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AP®︎/College Environmental science
Ecosystems and biomes
Introduction to ecosystems. How land ecosystems are classified into biomes.
Want to join the conversation?
- Is matter that was once alive, for example, a dead, rotting tree biotic or abiotic?(24 votes)
- It is biotic. Under the definition that scientists use (which may be argued to be arbitrary), biologically derived material is is considered biotic.(32 votes)
- " at, if my hand is an ecosystem then does my hand have its on population?" 4:33(11 votes)
- Yes, your hand has a live population of mostly bacteria, but there are your dead cells, viruses, parasites, microscopic bugs, etc.
:D(27 votes)
- What is the difference between ecosystems and habitats?(10 votes)
- A habitat is simply the region in which organisms live, and includes all the living factors in that place. In other words, it contains all the biotic factors present. Ecosystems, on the other hand, include both the biotic factors (like animals), abiotic factors (like temperature and water), and the interactions between them.(15 votes)
- Is it possible for a single kind organism take over biomes?(8 votes)
- Well, let's think about that for a minute. All consumers (organisms that eat other organisms) get their energy from producers (organisms that get energy from the sun), other consumers, and sometimes decomposers (organisms like fungus that break down dead matter). That rules them out. Decomposers get their energy from dead consumers and dead producers so that rules them out. Producers at the first glance get their energy from the sun but they also need decomposers to re-fertilize the area where they grow. That means they too are ruled out. As that covers every group of organism, we can say that all organisms depend on each other and couldn't live without each other.(11 votes)
- Is it bad if there weren't a lot predators?(6 votes)
- An ecosystem is a balanced system. Predators are part of this balance.
Using a simple system of a Carnivores, Herbivores and plants where the carnivore eats the herbivore eats the plants. If you get rid of the carnivores there will be more herbivores which will eat more plants and if there are not enough plants some of the herbivores will starve and with enough herbivores they may destroy or stress the plant population to the point where it dies off leaving the herbivores with no food and the all die.
Another aspect could be that the carnivore kills off the weak and sick herbivores helping to maintain the good overall health of the herbivores.(11 votes)
- I don't understand how a body could be an ecosystem. Is a dead body an ecosystem? Is a living one? Or is it both?(7 votes)
- Both living and dead bodies are ecosystems, as they both are home to living individuals such as bacteria and parasites. Good question!(5 votes)
- How many biomes are there?(5 votes)
- There are 7 main biomes, but there are many smaller ones as well(7 votes)
- aroundyou talked a little bit about freshwater, but isn't it true that even the freshest of "freshwater" has some salinity to it? 4:10(4 votes)
- Yes, all "freshwater" is somewhat salty; it's just much less than in the ocean and similar environments.(5 votes)
- How are biomes important?(4 votes)
- Just like lungs are important in your body, to be the primary organ of gas exchange and gas diffusion, the same applies to biomes in the nature.
Let's imagine that biomes are lungs of Biosphere if it makes easier for you to understand the concept :D(5 votes)
- Would a dead corpse be considered biotic ?(3 votes)
- Yes, Anything that is living or dead (as it was a living thing at one point) is considered biotic.(7 votes)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] So, just as a bit of review. If we take the members
of a certain species that share the same area, we call that a population. Population. All of the organisms in
this particular population will be members of the same species. There could be other
members of that species that aren't in that same area, and they wouldn't be a member
of this particular population. And a certain area won't have just one, or it doesn't tend to have
just one species in it. So, we could call this population one. You might have other populations there of a different species. So, this is another
species right over here. All of them combined in the same area, we could call this population, population two. And if you take... And we could, obviously have
many more populations there. And if you take all of the populations in a given area, there's flexibility on
how you define that area or define that region, you take those together, so you're really taking
all of the living things in a certain area, we
call that a community. A community of populations. Now, the community only
consists of living things, the biotic factors. So, let me write that down. Biotic referring to the living
things in a certain area. But if we want to think about
not just the living things, but also the non-living
things in that region. So, I'll write abiotic. Let me do that in another color. So, let's take the abiotic factors, or the abiotic environment. And, once again, we're
sharing the same region, and that is flexible on
how you define that region. You put all of these things together, and then you get your ecosystem. Your ecosystem, once again, it could be a very small region, it could be a very large region, but it's made up of all living things, the biotic factors, and
the non-living things, the abiotic factors. Now, what we're gonna
think about in this video is just the types of
ecosystems that you might have. Think a little bit about it, and also begin to think about
how the different factors interact with each other. How there's conservation of matter where, within an ecosystem,
matter tends to go from one form to another. You also have a flow of energy. Energy tends to enter an ecosystem in form of light, and that
energy gets transferred from one organism to another, and, sometimes, even involving
the non-living things, eventually, getting turned into actual heat. Now, in terms of the types of ecosystems. I already mentioned there's
a lot of variety there. This, right here, is a
picture of a tide pool at Half Moon Bay, not too
far from where I live. I've actually been to the
tide pools at Half Moon Bay. And you could consider
one particular tide pool, both the abiotic factors, the water, and the rock there, as well as the biotic factors, the starfish, the sea anemones, and whatever else might be living there. Those combined, that
could be an ecosystem. You might say that the
entire beach is an ecosystem. You might say that the entire
region is an ecosystem. Once again, it depends
on how much you want to zoom in or how much
you want to zoom out, and you can zoom out a good bit. This rain forest, right over here, this is the Amazon rain forest. You can consider the whole
rain forest an ecosystem, or maybe you just want to study, maybe you just want to study what's happening in this exact
region, right over there. You can also consider that an ecosystem. You can consider what's
happening in the river, itself, an ecosystem, or, maybe,
one part of that river. And, as you notice, I'm
talking about some ecosystems that are on land, and
some that are in water, and that is a general way,
one way of classifying them. So an ecosystem, you
could have it on land. You could have it on, near, in the water. So, you could say it's aquatic. And then, if within aquatic, you could have ones that... You have salt water, or
partially salty water, and these are called marine, and the main marine ecosystem, we're thinking about the
oceans and things like that. And then, you have freshwater ecosystems. Like if you are in the upper-Amazon, that is freshwater that is flowing. So we could say fresh, freshwater, non-salty water. And even though it looks
like rivers are big and there's a lot of freshwater around us. Obviously we need freshwater to live, most of the aquatic ecosystems are marine, are not involved freshwater. Freshwater is a very small subset. Now, this is just a few examples. Even your body, you could view your body as a whole ecosystem. You could view parts of
your body as an ecosystem. You could look at just... You could look at just a fraction of... If this is my hand right over here, you could take just a
little square, there, and you could consider that an ecosystem. You can think about the different bacteria that are there, other
types of microorganisms that are there, and
how they're interacting with the non-living things, the air. How they're interacting
with the oil on your skin, with the dead skin cells, and also, how they're interacting
with the living skin cells, and you, yourself. Now, since we're in
the, since we're focused on how we can classify ecosystems, one thing that's often done is classifying land ecosystems
into various categories. And, right over here, we have depicted the major types of land ecosystems on our planet and where you might find them. And these different
types of land ecosystems, these are called biomes. Biomes. And as you can see from this diagram, tropical forests, you can
find it right over here. This is the Amazon rain forest. You can find it in Africa. You can find it in Southeast Asia. You can find it in
Central and even Southern or North America. You have boreal forests which you'll find in more northern latitudes. Savanna, desert, tundra,
chaparral, polar ice, temperate forest, temperate grasslands, and these are just helpful for thinking about roughly
the types of ecosystem, or ecosystems we would
find in those regions. And it's typically most determined by temperature, moisture, the climate. Actually, the climate and the terrain and the types of minerals
that you would find there, that tends to be a pretty good indicator for what it will be like,
what the life would be like. But even with that said, there could still be a lot of variety. For example, the Sonoran
Desert, that is right over here in the southwest United States, in the northwest Mexico. This is a desert, and there's deserts all over the rest of the planet, but they won't have... They might be similar in a lot of ways, but they won't have
the exact same climate, or the exact same abiotic factors, or the exact same biotic factors. So, for example, right now
I'm gonna show you a picture, pictures of the Sonoran
Desert and the Rock Desert that's on the island of Boa Vista. Boa Vista is right over there. You really can't see it. It's a very small island
off the coast of Africa. And, as we see in these
diagrams, or in this picture, you don't have to be an
expert to recognize that, okay, these are both deserts. They both look dry. There's not a lot of water here, but they are also very different. The Sonoran Desert looks to have at least a lot more life, than the Rock Desert have here. It's appropriately named the Rock Desert because it seems, at
least to the naked eye, it looks like all you can see is rock. So biomes, once again, it's a very rough, high-level way to
classifying land ecosystems. But even the same biome
can be very, very... Two things that are
categorizing in the same biome could be very different.