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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 FACTORS AFFECTING ECOSYSTEM  





2 Ecosystem processes  



2.1  Primary production  





2.2  Energy flow  





2.3  Decomposition  





2.4  Nutrient cycling  





2.5  Types  







3 See also  





4 References  














User:Pragyakanika/sandbox

















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Cite error: There are <ref> tags on this page without content in them (see the help page).

Coral reefs are a highly productive marine ecosystem.[1]
Rainforest ecosystems are rich in biodiversity. This is the Gambia RiverinSenegal's Niokolo-Koba National Park.

ECOSYSTEMAnecosystem is a community of living organisms called producers, consumers, and decomposers.Cite error: A<ref> tag is missing the closing </ref> (see the help page).


Ecosystems are controlled both by external and internal factors. External factors such as climate, the parent material that forms the soil, and topography control the overall structure of an ecosystem and the way things work within it, but are not themselves influenced by the ecosystem.

FACTORS AFFECTING ECOSYSTEM[edit]

CLIMATE

PARENT MATERIAL

TOPOGRAPHY

Ecosystem processes[edit]

Energy and carbon enter ecosystems through photosynthesis, are incorporated into living tissue, transferred to other organisms that feed on the living and dead plant matter, and eventually released through respiration.[2] Most mineral nutrients, on the other hand, are recycled within ecosystems.

Primary production[edit]

Primary production is the production of organic matter from inorganic carbon sources. Overwhelmingly, this occurs through photosynthesis. The energy incorporated through this process supports life on earth, while the carbon makes up much of the organic matter in living and dead biomass, soil carbon and fossil fuels. It also drives the carbon cycle, which influences global climate via the greenhouse effect.

Energy flow[edit]

Left: Energy flow diagram of a frog.
The frog represents a node in an extended food web. The energy ingested is utilized for metabolic processes and transformed into biomass. The energy flow continues on its path if the frog is ingested by predators, parasites, or as a decaying carcass in soil. This energy flow diagram illustrates how energy is lost as it fuels the metabolic process that transforms the energy and nutrients into biomass.

Right: An expanded three link energy food chain (1. plants, 2. herbivores, 3. carnivores) illustrating the relationship between food flow diagrams and energy transformity. The transformity of energy becomes degraded, dispersed, and diminished from higher quality to lesser quantity as the energy within a food chain flows from one trophic species into another.Abbreviations: I=input, A=assimilation, R=respiration, NU=not utilized, P=production, B=biomass.[3]

The carbon and energy incorporated into plant tissues (net primary production) is either consumed by animals while the plant is alive, or it remains uneaten when the plant tissue dies and becomes detritus. In terrestrial ecosystems, roughly 90% of the NPP ends up being broken down by decomposers. The remainder is either consumed by animals while still alive and enters the plant-based trophic system, or it is consumed after it has died, and enters the detritus-based trophic system. In aquatic systems, the proportion of plant biomass that gets consumed by herbivores is much higher.[4] In trophic systems photosynthetic organisms are the primary producers. The organisms that consume their tissues are called primary consumers or secondary producersherbivores. Organisms which feed on microbes (bacteria and fungi) are termed microbivores. Animals that feed on primary consumers—carnivores—are secondary consumers. Each of these constitutes a trophic level.[4] The sequence of consumption—from plant to herbivore, to carnivore—forms a food chain. Real systems are much more complex than this—organisms will generally feed on more than one form of food, and may feed at more than one trophic level. Carnivores may capture some prey which are part of a plant-based trophic system and others that are part of a detritus-based trophic system (a bird that feeds both on herbivorous grasshoppers and earthworms, which consume detritus). Real systems, with all these complexities, form food webs rather than food chains.[4]


Decomposition[edit]

The carbon and nutrients in dead organic matter are broken down by a group of processes known as decomposition. This releases nutrients that can then be re-used for plant and microbial production, and returns carbon dioxide to the atmosphere (or water) where it can be used for photosynthesis. In the absence of decomposition, dead organic matter would accumulate in an ecosystem and nutrients and atmospheric carbon dioxide would be depleted.

Nutrient cycling[edit]

Biological nitrogen cycling

Ecosystems continually exchange energy and carbon with the wider environment; mineral nutrients, on the other hand, are mostly cycled back and forth between plants, animals, microbes and the soil. Most nitrogen enters ecosystems through biological nitrogen fixation, is deposited through precipitation, dust, gases or is applied as fertilizer.

Types[edit]

See also[edit]

  • Complex system
  • Earth science
  • Ecocide
  • Forest ecology
  • References[edit]

    1. ^ Hatcher, Bruce Gordon (1990). "Coral reef primary productivity. A hierarchy of pattern and process". Trends in Ecology and Evolution. 5 (5): 149–155. doi:10.1016/0169-5347(90)90221-X. PMID 21232343.
  • ^ Chapin et al. (2002), pp. 123–150
  • ^ Odum, H. T. (1988). "Self-organization, transformity, and information". Science. 242 (4882): 1132–1139. doi:10.1126/science.242.4882.1132. JSTOR 1702630. PMID 17799729.
  • ^ a b c Chapin et al. (2002) pp. 244–264

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    This page was last edited on 20 March 2016, at 13:30 (UTC).

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