To maintain life, organisms must be able to convert energy from one form to another. For example, in the process of photosynthesis, algae, plants, and photosynthetic prokaryotes use the energy from sunlight to convert carbon dioxide and water to glucose and oxygen (a waste product).…
Decomposition is the breakdown of organic material into its smaller molecules and elements. (This term is generally considered as a biotic process but one may find it also used to describe an abiotic process, e.g., due to weathering.) The decomposing organisms may use the release of elements for nutrients and by breaking apart the carbon-carbon bonds in organic matter this can release energy for them. These smaller molecules and nutrient elements may also become available for use by the primary producers (i.e., plants and phototropic microorganisms). Decomposition is an important step in the food chain and contributes to the nutrient cycling within an ecosystem. Most of the organic matter in an ecosystem ultimately passes through the decomposer subsystem.…
7. Label the ecological pyramid below with the following words: producers, tertiary consumer, secondary consumer, autotroph, heterotroph, primary consumer, decomposers, hawk, grass, chicken, grasshopper. Also label and explain what happens to energy, biomass and number of organism.…
Herbivores that feed of green plants are called the primary consumers, whereas organisms that feed…
Diagram how raw materials, producers, consumers, and decomposers are interrelated in the flow of energy and the cycling of materials through an ecosystem.…
Explain the theory in your own words based on the case study and suggested readings.…
D. Energy is captured by plants, then transferred to consumers and decomposers, and eventually lost as heat.…
A tertiary consumer is at the fourth trophic level and would be any animal that eats a carnivore. One example would be an eagle that eats small predatory mammals.…
This carbon is combined with other elements in intricate ways to form organic molecules significant to life.The carbon is later passed to animals who consume plants. When plants and animals die, the majority of their carbon is given back to the atmosphere as the organisms begin to decompose. Occasionally, there will be a plant or animal does not decompose immediately. Their bodies are confined in locations where decomposition cannot occur. This typically happens at the bottom of seas and oceans where the lifeforms become buried by…
Carbon is an essential component of all organic substances, necessary in nucleic acids, proteins, carbohydrates. The only way that can enter ecosystems is when it’s used for photosynthesis. Carbon dioxide diffuses into the plants stomata and through the Calvin cycle is combined with other molecules to make glucose. This may then be used in lipids, carbohydrates and proteins, incorporating carbon into the plants biomass e.g. cellulose cell wall and used for respiration. When a plant respires it releases some of this carbon back into the atmosphere as carbon dioxide. Moreover if deforestation or slash and burn occurs it releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere during the combustion process. When the primary producer is eaten by the primary consumer it passes its biomass and carbon along too. This happens through all the trophic levels. The consumers will leave detritus either urine, faeces or the carcass, or in the case of producers leaf litter. Decomposers known as Saprophytic bacteria then break down the detritus using enzymes. As they do so they respire again releasing carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. If plants or animals die in situations were there are no decomposers for instance deep oceans, the carbon in them may turn into fossil fuels over millions of years by the process of fossilisation. Alternatively vast amount of the carbon is used by marine zooplankton to make calcium carbonate shells. These are not…
One of the largest cycles that occurs all around us is in everyday life is the carbon cycle. The current atmospheric composition currently consists of approximately 0.04% of Carbon dioxide. A large proportion of it is found dissolved in the oceans as well as the atmosphere. The carbon cycle consists of 6 stages. Initially the CO2 that is absorbed by plants for the use in photosynthesis becomes carbon compounds in plant tissue. The carbon is moved up the food chain by consumption, a primary consumer. It is passed on to the secondary and tertiary consumers when they eat other consumers. When these organisms die they are digested by microorganisms known as decomposers (bacteria and fungi), when these decomposers feed on the dead organism it is called saprobiotic nutrition. The carbon is then released back into the atmosphere and other living organisms which proceed on to respiring and this causes CO2 to be released. However if the dead organism ends up somewhere were there is no decomposers present, then this matter will turn into fossil fuels over millions of years. We will then extract the fossil fuels and use them for energy and as fuels, this process known as combustion is very widely used, it then releases CO2 back into the atmosphere where it once came from.…
5. An overview of interrelationships between energy transfers and flow of matter within the ecosystem? Energy does not cycle through ecosystems but instead enters ecosystems and is used up within ecosystems. Ultimately energy is lost from ecosystems primarily as waste heat, the most thermodynamically unavailable form of energy. "Energy enters most ecosystems in the form of sunlight. It is then converted to chemical energy by autotrophic organisms, passed to heterotrophs in the organic compounds of food, and dissipated in the form of heat. The movements of energy and matter through ecosystems are related because both occur by the transfer of substances through feeding relationships. However, because energy, unlike matter, cannot be recycled, an ecosystem must be powered by a continuous influx of new energy from the sun. Energy flows through ecosystems, while matter cycles within them."…
African forests contain millions of species of countless wildlife and plant species. It is estimated that up to 50,000 plant and animal species become extinct each year due to tropical deforestation. This is detrimental to our ecology, and we will eventually lose millions of species due to deforestation.…
My reaction to the article as a whole I am expecting after I read this article s I will learn what makes up our foods groups and the food pyramid. I am interested in knowing the latest science behind the food pyramid. What are some better and healthier eating choices we can make? What are some of the down falls in our diet today? If being physically fit and more active is obliviously better for us then why don’t more people stick to a healthier lifestyle?…
"These organisms fulfill various functions,like allowing the soil to absorb processed organic matter such as leaves, wood, trunks and branches and with this nourishing crops; they also maintain an ecological…