ECOSYSTEM - Notes
ECOSYSTEM - Notes
The term ecosystem was given by A.G. Tansley (1953). Ecosystem is defined as a natural
unit consisting of all plants, animals and micro-organisms (biotic factors) in an area
functioning together with all of the non-living physical (abiotic) factors of the environment.
The term ecology is derived from Greek words Oikos (home) and Logos( study). So it deals
with the study of organism in their natural home interacting with their environment. The
Ecology is also defined as study of the structure and functions of an ecosystem.
The ecosystem can be Natural such as forests, grasslands, deserts, and aquatic ecosystems
such as ponds, rivers, lakes, and the sea and human modified such as agricultural fields and
aquarium.
Man-made ecosystems
b) Consumers: They get their food by feeding upon either plants or other organisms.
They can by divided into:
I. Herbivores (plant eaters): They feed directly on producers for their food and also
known as primary consumers. Ex- rabbit, insects, man.
II. Carnivores ( meat eaters) : They feed on consumers and can be called secondary
consumers ( if feeds on herbivores . Example: frog) or tertiary consumers( feeds upon
secondary consumers, example: snake, big fish).
III. Omnivores: They feed on both plants and animals. Example: Humans, rat, many
birds.
Most ecosystem are highly complex and consist of an extremely large number of individuals
of a wide variety of species. Some species of plant and animals are extremely rare and may
occur only at a few locations. These are said to be endemic to these area.
B) Abiotic component:
It include air, water, soil and can be divided into:
1) Climatic component: include, sunlight and shade, average temperature, rainfall, wind
pattern, humidity of a particular area. Most of the climatic parameters occurs in the lower
atmosphere known as troposphere.
2) Edaphic component: Soil is the major source of mineral nutrients for plants and other
organisms. Soil fertility is determined by nutrient availability, the water holding capacity and
aeration of the soil.
1) Physical factors: It include climatic, edaphic, geographical factor such as latitude and
altitude, Soil type, water availability, water current etc. The variation in these physical
parameter decide the type of ecosystem characteristics. The solar flux, temperature
and precipitation pattern shows mark difference in a desert ecosystem, tropical or
tundra ecosystem.
Ecosystem
Food chains: The sequence of eating and being eaten in an ecosystem is known as food
chain. All organism, living or dead are potential source of food for some other organism and
thus there is essentially no waste in the functioning of a natural ecosystem.
Each organism in the ecosystem is assigned a feeding level or trophic level depending upon
its nutritional status. So in grassland ecosystem grass constitute the 1st trophic level,
grasshopper 2nd, frog 3rd and snake and hawk occupy the 4rd and the 5th trophic levels,
respectively.
The decomposer consume the dead matter of all these trophic level.
1) Grazing food chain: It starts with green plants( primary producer) and culminates in
carnivores. Examples:
a) Grazing Food chain
Food web:
Food chain in ecosystem are rarely found to operate in isolated linear sequence. Rather they
are found to be interconnected and usually form a complex network with several linkages and
are known as food web. Food web is a network of food chain where different types of
organisms are connected at different trophic levels, so that there are number of option of
eating and being eaten at each trophic level.
Significance of food chains and food webs:
1) Food chain and food webs play significant role in ecosystem as flow of energy and
nutrient cycling take place through food chain and food webs.
2) Food chain and food webs also help in the maintaining and regulating the
population size of different animals thus maintains the ecological balance.
Trophic structure: The producer and consumer are arranged in the ecosystem in a
definite manner and their interaction along with population size are expressed
together as trophic structure. Each food level is known as trophic level
Biomagnification:
“Biomagnification or biological magnification is the process of accumulation of certain
chemicals in living organisms to a concentration higher than that occurring in the inorganic,
non-living environment.”
Industrial waste
Pesticide application
Causes
Plastic pollution
Effects of Bio-magnification
Biomagnification makes humans more prone to cancer, kidney problems, liver failure, birth
defects, respiratory disorders, and heart diseases.
a) Human Health:
• Mercury toxicity causes nervous disorders, impaired vision, hearing and speech.
• Consumption of excess of heavy metals causes kidney failure, brain damage, birth
• The ingestion and accumulation of metals in the tissues of marine organisms have
an adverse effect on their development and reproduction.
• Contamination of water bodies with toxic chemicals such as Selenium and mercury
include damage to the reproductive systems of fish.
• Few fishes would mean less food to other creatures that depend on them for
survival.
• The toxic chemicals found their way into the soil and water bodies as a result of
runoff, they are then assimilated into the primary consumers’ tissues after
consumption.
• However, if a group of organisms was to die due to the toxic substances the
natural flow of the food chains becomes disrupted. This may have a long-term
effect which might not be noticed in the short term.
mercury reductions
mercury-containing items.
The government should also evacuate and securely store indoor regulators
Other solutions
Biogeochemical cycles
Nutrient Cycling: Nutrient cycling is another functional aspect of ecosystem. Nutrient like
Carbon, nitrogen, sulphur, phosphate moves in a circular path through biotic and abiotic
components and therefore known as biogeochemical cycle. The nutrient too move through
food chain and ultimately reach the detritus compartment( containing dead organic matter)
where various micro-organism carry out decomposition. In the decomposition process dead
organic matter converted into inorganic substances by microbial decomposition which are
again used up by plant
a) Gaseous cycle
Reservoir pool is mostly atmosphere or hydrosphere
These are very quick
These are perfect cycles
Examples: C, N, O2 cycles
b) Sedimentary cycle
Reservoir pool is mostly lithosphere
These are slow
These are imperfect cycles
Examples: P and S
Carbon cycle
CO2 in atmosphere
Volcanic activity
Ocean water
Weathering of
photosynthesis
terrestrial rocks
Respiration
Organic carbon Organic carbon Human activity
Soil Carbon
Leaching/ runoff Ocean
Ocean sediments
Microbial Respiration
Fossil Carbon
and decomposition
Uplifting
Nitrogen cycle
About Nitrogen:-
Nitrogen exist in atmosphere as N2 gas with highest concentration.
Nitrogen is an essential element in living organisms.
It is used in formation of proteins and DNA in living organisms.
Nitrogen is a limiting nutrient in nature.
Human activities have affected the cycling of Nitrogen in nature
NITROGEN CYCLE
N2 in atmosphere
+N
O O
N2 N
+ O2
O
N NO2
3NO2 + H2O 2HNO3 + NO
Pond
Eutrophication
Decomposer
NH4-N
Ammonium N
NO2-N
Nitrite N
The main component of the nitrogen cycle starts with the element nitrogen in the air.
Nitrogen in the air becomes a part of biological matter mostly through the actions of
bacteria and algae in a process known as nitrogen fixation. Legume plants such as
clover, alfalfa, and soybeans form nodules on the roots where nitrogen fixing bacteria
take nitrogen from the air and convert it into ammonium, NH4. The ammonia is
further converted by other bacteria first into nitrite ions, NO2, and then into nitrate ions,
NO3. Plants utilize the nitrate ions as a nutrient or fertilizer for growth. Nitrogen is
incorporate in many amino acids which are further reacted to make proteins.
Ammonia is also made through a synthetic process called the Haber Process. Ammonia
may be directly applied to farm fields as fertilizer. Ammonia may be further processed
with oxygen to make nitric acid. The reaction of ammonia and nitric acid produces
ammonium nitrate which may then be used as a fertilizer. Animal wastes when
decomposed also return to the earth as nitrates.
To complete the cycle other bacteria in the soil carry out a process known as
denitrification which converts nitrates back to nitrogen gas.
OXYGEN CYCLE
O2 in Atmosphere
Photosynthesis
Respiration
Respiration
Food chain
Hydrosphere
Biosphere
Weathering
Burial
Lithosphere
The oxygen cycle is the biogeochemical cycle that describes the movement of oxygen within
and between its three main reservoirs: the atmosphere (air), the biosphere (living things), and
the lithosphere (Earth's crust).
By far the largest reservoir of Earths oxygen is within the silicate and oxide minerals of the
crust and mantle (99.5%). Only a small portion has been released as free oxygen to the
biosphere (0.01%) and atmosphere (0.36%).
The main source of atmospheric oxygen is photosynthesis, which produces sugars and
oxygen from carbon dioxide and water:
The main way oxygen is lost from the atmosphere is via respiration and decay, process in
which animal life and bacteria consume oxygen and release carbon dioxide. Chemical
weathering of exposed rocks also consumes oxygen
WATER CYCLE
Source: https://gpm.nasa.gov
Ecological Pyramids:
Ecological pyramids were first devised by British ecologist Charles Elton(1927). Ecological
pyramids is graphical representation of trophic structure and function of an ecosystem,
starting with producers at the base and successive trophic level forming the apex is known as
an ecological pyramid. It is of three types:
1) Pyramid of numbers:
2) Pyramid of Biomass:
It is based upon the total biomass (dry weight) at each trophic level in a food chain. It
can be upright or inverted. Example:
3) Pyramid of energy:
The amount of energy present at each trophic level is considered for this type of
pyramid. It is always upright, because there is huge loss of energy (about 90%) in the
form of heat and respiration at each successive trophic level. Thus at each energy
level only 10% of the energy passes on.
Carnivores(1)
Herbivores(10)
Producer(100)
Pyramid of energy