Ecosystems
Defining Ecosystems
-ecosystems are all the living organisms hat interact with one another in a defined area
-also includes the physical factors present in that area
-range in size – can be a tiny bacteria colony or the entire biosphere of Earth
-boundaries of ecosystems are defined by the team carrying out the study (rock pool or playing field)
Factors Affecting Ecosystems
-all ecosystems are dynamic (constantly changing)
- 2 different factors affect ecosystems
Biotic Factors – living factors (presence of animals, competition for space, food and breeding partners)
Abiotic Factors – non-living factors (light, temperature, water availability)
Biotic Factors
-living factors
-interactions between organisms that are living)
Producers – plants (and some photosynthetic bacteria) supply chemical energy to all other organisms
Primary Consumers – eat the producers (herbivores)
Secondary Consumers – eat the primary consumers (carnivores/omnivores)
Decomposers – (bacteria and fungi) feed on waste material or dead organisms
-interactions often involve competition for food, territory and breeding partners
Abiotic Factors
-non-living factors
Light
-light availability will affect the rate of photosynthesis
-the greater the availability of light, the greater the success of plant species
-plants can develop strategies to cope with low light intensities (larger leaves, photosynthetic pigments that require less light)
Temperature
-temperature will affect the enzymes controlling metabolic reactions
-plants and ectothermic animals will develop more in warmer temperatures
-temperature changes can lead to behavioural/physiological changes (migration and hibernation in animals and leaf-fall and flowering in
plants)
Water Availability
-a lack of water will lead to water stress, if severe, will lead to death
-lack of water will calls plants to wilt as water is needed to keep cells turgid, keeping the plant upright
-xerophytes have developed successful strategies to cope with water stress
Edaphic (Soil) Factors
-different soil types have different effects on different organisms due to the soil’s particles size
Clay – fine particles that are easily clumped together and waterlogged
Loam – different sized particles that retain water but does not become waterlogged
Sandy – well-separated particles that does not retain water and easily eroded
Dynamic Ecosystems
-ecosystems are forever changing hence they are referred to being dynamic
-small changes can affect each organism
-e.g. if predator population increases, prey population decreases as there are more predators to eat them
-3 types of changes affect population size:
Cyclic Changes Directional Changes Unpredictable Changes
-changes that repeat them self -changes that go in one directional and last -changes that have no direction or rhythm
e.g. seasons, fluctuations in predator and longer than the organism’s life time e.g. flood, hurricanes, lightning
prey populations e.g. erosion of coast line