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– THE MOVEMENT OF

Adapted from Chapter 3 – Module 6 Friedland and Relyea Haiti

 2010 – 76% of Haitians lived on less than $2.00/day  Oil and propane were to expensive to cook with, so people cut down forests to make charcoal. What effect did that have on the Haiti’s Forests?  1923 – 60% of Haiti was covered in forest  2012 - <2% of Haiti was covered in forest  Unsustainable  Causes increased erosion and deadly mudslides  Disrupts and cycles  Loss of lead to food insecurity and poverty Haiti – Is there any hope?

 Yes  U.S. Agency for International Development along with other groups has provided funds to 60 million trees.  But, people still need the wood  Solution 1: Plant mango trees (Mangifera indica), they have monetary value and that provides an incentive to not cut down the trees  Solution 2: Develop alternative sources (discarded paper processed into cakes)  Solution 3: In 2013, Haiti’s president committed to planting 50 million trees in hopes of increase forested area to 29% by 2063

#resourceprivilege

Ecosystem Boundaries

Large and small . (a) The Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem includes the land within Yellowstone National Park and many adjacent properties. (b) Some ecosystems are very small, such as a rain-filled tree hole that houses a diversity of microbes and aquatic insects. Boundaries of Ecosystems are not Clear-Cut

 Characteristics of ecosystems are largely determined by:  (temperature and precipitation)  Soil type and water availability  Geographic features (high elevation, nearness to , etc.)  Boundaries are defined based on biotic and abiotic features  Clearly defined: caves, aquatic ecosystems  Not clearly defined: often uses ranges of certain , topographical features, or park boundaries (not a good method)  Do ecosystem boundaries really matter? All are open, they are interacting and exchanging matter and energy

Biosphere

 The region of our planet where life exists

 Includes all ecosystems

Energy Flow Across an Ecosystem

 It all starts with the SUN!

(, algae and some bacteria) can convert solar energy (kinetic) into chemical energy (potential) so they can use it. These organisms are called producers or .

 Use solar energy to change dioxide and water into and oxygen. (Be careful, the is not converted into oxygen)

Chemosynthesis

 Some producers or autotrophs use chemicals to produce their own food.  This process is called .  It occurs in places like hydrothermal vents and hot springs  Chemicals like methane and hydrogen sulfide can be converted into Across an Ecosystem

– reverse of photosynthesis  Convert glucose and oxygen into carbon dioxide, water and energy in the form of ATP (adenosine triphosphate).  ATP is a high energy that provide your cells with energy  Aerobic respiration – oxygen is present  Anaerobic respiration – oxygen is not present – very inefficient

Energy captured by producers moves through many trophic levels

An that is incapable of photosynthesis and must obtain its energy by consuming other organisms. Also known as .

A consumer that eats producers. Also known as Primary consumer.

A consumer that eats other consumers.

 Secondary consumer A carnivore that eats primary consumers.

 Tertiary consumer A carnivore that eats secondary consumers.

 Trophic levels The successive levels of organisms consuming one another.

The sequence of consumption from producers through tertiary consumers. Trophic Levels

Simple food chains. A simple food chain that links producers and consumers in a linear fashion illustrates how energy and matter move through the trophic levels of an ecosystem. (a) An example of a terrestrial food chain. (b) An example of an aquatic food chain. Trophic levels

A complex model of how energy and matter move between trophic levels.

 Scavenger An organism that consumes dead . Large quantities – ex vultures

An organism that specializes in breaking down dead tissues and waste products into smaller particles. ex earthworm

Fungi and bacteria that convert organic matter into small elements and that can be recycled back into the ecosystem. Trophic Levels

A simplified food web. Food webs are more realistic representations of trophic relationships than simple food chains. They include scavengers, , and decomposers, and they recognize that some species feed at multiple trophic levels. Arrows indicate the direction of energy movement. This is a real but somewhat simplified food web; in an actual ecosystem, many more organisms are present. In addition, there are many more energy movements. Some ecosystems are more productive than others

 Gross primary (GPP) The total amount of solar energy that producers in an ecosystem capture via photosynthesis over a given amount of time.

 Net primary productivity (NPP) The energy captured by producers in an ecosystem minus the energy producers respire. Ecosystem Productivity

Gross and net primary productivity. Producers typically capture only about 1 percent of available solar energy via photosynthesis. This is known as gross primary productivity, or GPP. About 60 percent of GPP is typically used for respiration. The remaining 40 percent of GPP is used for the growth and of the producers. This is known as net primary productivity, or NPP. The efficiency of energy transfer affects the energy present in each

The total mass of all living matter in a specific area.

 Standing crop The amount of biomass present in an ecosystem at a particular time.

The proportion of consumed energy that can be passed from one trophic level to another.

 Rule of 10% (range from 5-20%)  The other 90% is not in a usable or digestible form (bones, cellulose, etc.) or is used by the consumer for moving, eating, living etc. and is lost as heat.

 Trophic pyramid A representation of the distribution of biomass, numbers, or energy among trophic levels. Ecosystem Efficiency

Trophic pyramid for the Serengeti ecosystem. The amount of energy that is present at each trophic level is shown in joules (J). The pyramid assumes 10 percent ecological efficiency, but efficiencies can range from 5 to 20 percent across different ecosystems. For most ecosystems, graphing the numbers of individuals or biomass within each trophic level would produce a similar pyramid.