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High school biology - NGSS
Course: High school biology - NGSS > Unit 4
Lesson 2: Flow of energy and cycling of matter in ecosystems- Flow of energy and matter through ecosystems
- Impact of changes to trophic pyramids
- Flow of energy and cycling of matter in ecosystems
- Understand: flow of energy and cycling of matter in ecosystems
- Apply: flow of energy and cycling of matter in ecosystems
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Impact of changes to trophic pyramids
Impact of changes to trophic pyramids.
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- So I have a test tomorrow and I need to know if this is right an ecosystem that has more producers is healthier than an ecosystem that is balanced because there is more energy So more animals are being supported. Thank you so much this Video was a life saver(3 votes)
- I believe that is correct, sorry for the late reply. ;)
Hope you did well on your test. :)(5 votes)
- , y can't the producers use the heat transferred off of the animals? 5:31(3 votes)
- The process of photosynthesis is commonly written as: 6CO2 + 6H2O → C6H12O6 + 6O2. This means that the reactants, six carbon dioxide molecules, and six water molecules, are converted by light energy captured by chlorophyll (implied by the arrow) into a sugar molecule and six oxygen molecules, the products. Plants cannot use the heat transferred off of animals because that type of energy cannot be effectively used by them. They are just not structured that way. Plants do not have cells that can use heat energy therefore they cannot use heat energy. Hope this helps!
-White Wolf(4 votes)
- Salman Khan: "What we call poop"(4 votes)
- After organisms produce all that heat, where does it go? How is the heat reused so that it returns back to chemical energy used by animals (that is, if it is reused at all)?(3 votes)
- How would this impact humans who eat those organism?(1 vote)
- 'Organism' is too vague a term to give you a detailed answer but depending on which organisms you are talking about there can be a variety of effects. From extinction to overpopulation, it all depends on a variety of factors.
Hope this helps you understand a little, sorry I couldn't help more.
-Nova(2 votes)
- I have an essay do tonight but then I got a question about the prompt
do all species obtain the same amount of energy from their diet? Why?(1 vote) - Was the volcano examplebased on the eruption and healing of Mount St. Helens, or the caldera explosion that led to the 'birth' of Yellowstone's geysers and hot springs? 5:16(1 vote)
- what happens to the heat?(0 votes)
Video transcript
- [Instructor] What we see here is known as a trophic pyramid,
and the word trophic, in a biology context, is
referring to food relationships. So one way to think about this, it tells us who is eating whom,
and who is producing energy, and then who is able to
leverage that energy. So the base of a trophic pyramid, you have your primary
producers, primary producers. These are often known as autotrophs, because they're able to
take energy from the sun, so sun's energy, and nutrients
that are available to them, and store some of that energy as biomass. And biomass is just a fancy
word for the actual substance of the organism that is
inherently storing energy. When someone tells you that that piece of food has a certain number of calories, that's because there's
energy stored in it. Calories are a unit of energy. And so, let's just say, if you
were to take a square meter, if you were to average on
a per square meter basis, these primary producers
in this environment, let's say they're able to
store 20,000 kilocalories per square meter per year. What's interesting
about a trophic pyramid, it helps describe, well, okay, that energy's stored as
biomass, what happens then? Well, then you could go to the next level, and you could view these as your primary or first-level consumers. So first-level, well, I
could call them level one or primary consumers,
these are the organisms that would eat the primary producers. But not all of that energy gets restored as biomass in these organisms. In fact, there is a lot of loss. On average, when we look at ecosystems, it tends to be only about 10% makes it from one level of our
trophic pyramid to the next. So at this level, on a per,
on average, per square meter, instead of 20,000
kilocalories being stored as biomass per year, you'd
only have 10% of that. So it might only be 2,000. 2,000 kilocalories per
square meter per year. So notice, you have that drop-off. And then you could go to
the next level after that, you could view these as
the secondary consumers. These are the folks who might
eat the primary consumers, the first-level consumers. You get another 10%
drop-off, so you would, or I should say, a 90% drop-off,
only 10% gets transferred. So about 200, 200 kilocalories
per square meter per year. And it keeps happening, the
folks who eat those folks, well then, you've dropped off
at this level right over here. You could call these the
third-level consumers, or sometimes viewed as tertiary consumers. This would be about 20 kilocalories per square meter per year. And this doesn't mean that
every square meter will have exactly 20 kilocalories of biomass of, let's say in this example, snake. It just means that if you
were to look at the biomass of snakes, and you were to average them across this ecosystem, the surface area, then you might average
about 20 kilocalories per square meter per year. And then you get to the
top of this pyramid. And this, you could view as
your level four consumer. You could view this as, since they're at the top of the pyramid, this is sometimes known
as the apex predator. But every stage here, you only are able to transfer 10% of the biomass. So here, you have two kilocalories per square meter per year. And what's useful about
this, it helps us understand what an ecosystem can support. It can support a lot of biomass
of our primary producers, but it can support very little biomass of our apex predators, and that's why, if you were to go into the forest, you would see very few apex predators. If you were to look at the apex predators and you were to think about their biomass in terms of kilocalories, and
spread it over their region where they have to find
food, it would be much lower than the average biomass
per square meter of, say, the grass and the trees. Now, an interesting thing is, well, where is a lot of that
energy getting lost to? Well, in a lot of cases, these
organisms are moving around. They have to do things,
they have processes in their own body, and those
things all generate heat. So even plants, even plants generate heat. So all of these characters
are, there's some energy that's being released as heat. Also, when these players die, they are decomposed by other organisms. So all this biomass, it's
either just going to die, or it's going to get eaten,
but even when it gets eaten, all of the energy doesn't get transferred. Some of it stays in the
undigested material, which we refer to as poop, and so, those dead bodies, that
dead biomass, or this poop that still contains energy,
is going to be fed on by what we call decomposers, decomposers. And they really break
things down into nutrients, which then can be consumed
by the primary producers as they utilize the sun's energy and keep the cycle going after that. Now, one interesting
thing to think about is, what if there are
changes to the ecosystem? What if, for example, a
nearby volcano erupts? And that volcano, let me draw that, it's a fun thing to draw, that volcano erupts and
ash goes into the sky, and all year it's just really gray. What do you think would happen? Well, the sun's energy that's
able to hit the surface of the earth in this area
would go down by a good bit. And so, if that went down by a good bit, then the primary producers
might not be able to store 20,000 kilocalories
per square meter per year. It might go down to 2,000 kilocalories per square meter per
year, and in which case, you'd drop to a zero off of all of these. So instead of 20,000,
it might go to 2,000. Instead of 2,000, this would be 200. Instead of 200, this would be 20. Instead of 20, this would be two. Instead of two, this would 0.2. And so, something like
the loss of light energy, even though this apex predator doesn't directly photosynthesize, a
lot fewer of them are going to be able to be supported
in that ecosystem if you have a lot less
energy stored at biomass, at the primary production
level, because there's just less of sun's energy to be able
to be stored as biomass. There could be other things
that happen in the ecosystem. Let's say that some
pesticides get introduced, and some of these level one
consumers start dying out. Well then, you might have less
of the transfer of biomass from the primary producer level to the primary consumer
level, which, once again, might affect these other
levels of the trophic pyramid. So this is an interesting
thing to think about. Ecosystems are these really complex, intertwined things, and one impact at one area could have
far-reaching consequences throughout the entire ecosystem. It's also interesting to think of ecosystems as energy transfer. Energy's coming from the
sun, and it's being cycled through this ecosystem,
through this pyramid. Some of it gets stored as
biomass and gets transferred to other forms of biomass, but
a lot of it gets lost as heat as these organisms' cells go
through different processes. The organisms are running around, living their life, doing whatever.