I bequeathe myself to the dirt, to grow from the grass I
love;
If you want me again, look for me under your
boot-soles."
- Walt Whitman
In this lesson, we will learn answers to the following
questions:
What is an
ecosystem, and how can we study one?
Is the earth an
open or closed system with respect to energy and elements?
How do we define
"biogeochemical cycles," and how are they important to ecosystems?
What are the major
controls on ecosystem function?
What are the major
factors responsible for the differences between ecosystems?
Introduction - What is an Ecosystem?
An ecosystem consists of the biological community that
occurs in some locale, and the physical and chemical factors that make up its
non-living or abiotic environment. There are many examples of ecosystems -- a
pond, a forest, an estuary, a grassland. The boundaries are not fixed in any
objective way, although sometimes they seem obvious, as with the shoreline of a
small pond. Usually the boundaries of an ecosystem are chosen for practical
reasons having to do with the goals of the particular study.
The study of ecosystems mainly consists of the study of
certain processes that link the living, or biotic, components to the
non-living, or abiotic, components. Energy transformations and biogeochemical
cycling are the main processes that comprise the field of ecosystem ecology. As
we learned earlier, ecology generally is defined as the interactions of
organisms with one another and with the environment in which they occur. We can
study ecology at the level of the individual, the population, the community,
and the ecosystem.
Studies of individuals are concerned mostly about
physiology, reproduction, development or behavior, and studies of populations
usually focus on the habitat and resource needs of individual species, their
group behaviors, population growth, and what limits their abundance or causes
extinction. Studies of communities examine how populations of many species
interact with one another, such as predators and their prey, or competitors
that share common needs or resources.
In ecosystem ecology we put all of this together and,
insofar as we can, we try to understand how the system operates as a whole.
This means that, rather than worrying mainly about particular species, we try
to focus on major functional aspects of the system. These functional aspects
include such things as the amount of energy that is produced by photosynthesis,
how energy or materials flow along the many steps in a food chain, or what
controls the rate of decomposition of materials or the rate at which nutrients
are recycled in the system.
Components of an
Ecosystem
You are already familiar with the parts of an ecosystem. You
have learned about climate and soils from past lectures. From this course and
from general knowledge, you have a basic understanding of the diversity of
plants and animals, and how plants and animals and microbes obtain water,
nutrients, and food. We can clarify the parts of an ecosystem by listing them
under the headings "abiotic" and "biotic".
ABIOTIC COMPONENTS
BIOTIC COMPONENTS
Sunlight Primary
producers
Temperature Herbivores
Precipitation Carnivores
Water or moisture Omnivores
Soil or water chemistry (e.g., P, NH4+) Detritivores
etc. etc.
All of these vary over space/time
By and large, this set of environmental factors is important
almost everywhere, in all ecosystems.
Usually, biological communities include the "functional
groupings" shown above. A functional group is a biological category
composed of organisms that perform mostly the same kind of function in the
system; for example, all the photosynthetic plants or primary producers form a
functional group. Membership in the functional group does not depend very much
on who the actual players (species) happen to be, only on what function they
perform in the ecosystem.
Processes of Ecosystems
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