depict the real world by
means of simple food chain, because the
interconnection between different trophic
level in real world are extremely complex
 Various food chain are interlinked with each
other and these interlocking pattern formed
by several food chain linked together are
called food web
Ecological Pyramids
 An ecological pyramid is a diagram that
shows the relationship amounts of energy or
matter contained within each trophic level in
a food web or food chain.
 Energy Pyramid only 10% of the energy
available within one trophic level is
transferred to organisms at the next trophic
level.
Pyramids Continued
 Biomass pyramids show the total amount of
living tissue available at each trophic level. This
shows the amount of tissue available for the next
trophic level.
 Numbers pyramid shows the number of species
at each trophic level.
 Because each trophic level harvests only about
one tenth of the energy from the level below, it
can support only about one 10th
the amount of
living tissue.
PYRAMID OF NUMBERS
 Shows the number of organisms at each
trophic level per unit area of an ecosystem.
Pyramid of Numbers
Pyramid of numbers displays the number of individuals
at each level.
1 owl
25 voles
2000
grass plants
PYRAMID OF BIOMASS
The total amount of matter present in
organisms of an ecosystem at each trophic
level is biomass.
Biomass is preferred to the use of numbers of
organisms because individual organisms can
vary in size. It is the total mass not the size
that is important.
Pyramid of biomass records the total dry
organic matter of organisms at each trophic
level in a given area of an ecosystem.
Biomass PyramidsBiomass Pyramids
Displays the biomass at each trophic level.
PYRAMID OF ENERGY
 Shows the amount of energy input to each
trophic level in a given area of an ecosystem
over an extended period.
1. Why will this type of pyramid never be
inverted?
Energy PyramidEnergy Pyramid
Fig. 4–19
In nature, ecological
efficiency varies from
5% to 20% energy
available between
successive trophic
levels (95% to 80%
loss). About 10%
efficiency is a general
rule.

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ECOSYSTEM

  • 1.
  • 2. Ecosytem  The term Ecosystem was first proposed by ecologist A. G. Tansely who defined ecosystem as “ the system resulting from the integration of all the living and non living factors in the environment” • A community of living organisms interacting with one another and with its non-living physical and chemical environment.  Or • An Ecosystem is a region in which living organism interact with their environment and these interactions perpetuate the community and retain stability under varying conditions.
  • 6. Producers  Producers make their own food  Green plants use energy from the sun to make food  Producers are on the bottom of the food chain
  • 7. Consumers  Consumers hunt, gather, and store food because they cannot make their own.
  • 8. Three Types of Consumers Herbivores Carnivores Omnivores
  • 9. Herbivores  Animals who eat plants such as:  grasshoppers  rabbits  squirrels  deer  pandas
  • 10. Carnivores (secondary consumers)  Meat eaters and feed on herbivores are known as secondary consumers  Eg dog, fox, wolf etc.
  • 11. Carnivores (tertiary consumers)  Carnivores which prey upon other carnivores but are not eaten themselves. They constitute the terminal end of predator of grazing food chain  tigers  lions  hawks
  • 12. Omnivores  Animals who eat both plants and animals such as:  humans  bears
  • 13. Decomposers  Organism that feed on dead and decaying matter and convert the organic material in to organic material are called decomposers  They help in nutrient recycling and known as recycling agent of the nature  In absence of recycling nutrients earth would be converted in to a vast dump of dead organism  Microorganisms that are able to break down large molecules into smaller parts
  • 14. Abiotic components  Physical factors: Sunlight, shade, intensity of solar flux, length of day , temperature, annual rainfall (precipitation), latitude, altitude, soil type, water availability  Chemical factors: Availability of essential nutrients such as carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium, oxygen, sulfur, percentage of water and air in soil, salinity of water, oxygen dissolved in water
  • 15. Functioning of Ecosystem  The function of ecosystem can be studied in following terms  Food chain  Mineral nutrient cycle  Energy flow
  • 16. Food chain  The transfer of food energy from the source through a series of organism by regular eating and eaten up  In food chain each stage of transfer of food energy is known as trophic level  Therefore trophic level refers to successive levels of energy flow that form the link of food chain
  • 17. Types of Food Chains  Aquatic- Water-related food chains with sea plants and animals  Terrestrial- Land-related food chains with land plants and animals
  • 18. Type of food chain  Grazing food chain: Common in nature. Producer form the first link , herbivores as second and secondary consumer as the third  Detritus food chain: The organic waste and dead matter derived from grazing food chain is termed as detritus. Detrivores are the animal that consume detritus and in doing so contribute to decomposition and recycling of nutrient  Eg algea, bacteria, earthworms, millipedes  Organism in this food chain are generally smaller, and functional role do not fall in catagories  However grazing and detritus food chain are interlinked
  • 19.
  • 20.
  • 21.
  • 22. Food webs  It is not possible to depict the real world by means of simple food chain, because the interconnection between different trophic level in real world are extremely complex  Various food chain are interlinked with each other and these interlocking pattern formed by several food chain linked together are called food web
  • 23.
  • 24.
  • 25. Ecological Pyramids  An ecological pyramid is a diagram that shows the relationship amounts of energy or matter contained within each trophic level in a food web or food chain.  Energy Pyramid only 10% of the energy available within one trophic level is transferred to organisms at the next trophic level.
  • 26. Pyramids Continued  Biomass pyramids show the total amount of living tissue available at each trophic level. This shows the amount of tissue available for the next trophic level.  Numbers pyramid shows the number of species at each trophic level.  Because each trophic level harvests only about one tenth of the energy from the level below, it can support only about one 10th the amount of living tissue.
  • 27. PYRAMID OF NUMBERS  Shows the number of organisms at each trophic level per unit area of an ecosystem.
  • 28. Pyramid of Numbers Pyramid of numbers displays the number of individuals at each level. 1 owl 25 voles 2000 grass plants
  • 29. PYRAMID OF BIOMASS The total amount of matter present in organisms of an ecosystem at each trophic level is biomass. Biomass is preferred to the use of numbers of organisms because individual organisms can vary in size. It is the total mass not the size that is important. Pyramid of biomass records the total dry organic matter of organisms at each trophic level in a given area of an ecosystem.
  • 30. Biomass PyramidsBiomass Pyramids Displays the biomass at each trophic level.
  • 31. PYRAMID OF ENERGY  Shows the amount of energy input to each trophic level in a given area of an ecosystem over an extended period. 1. Why will this type of pyramid never be inverted?
  • 32. Energy PyramidEnergy Pyramid Fig. 4–19 In nature, ecological efficiency varies from 5% to 20% energy available between successive trophic levels (95% to 80% loss). About 10% efficiency is a general rule.