Environmental Ecology: Lecture 1 - Introduction
Environmental Ecology: Lecture 1 - Introduction
Lecture 1 – Introduction
It’s important to study environmental biology mainly due to climate change (Warming stripes,
an illustration that shows the annual deviation of temperatures from 1850 to 2017). However,
climate change is not the only issue that we are facing, but there are a range of interlinked
processes that lead to environmental degradation, loss of biodiversity and to a change and
potential collapse of ecological systems as we know them.
The module will provide a foundation of knowledge about the natural and managed
environment, highlight the importance of the environment to human society and well-being,
and illustrate the basic principles of ecology through which living organisms interact with the
environment.
So some questions this module will answer are: How does the Earth System work and how do
major biological processes affect this system? How do organisms interact with one another
and the environment? How is human activity perturbing environmental and ecological
processes? Can we adapt/mitigate/restore and live more sustainably?
1. Global scale
In these previous years we spent a lot of time and effort exploring the space, however, the
concept of colonizing other planets to ensure the survival of our species is unrealistic. There is
no planet B.
In the last years (2020 and 2021), there had been floods (China, UK, Kenia…), droughts and
wildfires (Siberia, UK, Amazon…), and extreme temperatures (NW USA, Texas…).
All these extreme events mean the loss of life, people displaced, destruction of infrastructure…
the estimated costs are $40 billion for Germany alone.
All of these is caused mainly by human activity (pollution, plastics, oil spills, carbon emission…).
Climate change also has effects like eutrophication, leading to a plague of jellyfish in Japan and
the Mediterranean Sea.
Resources like air, water, food, shelter, medicines, clothing, culture all come from the
environment. The human species has developed an ability to modify the environment to
enhance all of these resources. This has led to a triplication of the population in the last 100
years. Other species thrive when good conditions (mice plague), but humans manage to adapt
and persist even in bad conditions.
Part II: How do humans interact with, and modify, the environment?
In the beginning, our ancestors were hunters and gatherers due to the lack of technology and
agriculture. Nowadays, the only form of this is fishing, because now we have the technology to
capture water and food.
The environment provides a wide range of ‘goods’ and ‘services’ to human beings. It’s
important to identify these ‘goods’ and ‘services’, understand how they function and their
‘value’ to humans whilst there is still time to do something about it.
Natural Capital: World’s stocks of natural assets which include geology, soil, air, water,
and all living things. It is from this Natural Capital that humans derive a wide range of
goods and services which make human life possible. These are often delivered by
ecosystems, which has led to them being called ecosystem goods and services.
Ecosystem: A community of plants, animals, and microorganisms, along with their
environment, that function together as a unit. An ecosystem can be as large as a rain
forest or as small as a rotting log. The whole globe is an ecosystem too.
1. Typology/Classification of Ecosystem Goods and Services
Supporting. Ecological services that go in the background but are essential for the
production of all other services. E.g. Soil formation, photosynthesis, primary production,
nutrient cycling…
Regulating. Benefits obtained from the regulation of the environment. E.g. air quality,
climate, water quality, erosion, pest and disease, pollination.
Provisioning. Material benefits obtained from the environment. E.g: food, fibre, fuel,
ornamentals, genetic resources, fresh water…
Cultural. Non-material benefits obtained from the environment. E.g: spiritual value,
educational value, inspirational value, aesthetic value, recreational value…
These categories can be related to the constituents of well-being. The arrows indicate the
linkages there are.
This assessment was called for by UN Secretary General in 2000 and completed in 2005 and
was undertaken by a lot of experts so has the value of peer reviewed.
It’s a critical evaluation of information concerning the consequences of ecosystem changes for
human well-being. It’s intended to be used to guide decisions on complex public issues.
Its conclusion states that, mainly due to population increase, over the past 50 years, humans
have changed ecosystems more rapidly and extensively than in any comparable period of time
in human history. This has resulted in a substantial and largely irreversible loss in the diversity
of life on Earth.
1. Unprecedented change
Structure and function of ecosystems . More land was converted to crop land in the 30
years after 1950 than in the 150 years between 1700 and 1850. In 2000, cultivated systems
(areas where at least 30% of the landscape is in crop land, shifting cultivation, confined
livestock production, or freshwater aquaculture) covered 25% of Earth’s terrestrial surface.
Status of Cultural Services. ‘Rapid loss of culturally valued ecosystems and landscapes lead
to social disruptions and societal marginalization, now occurring in many parts of the
world’ / ‘people display, in general, a strong preference for natural over built
environments’ / ‘numerous studies have demonstrated that contact with nature may
enhance restoration from stress and increase health and well-being’
Part V: Does it matter?
1. UK issue
UK had its own National Ecosystem Assessment. It was the first analysis of UK’s natural
environment in terms of benefits provides to society and continuing economic prosperity. Part
of it belongs to the Living With Environmental Change (LWEC) initiative. It began in mid-2009
and reported in June 2011. Inclusive process involving many government, academic, NGO and
private sector institutions.
Due to increasing of population, UK house construction increased a lot. Also, there has been
several floods. Brexit meant that the UK was no longer part of the EU Common Agricultural
Policy (CAP), so it had to make its own. In this new CAP, farming will be more environmentally
friendly.
The fate of the environment and ecosystems (nationally and globally) is influenced enormously
by ‘political’ decisions.
1. Evolution
The theoretical basis for understanding all life on Earth is evolution by natural selection.
Natural selection is the differential success (survival and reproduction) of individuals within
the population that results from their interaction with the environment: Heritable variation in
characteristics and variation results in differential success.
Natural selection results in changes in the properties of populations of organisms over multiple
generations: evolution. Adaptation is a product of evolution by natural selection: Any heritable
behavioural, morphological, or physiological trait that has evolved by natural selection such
that it maintains the fitness of an organisms under a given set of environmental conditions.
Fitness = long term reproductive success.
2. Resources
All living things require resources, and they can only survive, grow, and reproduce under
certain sets of physical conditions.
Resources are biotic or abiotic components of the environment that are consumed or used
by an organism. E.g. Sources of energy (autotrophs, heterotrophs), nutrients for
maintenance, growth and reproduction or oxygen, CO2, water, space.
• Community structure: (i) species richness, relative abundance; (ii) types of species: their
functions & how they relate to each other.
• The structure is affected by: Conditions & resources present, interactions within &
between species: competition, predation, mutualism. The action of foundation species and
keystone species (if you remove that specie, the ecosystem collapses). Frequency of
disturbances or disruptive events.
Other factors that determine the abundance and distribution of a population are Ability to
disperse to new areas. Geographical barriers to dispersal
(mountain ranges, ocean, desert etc.). Evolutionary /
geological history, continental drift (geological time scale)
e.g. kangaroos.
5. Food web
The community consists of a series of interconnected
trophic interactions. Species within the community can be
classified into functional groups according to the way they
acquire energy.
Species within the community can be classified into functional groups according to the way
they acquire energy:
Herbivores: plants are abundant as food, but it is poor quality, taking a large investment in
time and energy to digest.
Carnivores: High energy food but incurs high costs in catching and killing (higher costs than
foraging costs of herbivory).
A generalized food chain – the transfer of energy through a sequence of trophic levels:
Note how short this chain is – most food chains tend to have 3 or 4 levels. Chains with 5 links
are very rare.
The laws of thermodynamics govern energy flow. Potential energy: stored energy. Kinetic
energy: performs work at the expense of potential energy. Energy is neither created nor
destroyed. It can change from one form to another and move from place to place.
Part II: Ecological energetics
Energy is fixed and released through metabolic processes that drive all the living components
of the biosphere. Energy is transformed between potential and kinetic forms when it is fixed or
released, and it is lost from the food web with each transformation.
The standard units of energy are the joule (energy used in moving 1kg through 1m) or the
calorie (heat required to raise 1g of water by 1 oC). (Note: 1 joule = 4.3 calories)
The first ecosystems probably comprised unicellular chemosynthetic bacteria releasing energy
from inorganic molecules. But since 3 billion years ago, oxygenic photosynthetic organisms
have supported the majority of ecological communities that have developed on Earth since the
oxidation event, which willed all the anaerobic bacteria since oxygen is toxic.
Energy enters the biosphere mainly as sunlight. Radiant energy on earth = 5 x 10 10 J m-2 per
year. Both chemosynthetic and photosynthetic organisms are autotrophs (literally ‘self-
nourishers’).
Primary producers: the base of food chains and fix energy in the process of photosynthesis
1. Primary producers
Photosynthetic organisms utilize the radiant energy of sunlight, and water as an electron
source, to synthesize carbohydrates.
6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2
carbon dioxide water radiant energy glucose oxygen
2. Primary production
Temperature, water, and nutrients control primary production
in terrestrial ecosystems. NPP is constrained by water,
temperature, nutrients…
4. Aquatic ecosystems
Temperature, light, and nutrients control primary production
in aquatic ecosystems.
Ocean systems are crucial for global productivity. Some people say that the oxygen you take
one every two breaths (or two every three) comes from the sea. (Mt=million metric tons).
The energy left over goes into growth and product of young. This net energy of production is
secondary production.
As the production efficiency of insect is really high, people are starting to think in farming
insects as a source of food.
Food chains have a set number of links, but rarely extend beyond 5 links. The rapid
decline in energy up the chain was thought to limit the number of links, but we actually
don’t see longer chains in those dominated by more efficient ectotherms.
Chain length is not controlled by primary productivity (i.e. no difference high vs low
productive biomes), but by other factors.
Consumers get larger and fewer with each link. Large carnivores need large territories,
which limits the number of links.
‘Top-down’ control: Predators control the abundance of prey populations. This Not to scale!
affects abundance of organisms at all levels below in the chain, either
decreasing or increasing it. (A lot of birds, few fish 1, a lot of fish 2, few fish 3, a
lot of shrimp).
Food chains are not that simple, they’re actually food webs.
3. Decomposition
Ecosystems have 2 major food chains: the grazing food chain and the detrital food
chain, which are linked.
The distinction is the source of energy for first level consumers – the herbivores. The grazing
food chain is driven by primary producers (photosynthetic organisms) and the detrital food
chain is driven by detritus (dead organic matter).
All organisms end up as detritus. There are herbivores that eat living plants and others that eat
decomposing plants. Carnivores eat all types of herbivores.
In most ecosystems the bulk of the energy fixed by primary producers pass straight to the
decomposer community as
herbivores are kept in check
by the carnivores. This fuels
the productivity of the
decomposers whilst also
driving the recycling of
nutrients.
The decomposer community is essential for
ecosystem survival: Most essential nutrients are
recycled within the ecosystem. Decomposition
and nutrient recycling are complex processes
involving a wide variety of organisms (Leaching,
fragmentation, changes in physical and chemical
structure, ingestion, excretion).
4. Biogeochemical cycles
And for developing countries? Future agriculture (agroecology) – efficient production for
people & leave room aside for nature.
1. Temperature trends
This very famous plot is known as
the ‘hockey stick graph’, and it
In the last years, the overall trend is increasing over the baseline. The rate of change is also
increasing over time. This was calculated using instrumental data (black line in the plot), which
correlates completely with the previous information.
The Sun is emitting a vast amount of radiation. 64 million W/m 2 (J/m/s) is produced at surface
of the sun but only 1370 W/m2 is emitted directed at the earth. However, due to the Coriolis
effect, the average over the whole Earth at the top of the atmosphere is 342W/m 2 (incident
radiation). The Earth absorbs and radiates that energy. The balance of the input and output of
the radiation is the radiative equilibrium.
It’s estimated that without atmosphere the average temperature would be -18ºC and not the
actual 15ºC. This is due to the greenhouse effect, when the re-radiated energy reflected from
the Earth id captured by the atmosphere and reflected back or scattered.
1. Planetary neighbours
Venus. 154,000 times as much carbon dioxide in its atmosphere as Earth, so its
atmosphere has a super-greenhouse effect (460ºC average).
It was thought that early in the history of the solar system it was covered in oceans, but
now it has lost all the water, so all of that water is now water vapor in the atmosphere (a
very potent greenhouse gas). Over time, the H in water was lost, and the oxygen combined
with carbon to make CO2 (now 96.5% of atmosphere is CO2).
Mars. Thin atmosphere, so it has a very weak greenhouse effect (-60 ºC average).
2. Earth’s energy budget
From all the incoming radiation, 30% is already reflected by clouds, upper atmosphere, shiny
surfaces… The other 70% is absorbed by the atmosphere and the land.
The Earth then re-emits this radiation at a much longer wavelength. 40% of this re-emitted
energy passes through the atmospheric window, the rest is recaptured by the atmosphere.
There is a disparity between the radiation that’s absorbed and the radiation that’s re-radiated.
This due to the cycle of ‘back radiation’ that the atmosphere recaptures and holds on for a
little bit longer. This is driven by the greenhouse gasses, altering our weather.
The total radiation input and output are quite balanced in both the surface and the
atmosphere. There’s still a slight of difference which means warming in this case.
Such effects are called radiative forcing and they can be positive or negative. Equally
important, they provide a basis for quantification. Defined as Wm 2. 2 definitions:
Radiative forcing is a measure of how the energy balance of the Earth-atmosphere system
is influenced when factors that affect climate are altered (IPCC – Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change 4th Assessment).
The change in average net radiation at
the top of the troposphere which
occurs because the concentration of a
greenhouse gas or some other change
in the overall climate system.
(Houghton).
Here we can find all those factors previously listed that could alter the energy flow and
balance.
5. Greenhouse gases
All greenhouse gasses are
multiatom molecules (they
have 3 atoms or more). This
characteristic allows them to
have 2 different
behMethylococcus
capsulatuaviours: stretching
and bending. The asymmetric
stretching and the bending-
twisting create a dipole that
vibrates in different
frequencies, so they can
interact with energy of lots of
different frequencies.
The solid blocks show what actually passes through the atmosphere. The lines show what it is
expected to emit, but the solid blocks show what
actually happens. The difference is due to things that
are in the atmosphere.
The importance of this plot is how much of this interaction has an anthropogenic origin.
1. Infiltration
Key physical process. Some water from rain and snow infiltrates into subsurface soil and rock.
Some will remain in shallow soil layer, where it gradually moves vertically and horizontally
through soil and sub-surface material. Eventually, it might enter a stream by seepage into
stream bank. Much of the water moves vertically downwards and ends up as ground water.
It is determined mainly by physical processes, but ecosystems also play a key role. The ability
of ecosystems to regulate water is strongly influenced by changes in land cover, for example
replacement of forests with crop land. In recent years we have allowed a lot of additional
pollutants to enter water environment.
1. Water quantity
It is important to balance needs of society (industry, agriculture, and people) and environment
(rivers, lakes, wildlife, and habitats), including the need to dilute pollutants.
Water quantity has a very major impact in many parts of world on humans (including
agriculture) and ecosystems. It has impact on distribution of human population (e.g. some
parts of Australia, due to climate change, are becoming less habitable for humans). Supply is
also affected by climate change by how we use the land and the rate of extraction/use.
There have been several important droughts all over the world this last years: in 2009, Kenya
suffered a drought that killed even elephants. In Australia, camels destroyed air conditioners to
access moisture. California the main vegetable producer of the country, however, it’s
susceptible to droughts, and last years it suffered a worst drought than the year before (fires).
Different event, but same
extremity: floods. Capacity of
ecosystems to buffer from extreme
events has been reduced through
loss of wetlands, forests,
mangroves… People are
increasingly occupying regions
exposed to extreme events due to
the increase of population.
In England, flood damage costs are around £1.1 billion per year. Around one in six properties is
at risk of flooding. Over 2.4 million properties are at risk of flooding from rivers or the sea, of
which nearly half a million are at significant risk. One million of these are also vulnerable to
surface water flooding with a further 2.8 million properties susceptible to surface water
flooding alone. There are other ‘human’ costs.
2. Water quality
Globally, water quality is declining, although in most industrialised countries pathogen and
organic pollution of surface waters has decreased over last 20 years.
Cultivated systems can have negative impacts on freshwater quality through pollutants
contained in drainage water, runoff, and effluents. Agriculture can also concentrate pollutants
by extracting water from environment for irrigation.
Salinisation is the excessive increase of water-soluble salts in soil. It’s often associated with
irrigated areas where low rainfall, high evapotranspiration rates or soil textural characteristics
impede washing out of salts which subsequently build-up in soil surface layers. Irrigation with
water with high salt content worsens problem. Natural disasters in coastal areas, such as
tsunamis, can cause severe salinisation problems with several years of low fertility of affected
soil before recovery. De-icing of roads with salts can lead to localised salinisation.
Wetland ecosystems (including lakes, rivers, marshes, and coastal regions to a depth of 6
meters at low tide) estimated to cover more than 1,280 million hectares, an area 33% larger
than United States and 50% larger than Brazil.
Wetlands are “areas of marsh, fen, peatland or water, whether natural or artificial, permanent
or temporary, with water that is static or flowing, fresh, brackish or salt, including areas of
marine water the depth of which at low tide does not exceed six metres” (Ramsar Convention
on Wetlands).
The Ramsar Convention is intergovernmental treaty that provides framework for national
action and international cooperation for conservation and wise use of wetlands and their
resources.
One of most important roles may be in regulation of climate change through sequestering and
releasing major proportion of fixed carbon in biosphere. Although covering only 3–4% of
world’s land area, peatlands estimated to hold 25–30% of global carbon contained in
terrestrial vegetation and soils.
1. EU Directives
They lay down certain end results that must be achieved in every Member State. National
authorities have to adapt laws to meet these goals but are free to decide how to do so.
Each directive specifies date by which national laws must be adapted. Directives bring different
national laws into line with each other and are particularly common in matters affecting
operation of single market (e.g. product safety standards).
Water Framework Directive. It’s a framework for the protection of all waters including rivers,
lakes, estuaries, coastMethylococcus capsulatual waters and groundwater, and their
dependent wildlife/habitats under one piece of environmental legislation. Aims to:
Protect/enhance all waters (surface, ground, and coastal waters), achieve "good status" for all
waters by December 2015, manage water bodies based on river basins or catchments and
involve the public.
In the UK there is the Catchment Abstraction
Management Strategies (CAMS), that
manages how much water businesses, etc.
can take out of the system. We have the
Warwickshire Avon abstraction licensing
strategy.
3. Artificial recharge
Practice of increasing amount of water that enters
a groundwater reservoir by artificial means aka
putting water back to the ground.
4. Nitrates
Nitrates Directive, adopted by EU 1991, aims to reduce water pollution caused by nitrogen
from agricultural sources and to prevent pollution in future. Requires Member States to:
Designate as Nitrate Vulnerable Zones (NVZs) all land draining to waters that are affected
by nitrate pollution.
Establish a voluntary code of good agricultural practice to be followed by all farmers
throughout country.
Establish a mandatory Action Programme of measures for purposes of tackling nitrate loss
from agriculture.
Review extent of their NVZs and effectiveness of their Action Programmes at least every
four years and to make amendments if necessary.
Lecture 6 - Soil Systems
Soil is really important as it is involved in water purification, climate regulation (reducing CO2
and other GH gasses levels by C fixation), biogeochemical cycling,
storing pollutants, and even in human health (some antibiotics are
made with microorganisms found in the soil).
1. What is soil?
2. Components of soil
3. Soil horizons
There are 5 horizons (5 of above), but that doesn’t mean that each soil is going to have each of
those soil horizons. We can see these two types of soils, both from Arizona, not too far away
one of each other:
The inorganic compounds tend to be larger than microbes, and in some cases this is true, but
fungi are very variable.
5. Soil structure
Aggregates: Grouping of soil particles that cohere to each other more strongly than to other
surrounding particles. The formation of this aggregates is a function of biology (microbes and
roots products), chemistry (soil particle chemistry), and physics.
Inside a soil aggregate we find
pore spaces with bacterial
colonies. This bacteria can
secrete polysaccharide
derived compounds that act
as a glue, binding particle
together. They can also
secrete humic-like substances
creating hydrophobic regions.
This pore sizes can be increased by the action of invertebrates, plat roots, earthworms, small
mammals… crating macropores, resulting in a significant aeration of the soil as well as the
preferential flow of water.
6. Soil texture
Texture can be defined as the coarseness or
fineness of a soil. It depends on the content of
sand, silt, and clay. Those soils predominated by
sand are considered coarse textured, while those
with more clay and silt are known as fine
textured soils. It is a fixed property of the soil.
For example, soils with much clay are not easy to work with, don’t aerate very well, hold
moisture and all this inhibits biological activity. However, a sandy soil can’t hold as much
organic matter, being an issue for accumulating nutrients for plant growth. A well-
proportioned soil with sand, clay, and silt is the best soil for plant growth.
The soil texture triangle is a tool to know the type of soil just by
knowing two out of the three types of particles.
For example, a soil with 30% clay and 30% silt is clay loam. Clay
loam could also be identified if we knew the 40% of sand.
The average pore size of a clay textured soil is quite small, but the overall number of pores is
quite high, resulting in grater overall pore space. Small pores do not transmit water as fast as
large pores, so a high clay soil will slow the movement of any material moving through it
(water, air, microbes…). This means that clay and silt soils are more prone to floods.
7. Bulk density
CEC is the total exchangeable cations that a soil can absorb. This influences the soils ability to
hold on to nutrients as well as provide a buffer against soil acidification. Soils with higher
amounts of clay or organic matter tend to have high CEC.
This parameter arises due to the negative charges associated with clay and organic matter’s
particles. Clay is negatively charged for one of two reasons:
Isomorphic substitution (clays). The replacement of one atom by another of similar size in
a crystal lattice without disrupting or changing the crystal structure of the mineral.
In the picture is the example of a substitution of an aluminium ion (trivalent) for a
magnesium or iron ion (divalent). One positive charge is lost, so the net negative charge is -
1.
Ionization (pH dependent). Clays (kaolinite), organic matter, Fe and Al hydroxides, where
hydroxyl groups (OH) at the edge of a lattice can ionize: Al – OH = Al – O - + H+
Here we have Al bonded to a hydroxyl group. This group can ionize, giving O- and a loosely
associated proton. This process is also known as broken edge bonds. This process increases
as pH increases.
Organic matter has hydroxyl, carboxyl… groups that help with CEC.
Clay and organic matter particles that participate in CEC have to be very small (they are
referred as colloids). These colloids, as they are very small, they have a high surface area for
cation exchange capacity to occur.
9. Sorption in soil
Sorption is a major process that influences the movement and bioavailability of essential
compounds in pollutants and soil. The broad definition is the association of organic or
inorganic molecules with the solid phase of soil, especially clay.
10. Revision
1. Name the 5 major components of a typical moist surface soil (mineral soil) and give the
approximate percentage of each component by volume. How would you define “organic
soil”?
2. Identify the most reactive fraction of the three soil solids (i.e., the sand, silt, or clay
fraction). Explain why this fraction is most reactive. Why is desirable to have some clay in a
soil?
3. Discuss the relationship between particle size and surface area of sand, silt, and clay. How
does particle size affect the pore space in a soil? How does it affect water retention by a soil?
The movement of gases within the soil?
4. What is the role of soil microbes in the formation and maintenance of waterstable soil
aggregates? Identify three mechanisms through which soil microbes contribute to the
formation and stabilization of such aggregates
There is also the chemical component (Reactions and behaviour of chemicals in the
environment, e.g., partitioning, solubility, reaction kinetics in different compartments
(atmosphere, soil, hydrosphere, etc.).
1. Biological component
We’re going to see the atmospheric gases and their link to metabolism.
• Chemical. Produced by
reduction of CO2 in H2-rich
fluids (due to
serpentinization) in earth’s
crust (e.g. at hydrothermal
vents). Degraded by
hydroxylation in the
atmosphere (yielding
methanol).
3. Why understand
biogeochemical cycles
• Knowledge of microbial
activities (metabolism) on
modern Earth and
integration with geochemical record allows to unravel How biogeochemistry of Earth has
evolved, how life may have evolved, and whether and where we may find extraterrestrial
life.
• Biogeochemical cycles are not static. They have changed during Earth’s history and
they’re currently changing due to human activities. Understanding the cycles allows to
model how changes will affect global ecosystem(s) and Earth system.
The Earth originated around 4.6 billion years ago, and it is generally accepted that the first life,
in form of bacteria, originated 3.8 billion years ago, in the Archaean period. The evidence for
this statement comes from fossil evidence. Microbial life can be observed in rocks found in
Western Australia and South Africa dated to about 3.5 billion years ago.
So there is evidence that suggests that life was present at the beginning of the Archaean
(3.8-2.5 Gya). The temperature in this period is debated, suggestions range from range from
26-35°C to 50-70°C.
In Jack Hills, Western Australia, there are large abundance of zircon minerals older than 4.4
billion years old. After investigating around 10.000 zircons, one was discovered to have
primary graphite inclusions. They think this graphite are microorganisms that were
transformed into graphite through temperature and pressure. They think this because the
isotopic signature suggests that this graphite has a biological origin.
99% of the natural carbon is C12 and about 1% is C13, a little bit heavier. Enzymes discriminate
between C12 and C13, Methylococcus capsulatu they have a higher rate of reaction with C12.
This means that the products that are formed through biological processes are going to be
lighter than the natural abundance of isotopes.
If you compare the isotopic signature of the zone of uncertaintygraphite inclusions of the
zircon, they are relatively light and in the range of organic carbon. This is geochemical evidence
that suggests that 4.1 billion years old zircon contains carbon of probably biological origin.
There is another paper that, using a molecular clock reconstruction of integrated genomic
sequences of living organisms, suggested that LUCA must have been present in the Hadean
probably around 4.5 billion years ago.
2. Earliest metabolism
It is challenging to determine the precise nature of early metabolism on Earth. Early metabolic
strategies probably included:
There is the little pond hypothesis, which theorises that life originated in a
warm little pond with electrical discharges that caused clay minerals to
transform into organic compounds.
The key features of the transition of prebiotic chemistry to life are Self-replicating RNA (RNA
world, ribozymes)Enzymatic activity of proteinsDNA - genetic coding functionEvolution
of biochemical pathwaysDivergence of lipid biosynthesisDivergence of cell wallsLUCA
4. Summary
• Microbial life on Earth drives important processes that are part of biogeochemistry
• Microorganisms have evolved probably over more than 4 billion years ago
• As well as shaping current conditions on Earth,
they have changed the chemistry of the
environment over geological time scales
Oxygen started to accumulate in the atmosphere relatively slowly because the ocean was full
of reduced compounds, which cleared the oxygen up.
The oxidation event, which lasted more than 1 billion years (until 10%), led to the formation of
the ozone layer, with blocked UV radiation, protecting the DNA of the organisms of Earth of
mutations.
1. Stromatolites
The great oxygenic event was most likely driven by ancestors of cyanobacteria (Betts et al.,
2018) as cyanobacteria evolved later (1947–1023 Ma) than GOE (2400 Ma).
Cycling of elements that are part of the biomass of living organisms or that are transformed
during energy generating dissimilatory metabolism. The main elements in biomass are C, N,
P, and S, but other essential elements occur in small amounts (e.g. metals in enzymes).
Energy gaining transformations in (microbial) metabolism, e.g. O 2, nitrogen, sulphur, iron,
manganese etc. Undergo reduction and oxidation processes, and these elements will also be
assimilated and liberated again when biomass decays.
Biogeochemical cycling is the transformation of matter from inorganic form to organic form
and back and the movement of matter from non-living to living compartments and back.
Some forms of specific elements may also be cycled due to energy yielding reactions, without
becoming assimilated into biomass. Examples are the electron acceptors of respiratory
metabolism, e.g. O2, NO3-, SO42-, Fe3+ or inorganic electron donors of energy metabolism such
as NH4+, Fe2+, HS-
Acetogens Acetate formation Ancient metabolism, modern day acetogens are Moorella
versatile, use range of C1 compounds Acetobacterium
Phototrophic Phototrophic, H2S oxidation to First phototrophs, exploited reduced sulfur in early Chlorobium
sulfur bacteria sulfur and sulfate, fixation of CO2 Earth; still relevant in anoxic habitats (microbial Chromatium
mats, anoxic/oxic interfaces in lake ecosystems)
Early prebiotic chemistry may have existed in a wide range of settings and the circumstances
for the origin of life remain uncertain
One of the potential geological settings that has been suggested are hydrothermal sites
Metabolic by- and end products have had major effects in changing chemistry of atmosphere
and oceans
It is conceivable that conditions suitable to evolve life exist elsewhere in the Universe, based
on the large number of objects and their diversity.
1. Titan
Saturn moon. Subsurface ocean with liquid water. Cryovolcanoes identified as potential
sources of geological methane. Surface lakes/seas of hydrocarbons. Methane and ammonia
present as potential energy sources for microbial life
2. Enceladus
Saturn moon. Covered by ice, subsurface liquid water. Internal heat and geologically active.
Cryovolcanoes near South Pole ejecting water and hydrogen
3. Mars
1. Flux disequilibrium
If we look more closely into this disequilibrium we can see a lot of anthropogenic changes in
the carbon cycle (red arrows).
One of the major changes is the use of fossil fuels (organic carbon). This carbon would
normally be locked away from the carbon cycle.
Other anthropogenic
change is land-use change
and land sink. A change in
land use affects the
carbon cycle when you
change, for example, from
a forest to a pasture. This
changes the amount of
carbon fixation that the forest would do, and also how the carbon is processed within the soil
is changed (often there’s an increase in
mineralisation of organic C which leads to CO 2
emissions, meaning a loss of organic carbon).
On the other hand, this increase in CO 2 leads to
the carbon fertilization effect, making
photosynthesis more effective, so land sink
increases.
We must try to put 0 in all of the red arrows in order to stop the emission of greenhouse
gasses. Knowing which processes affect this issue allows us to do that.
The carbon cycle in the ocean works in two parts: the upper layers and the deeper layers.
The surface layer, which is in contact with the atmosphere, exchanges carbon with it. This DIC
(dissolved inorganic carbon) is used by photosynthetic organisms (50 Pg of net primary
production) to create POC (particulate organic C) and DOC (dissolved organic C). However, 37
Pg of carbon is returned to DIC through respiration.
The deeper layers of the ocean receive C from the upper layers in two different ways: sinking
of POC and DOC (relatively small amount of C is fixed and even less amount reaches the
bottom ocean’s sediments where it’s buried) and deep-water formation (when water cools
and increases its density, it goes down creating a circulatory system that drives ocean’s
currents and sinks DIC).
Iron-oxidizing bacteria
Oxidize Fe2+ to Fe3+ (energy)
Fix CO2
Cyanobacteria / phytoplankton
Oxidize H2O
Fix CO2
3. Marine phytoplankton
Until the 70s, it was thought that all life was light dependent. However. There are organisms
inhabiting these vents systems nourishing only with chemical energy which is ultimately
geothermal energy.
In these ecosystem, water is entrained into the crust and interacts with hot basalt leading to a
lot of chemical reactions that lead to the production of reduced organic compounds that flow
out to the surface.
The fluid vent is over 350 ºC, but within the chimney wall there is a gradient of temperature.
The most thermophilic organisms (bacteria and archaea) thrive at a temperature of about
110ºC, creating a chemosynthetic microbial ecosystems independent of photosynthetically
produced biomass (use reduced organic compounds as energy source to fix CO 2).
There are also higher organisms (Giant tubeworm Riftia pachyptila) that depend on
chemolithoautotrophic microorganisms. These Sulfur-oxidizing endosymbionts fix carbon
inside worm tissues, oxidizing a range of energy-rich, reduced sulfur compounds, (e.g. H 2S, S2-n,
S0, S2O32-) and providing the host with organic carbon. The host
in exchange gives the microorganisms inorganic material from
the surrounding water.
5. Summary 1
redox cycles
• Carbon fixation by primary producers
– Photolithoautotrophs
Chemolithoautotrophs independent of sunlight
Part III: Major organic carbon pools
The most abundant organic compounds in the
environment is plant matter (cellulose, hemicellulose,
lignin, starch…). Another considerable amount is in
chitin (fungi, insects, zooplankton) and other cellular
compounds (peptidoglycan from prokaryotes, lipids,
protein, nucleic acids, humics derived from soil, hydrocarbons formed by diagenesis and used
as fossil fuels).
1. Respiration/fermentation
All of that organic C must go back to CO 2, and it is done by respiration and fermentation.
Dissimilation of organic carbon (e.g. sugars), to CO 2 and or organic acids and hydrogen and
coupling that to generation of ATP as an energy storage (in respiration, via membrane
potential and proton motive force). Oxidation of organic matter to CO 2 can be coupled to both
aerobic and anaerobic respiration
There is a difference in how much energy these different electron acceptors allow an
organism to extract from the organic carbon that it’s being oxidized. The highest yield of
energy achieved is using oxygen as electron acceptor. The next best electron acceptor is
nitrates, followed by manganese, then iron, sulphates, sulphur, methane and finally acetate.
In a sediment, in the first layers are inhabited by use oxygen for respiration, in the next layer
(anoxic, as all oxygen was used) will be inhabited by bacteria that use nitrate, and so on.
In this flow of carbon there is also some cooperation, as organic polymers are hydrolysed so
the oligo/monomers can be utilized by respirating organisms but also by fermentative bacteria.
Fermentation is a way of organisms that do not respire to gains just a few electrons and make
energy. The products of fermentation are H 2, organic acids, alcohols, and CO2. All of these
products are really important type of intermediates that can also feed all the different anoxic
respirations.
There is a huge diversity and a wide range of phylogenetic groups. All of them respire organic
carbon to CO2 using O2 as electron acceptor. There are, however, differences in substrate
range and specialization (e.g. polymer degradation, preference of specific substrates)
A notable group are the SAR11 bacteria, believed to be the
most abundant heterotrophs in the oceans; long considered uncultivable, but some cultures
now available.
Marine environment is rich in sulphate (28mM). Sulphate reduction is dominant process for
organic matter degradation (accounting for an estimated 50% of organic matter degradation),
producing sulphide. Precipitation of iron sulphide in anoxic layer gives black sediment
colouration.
N2, the largest N pool, is not in a usable format for plants or microbes, so it has to be converted
into a usable form. Some microbes can do this through N fixation. This process’ products are
ammonia and ammonium (this process can be done artificially by the Haber-Bosch process).
Nitrate can also be subjected to denitrification, where under anaerobic conditions, it is used as
a terminal electron acceptor and reduced to nitrite, nitric oxide, nitrous oxide (a potent
greenhouse gas), and ultimately, dinitrogen.
This nitrogen cycle can be greatly affected by human interactions (anthropogenic forcing). In
this image, the fluxes indicate tera-grams of N per year.
The number in parenthesis are preindustrial averages (1831-1860), while the number not in
parenthesis are contemporary values (1991-2005). We can see how the amount of N taken
from the atmosphere into the terrestrial systems is almost doubled, mainly due to increases
of agricultural precision (crops that are good at N fixation).
Soil emissions has quadrupled due to a lot of different processes (land degradation,
agriculture…). Harvest agriculture has tripled the amount of N released, mainly due to
combustion of agricultural equipment. The amount of fertilizer went from 0 to 114 (Haber-
bosh process). Atmospheric depositions (N in a reactive form in aerosols floating in the
atmosphere), freshwater emissions and N released from rivers to oceans have increased.
4. Energy yields
Nitrogen fixation has a negative yield, but this is complemented by the supplements from
symbiotic plants.
Nitrogen fixation (dinitrogen gas to ammonium) is neither aerobic nor anaerobic (even
though the enzyme is degraded in aerobic conditions).
Ammonium can then be converted into nitrate by nitrification, a strictly aerobic process. Each
arrow is an enzymatic step, so it can be done by two different
Nitrogen Mineralization
Organic matter decomposition
RNH2 --> NH4+, NO3-
Nitrogen Immobilization
Microbial uptake into cells
NH4+ --> RNH2
Nitrification
For energy production
NH --> NO2- --> NO3-
4
+
Denitrification
Anaerobic respiration
NO3- --> N2O, N2
Anammox (anaerobic ammonia oxidation) is the process by which ammonia and nitrate oxide
react to form hydrazine, which can be further reduced into dinitrogen gas.
Part II:
Mineralization and immobilization
Nitrogen in organic matter or added as fertilizer is available to plant and microbes. If the N is
“assimilated” by a microbe or plant, it is said to be “immobilized” and is no longer available to
plants or other microbes until the cell die and is “mineralized” back to inorganic, plant-
available forms of N.
An addition of N in a system can be done via fertilizers or organic matter. These inputs can be
mineralized, broken down into inorganic nitrogen (ammonium and nitrate).
1. Ammonification
Nitrogen mineralization is the transformation of organic nitrogen into inorganic nitrogen (NH 3,
NH4+, NOX-.) It is a form of regeneration of N in a form that it is usable for plant development.
2. Proteolysis
Putrefaction is the anaerobic decomposition of proteins with the production of very foul-
smelling intermediates such as mercaptans and specialized amines such as cadaverine and
putrescine.
4. Urea metabolism
Urea is a product of the destruction of the nitrogenous bases contained in nucleic acids. It’s an
important fertilizer, so it also enters the environment via animal excretions. The position of
urea as an intermediate in microbial metabolism, an animal excretory product, and a fertilizer
makes it a key compound in the N cycle.
Urease degrades urea into CO 2 and 2NH3. Urea is readily metabolized in the environment
(especially soil) in a short period of time, as many microbes (bacteria, fungi, actinomycetes…
103 to > 106 per g-soil) possess this enzyme (urease).
This process tends to be anaerobic, and obligate anaerobes are hard to isolate. This means
that the microbes that can decompose urea in anaerobic conditions are facultative anaerobes
(they can do it in aerobic or anaerobic conditions).
This is a big problem. When urea is broken down, pH tends to rise readily as high as 8 or 9. At
these high pH’s the product is NH 3 (not NH4+) which can lead to volatilization leading to loss of
nitrogen and potential air pollution. This initial phase may remove as much as 10-70% of the
urea-N.
Total N content of soil. Soils rich in N liberate greater quantities of N. 1-4% is the quantity
of soil organic N that is made available during the growing season in temperate latitudes.
Moisture. Mineralization happens at high moisture levels (in arid regions onset of rainfall is
followed by a rapid onset of mineralisation). The optimum moisture is 50-75% volumetric
water content. Mineralisation is not affected by submergence in water, it’s rapid in paddy
soils. Alternate wetting and drying enhances mineralization.
pH. Mineralization is greater in neutral than acid soils. Liming (increasing pH) stimulates
mineralization. Organic N accumulates in acidic soils.
Temperature. Optimum = 40-60 °C (above mesophilic range).
Available N. Addition of inorganic-N sometimes stimulate mineralization – this is referred
to as “priming”.
Part III: Nitrification and denitrification
For
For denitrification, the process should be form nitrite to N 2. However, there is some N leaking
in forms of N2O and NO production.
There is one difference, for denitrification, those gaseous metabolites can be brought back into
the pipe reactants.
1. Nitrification
It’s the chemoautotrophic (this microbes obtain C from CO 2 and obtain energy from inorganic
metabolites) oxidation of NH3/NH4+ to nitrite (NO2- ) and nitrate (NO3-).
4. Denitrification
The microbial reduction of NO3 - and NO2 - with the liberation of gaseous end products such
as nitric oxide (NO), nitrous oxide (N2O), and ultimately dinitrogen (N2). NO3- NO2- NO
N2O N2.
The main microbes capable of denitrification are pseudomonas, but there is a plethora of
other microbes. All of them are aerobes that use NO3- as an alternate O2 electron receptor.
Denitrifires account for 0.1-5% of soil bacterial. Some fungi and actinomycetes have been
implicated in N2O production via incomplete denitrification.
Nature and amount of organic matter. Slow in soils low in organic matter. Stimulated by
carbon-rich materials: Sugars > cellulose > lignin.
Aeriation. Rough 0.2 ppm of O2 is the upper limit. Occurs when O2 supply is insufficient.
Can occur in anaerobic microsites. Favoured by aerobic-anaerobic cycles (e.g., intertidal
areas, submerged soils).
Moisture. H2O generally above 60% VWC. Effect of moisture attributed to its role in
governing O2 diffusion. Maximal when more than 80% of pores are water-filled.
pH. Many denitrifires are sensitive to acidic conditions. Affects amounts of N2O or N2
produced due to sensitivity of nitrous oxide reductase to low pH.
Nitrate concentration. Probably more limiting than carbon in most soils. Influences the
final products of denitrification. High NO3 - favors N2 production.
Temperature. Wide range: 2 – 65 °C , Optimum = 25 °C, None above 70 °C
Part IV: Full circle
High levels of fertilizer, especially urea, and microbes mineralize that urea to ammonia.
Ammonia can either be taken up by plants when water is added and converted to ammonium
or the excess can be subjected to nitrification, so ammonia transforms in nitrate, which can
also be taken up by plants, but it can also be leached into water sources causing
eutrophication.
Nitrate is also subjected to denitrification, considering the amounts of water added that turn
the soil in an anaerobic environment. This causes compounds that pollute the air by
volatilization.
How to curb N pollution and greenhouse gases coming from this system? First, not add so
much fertilizer, just the optimal amount for plant growth. You could also add nitrification
inhibitors. You also modify the efficiency of N uptake of plants or make a more
environmentally friendly fertilizer.
1. Draw a schematic diagram of the nitrogen cycle and label the pools of nitrogen and the
transformations that occur between them.
2. Identify which N transformations require energy and which release energy.
3. Which transformations are assimilatory, and which are dissimilatory?
4. Which transformations are oxidative, and which are reductive?
5. Understand the basic steps in the mineralization of proteins, nucleic acids, and urea
6. What are the products of nitrification? Are they harmful to plants or humans?
7. What conditions stimulate nitrification?
8. Describe the environmental conditions that enhance rates of denitrification
9. What are the environmental implications of denitrification?
Lecture 10 – Methanotrophy and analysis of communities
Part I: Methanotrophy
** methanotrophs
1. Methanotrophs
Methanotrophic microorganisms are present in most environments and affect the net flux of
methane to the atmosphere. They also take up methane from the atmosphere, mitigating
methane emissions.
Aerobic methanotrophs use methane as a C source and an energy source. By oxidizing it with
O2 they transform it into CO2 and H2O + energy (biomass).
Anaerobic methanotrophs utilize methane with either sulphate or nitrate to produce CO 2 and
either hydrogen sulphide or dinitrogen.
2. Enrichment (of
methanotrophs)
3. Methylococcus capsulatus
(Bath)
It is the best studied methanotroph model organism. It was firstly isolated from geothermal
waters of Roman Baths (Bath, UK) which have a geothermal source and are enriched with
methane.
4. Diversity of methanotrophs
Type I methanotrophs
belong to the gamma
subdivision of the
Proteobacteria. They use the
ribulose monophosphate
(RuMP) pathway to
assimilate formaldehyde into
cell carbon and possess
bundles of intracytoplasmic
membranes.
Type II methanotrophs belong to the α-subdivision of the Proteobacteria. They use the serine
pathway for the assimilation of formaldehyde and possess intracytoplasmic membranes
arrayed around the periphery of the cell.
There are 6 genera belonging to Type I and 3 genera belong to type II.
• Microbial process in which bacteria degrade methane as carbon and energy source,
producing CO2
• Diverse organisms, isolated from a wide range of environments
• Metabolic pathway characterized, enzymology and genetics relatively well-understood
• Other interesting aspects
– Co-oxidize a wide range of compounds (e.g. trichloroethylene TCE…)
– Biotechnological interest for bioremediation
– Environmental impact on CH4 fluxes
Part III: Microbial community analysis
The visual characterization of microbial communities under the microscope (after fluorescent
dyeing) is uninformative, as morphological diversity is limited (so different communities look
similar), and visually you can’t identify the microorganism or their physiology.
1. Cultivation biases
Countless studies have shown that it’s not possible to analyze microbial
diversity in environmental samples using cultivation. Cultivable bacterial
diversity is not matched by the diversity obtained by using cultivation-
independent approaches. This is why the vast majority of environmental
microorganisms are often said to be ‘unculturable’. Common statement
(overly simplified): 99% of bacteria and archaea have not been cultured.
2. Counts
Direct counts. A fluorescent dye that interacts with DNA is used. These counts are higher than
cfu. This is due to some reasons: the medium used is too specific and cannot be used to all of
the variety of microorganisms that exist in the sample. This count can also disrupt the
consortia and also include dead/dormant cells.
3. RNA
Ribosomal RNA gene surveys of environmental sequences show that large numbers (even
complete phylogenetic groups of bacteria and archaea) have remained uncultivated. Red
dots = candidate phyla without cultivated representatives.
1. Problems
Microbial Communities Are Taxonomically and Functionally Diverse. If rRNA sequence is similar
to another, that doesn’t mean that both have even similar metabolisms or physiology. rRNA
genes do not indicate the ‘function’ (metabolic potential) of uncultivated microbial taxa.
Genes that encode key enzymes of metabolic pathways, can be used to test the metabolism of
microorganisms in a sample. The presence of the functional marker gene indicates metabolic
potential (function). Diversity of functional genes can be analysed using PCR amplification,
cloning and sequencing analogous to rRNA approach or even using sequencing community
genomes (metagenomics).
In fact, the pmoA gene was used to define groups of methanotrophs. Since 1997, using of
primers amplifying pmoA has revolutionized understanding of methanotroph diversity. The
vast majority of pmoA genes represent uncultivated groups of microorganisms that are not
closely related to isolated methanotrophs. As of Feb 2021, there are ~32,000 pmoA sequences
in public sequence databases. Primers for mmoX (encoding a subunit of soluble methane
monooxygenase) have also been developed.
• Hundreds of studies using pmoA, mxaF and mmoX have increased understanding of
diversity and ecology of methanotrophs (and continuing)
• Example of methanotrophs in environment for community analysis, can be applied to
other functional guilds
• More recent approaches for microbial community analyses are based on metagenomics,
metatranscriptomics and metaproteomics and other more advanced techniques based
on high throughput sequence data
– See recommended articles on moodle for more information
3. Summary
The diversity of plant and animal life in a particular habitat (or in the world as a whole)
The variety of plant and animal life found in an ecosystem and the variation in their genetic
makeup
The variety of life forms, the different plants, animals and microorganisms, the genes they
contain and the ecosystems they form
All hereditarily based variation at all levels of organisation, from the genes within a single
local population or species, to the species composing all or part of a local community, and
finally to the communities themselves that compose the living parts of the multifarious
ecosystems of the world. E O Wilson
Around 2 million species of animals, plants, and fungi have been described, but there may be
5-15 million. We have identified and named a greater proportion of vertebrates and plants
than insects and fungi. 6,399 species of mammals have been described (2018).
Some species appear when somebody realized that what is was thought to be one species is
actually two, this happened to the Tapanuli orangutan. Morphometric, behavioural, and
genomic evidence led to the conclusion, that the isolated population at the southern range
limit of Sumatran orangutans is distinct from both northern Sumatran and Bornean species.
Genomic evidence suggests that while northern Sumatra and Borneo species separated about
674,000 years ago, this species diverged much earlier, about 3.38 million years ago. Now the
most endangered great ape in the
world. About 800 left in fragmented
habitat spread over about 1,000 km2 ,
with densest populations in primary
forest.
1. Nutrient cycle
2. Pollination
Pollinators include bees, butterflies, birds, moths, flies, beetles, bats… They have a crucial role,
but pollination is not mediated entirely by animals. Interactions are generalized i.e. there are
few interactions where one species of plant depends on only one species of animal. Usually,
the same animal can pollinate several different types of plants, and these interactions change
with time and space. A study made in ESPAÑA showed how a lavender flower was visited by 85
species of dipteran, hymenopteran, and lepidopteran pollinators. However, the quality of
pollination does vary with the species.
3. Agricultural products.
Include both plants and animals, which some of them we have selectively bred with time to
provide the characteristic we want. Even though there still exist differences.
4. Medicine
For centuries, bark extract was sued to relieve pain. Salicylic acid was synthesised in
1850s from this tree, but the compound damaged mucous membranes. In 1893, Bayer
company obtained a patent on acetylsalicylic acid (aspirin).
Discovery of penicillin attributed to Alexander Fleming in 1928. He showed that, if
Penicillium notatum was grown in the appropriate substrate, it would exude a
substance with antibiotic properties, which he called penicillin. Could be synthesised in
1957 opening the way to the development of particular penicillin to combat particular
bacteria. By the early 1960's, researchers started producing hundreds of kinds of
experimental penicillin.
Galantamine used for the treatment of mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease and
other memory impairments.
Docetaxel (taxane drug) is a man-made drug that was first made from yew tree
needles. It works by stopping cancer cells from replicating, so blocks the growth of
cancer.
5. Cultural services.
6. Bioremediation
Many bacteria found in soils and ground water are able to biodegrade organic compounds.
They can be useful for a number of processes for remediating contaminated soils and ground
water. These microorganisms could convert contaminants to less hazardous substances:
carbon dioxide and water. Processes for addressing metals are under development.
1. Habitat change/destruction
Building a new road or a city can completely destroy a habitat. However, sometimes what it
does is fragmentate it, reducing the population in each part increasing genetic drift, inbreeding
depression, and increasing the risk of extinction if population becomes very small.
Genetic drift: change in the relative
frequency with which an allele occurs
in a population due to random
variation.
2. Invasive species
An invasive species is a species that did not live in a particular place before but was introduced
accidentally or by human interaction. Invasive species can cause abrupt changes in populations
in coastal ecosystems, for example, the introduction of the invasive, carnivorous ctenophore
Mnemiopsis leidyi (a jellyfish-like animal) in the Black Sea. This animal eats eggs and larvae of
fish and caused rapid loss of 26 major fisheries species and has been implicated (along with
other factors) in the continued growth of the oxygen-deprived “dead” zone. The species was
subsequently introduced into the Caspian and Aral Seas, where it had similar impacts.
3. Pollution
Pollution can come from nutrients (fertilizers), pesticides, or other pollutant activities such as
mining and industrial waste.
In a pesticide-free situation, predators consume pests (ladybirds eat aphids, frogs consume
invertebrates…). In many agricultural areas, pest control provided by natural enemies has been
replaced by the use of pesticides. Such pesticide use has itself degraded the capacity of
agroecosystems to provide pest control.
Veterinary products also can pollute an ecosystem. Gyps vultures of India and South Asia were
some of the most abundant large raptors in the world. Within 10 years, 3 species became
endangered due to a drug used to treat livestock. Vultures feeding on carcasses had renal
failure and died. Vultures provide vital ecosystem service through the disposal of livestock
carcasses, their loss has huge socio-economic impacts. Carcasses were left to rot, posing a risk
to human health (diseases, including anthrax, and species such as rats). Also resulted in
explosion in feral dogs (common cause of human rabies). In 2006, India, Pakistan and Nepal
banned manufacture of drug and pharmaceutical firms encouraged to promote a safe
alternative and vulture numbers have stabilised.
4. Climate change
Climate change is likely to affect the distribution of many species, both animals and plants. It’s
also likely to affect their phenology (e.g. flowering time of plants and emergence time of
insects) so that they become desynchronized.
Climate change will reduce climate space, also reducing species locations. This would mean
that animals and plants would have to move, for some species, this is impossible and habitat
fragmentation and natural barriers (such as the sea) will limit the capacity of some other
species to disperse.
Part III: Things about biodiversity to be concerned now and in the future
Will the loss of biodiversity have an impact on the Earth and human well-being?
Is ‘quantity’ or ‘quality’ important?
Are there some species that we just can’t afford to lose?
How do we value biodiversity against other activities?
How do we maintain biodiversity in the face of increasing pressures from human
development and climate change?
Lecture 12 – Ecological interactions: competition and predation
All living things require resources, and they can only survive,
grow, and reproduce under certain sets of physical
conditions. Each species has a set of conditions and
tolerances under which they can survive, grow, and
reproduce.
1. Community
The community consists of a series of interconnected trophic interactions: a food web. Species
within the community can be classified into functional groups according to the way they
acquire energy.
Energy flows in a food web from one part of the ecosystem to another (trophic dynamics).
The structure is affected by (dynamics) conditions and resources present, the interactions
within and between species: competition, predation, mutualism; The action of foundation
species and keystone species, and the frequency of disturbances or disruptive events.
Competition and predation both concern the requirement for individuals to obtain resources
for survival, growth, and reproduction. Competition occurs where common resources are
limited. Predation concerns the acquisition of food by herbivore and carnivore heterotrophs in
a food web.
Part I: Competition
It is defined by the interaction between organisms in which the fitness of one or both is
lowered by the presence of another when they have a shared resource. Competition can be:
Competition may be asymmetric, but in many cases both competitors suffer a fitness
reduction even though one organism get all the resource due to the expense of energy on
the competitive process.
The Whooping crane (Grus americana) was an endangered species recovering from near
extinction. It breeds in Canada, overwinters in Texas. Was protected in 1916 (15 birds alive in
1941).
This plot shows an exponential increase in numbers on wintering grounds. This happens in an
environment with no limited resources and uncrowded (a weird case). This curve is
exponential, Births > deaths.
In real populations, growth is not exponential. It has been estimated that one cabbage aphid
could (in principle) produce 250 million tonnes of offspring in a year (by asexual reproduction).
But in nature, resources are limited (e.g. food) and the environment functions to slow down
population growth through intraspecific competition for limited resources.
Population regulation involves density dependence (negative feedback gets bigger with the
population):
• Rate of population growth is slowed with increasing population density.
• Population is affected in proportion to its size.
• Density-dependent mortality; density-dependent fecundity.
The more the population, the more competition there is. Eventually, the population can’t grow
more because everything is balancing itself, resulting in a logistic curve of population growth
(S-shaped). When the population grows, births > deaths. When it is constant, births = deaths.
a) Population growth of Lactobacillus sakei in nutrient broth.
b) Population of shoots of the annual plant Juncus gerardi in salt marsh.
c) Population of willow trees in an area where myxomatosis disease had prevented rabbit grazing.
The same basic idea of density dependence applies to intra- and inter-specific competition.
Interspecific competition can result in the
co-existence or exclusion of 1 species
population by another, depending on
resource availability and conditions. Again,
this is important for the conservation of
biodiversity.
1. Mechanisms of competition
Ecologically, predation is not just about the consumption of animals as food, herbivores (and
omnivores) are also predators, as they consume live organisms (plants, in this case).
Decomposers are not predators, as when they eat an organism it is already dead.
If 1 predator has 2 prey species, then an increase in either one of prey species may cause an
increase in the predator. But an increase in the predator may harm both prey species.
Each prey species is indirectly having a negative effect on the other via their positive effect on
the predator.
By increasing predator abundance, each prey species is indirectly decreasing the abundance of
the other prey species. This process is called apparent competition.
There were only 360 bighorn sheep Ovis canadensis sierra remaining in the Sierra Nevada
(California & Nevada USA). Pumas, Puma concolor, prey on the sheep but their primary prey is
a population of 19000 mule deer Odiocoileus hemionus.
Researchers radio collared 162 sheep, and found them soon after
death, ascribing a cause of death to 39 animals, of which 22 were
caused by cougar predation. Sheep mortality caused by cougars was
correlated with % overlap of range of sheep and mule deer.
2. Squirrels
In the UK, the native species of squirrel is the red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris). However, in 1876
the grey squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) was introduced from N America.
Grey is able to digest a wider range of food resources in mixed woodland and remains active
throughout the year. It was also a carrier of the parapox virus which has a major impact on the
native red squirrel.
It’s native to the west and the central Himalayas. Introduced in GB as a garden plant the early
1800s. Out competes the native UK species in ecologically sensitive areas, particularly
riverbanks.
Burmese pythons (Python molurus bivittatus) are large (up to 6m) constrictors native to
Southeast Asia. They have established across thousands of square kilometers in southern
Florida, including all of Everglades National Park (ENP) since 2000.
Pythons in Florida consume a wide range of mammals and birds, including species classified as
threatened or endangered.
Host shift from Asian bee Apis cerana to European honeybee Apis mellifera in the 1950s.
Arrived UK 1992. Parasitic mite on bee brood transmits a highly damaging virus. Resistant to
chemical pesticides
The intentional introduction of an exotic predator as a biological control agent for permanent
establishment and long-term pest control.
Based on the ‘natural enemy release hypothesis’. An organism invades a new geographic area
(usually moved accidentally by people). In so doing, it escapes its “natural enemies”. Its
population is no longer controlled, and it becomes a pest. This is a major reason for the
success of invasive species.
2. Safety testing
Classical control is generally safe. Around 2000 natural enemy species released, with
permanent suppression of 165 arthropod pest species (especially effective against arthropods).
130 species release for arthropod control in Europe. Few apparent problems … but if it goes
wrong the consequences can be severe! Strict safety testing – host range.
Competition and predation are density-dependent processes and tend to be stabilizing for
populations over the long term. Other factors that affect population size are chance variation
in births and deaths, environmental changes, genetic drift, and catastrophes (volcano, forest
fire).
An intense investigation of population levels and the factors that affect them. Identifies what
regulates and determines the abundance of a population
Spring Colorado potato beetle adults emerge from hibernation in mid-June when potato
plants are emerging through the ground. They start laying eggs within 3 days, for 1 month.
Eggs are laid in clusters on the lower leaf surface. Larvae crawl up the plant. Pupate in the soil.
Summer adults emerge in early August, feed, re-enter soil in September to hibernate.
Land-use change through human activities affects other organisms through loss or degradation
of their habitat, usually by fragmentation of their habitats caused by turning wild areas into
farmland. Some populations are now restricted to protected areas. How do you decide how
large these protected areas must be to keep a population viable?
To conserve species, you need to understand the factors that determine their population size.
The number must be large enough to withstand chance variations in births and deaths,
environmental changes, genetic drift, and catastrophic events.
Once the MVP for a species has been determined, the area needed to support the population
must be estimated. This is the minimum dynamic area (MDA). To calculate this you need to
understand the carrying capacity of the habitat and the home range size of individuals, family
groups, or colonies. This gives an estimate of the area requirement per individual.
Figure. Large parks contain larger populations of each species than small parks; only the largest
parks may contain long-term viable populations of many large vertebrate species. Each symbol
represents an animal population in a park. If the minimum viable population (MVP) of a
species is 1000 (dashed line), parks of at least 100 ha will be needed to protect small
herbivores. Parks of more than 10,000 hectares will be needed to support populations of large
herbivores, and parks of at least 1 million hectares will be needed to protect populations of
large carnivores.
With an estimate for both MDA and MVP, the area needed to
maintain a viable population can be determined. For large
carnivores, this area can be enormous, e.g. the estimate for a
population of 1000 grizzly bears is 2 million km 2. This is why
most large carnivore populations are endangered and only
found in very large public land areas and nature reserves.
Key features are: ‘habitable site’ (size, number, life span) and ‘dispersal
distance’.
This butterfly can colonize all habitable sites of less than 1km from
where it emerged. As it can only fly up to that distance. Any habitable
site more far away than 1 km remains uninhabited (beyond dispersal
power).
Their world population is below 1000 individuals distributed among 9 spatially and
genetically isolated populations. Understanding that the lynx functions as a metapopulation
is central to its conservation. Its existence depends upon maintaining genetic exchange
among the local populations, so the priority would be to link the patches so the population
would be more than the MVP.
1. Primary succession
It’s the development of a community on newly exposed substrate. The site has never
supported a community before.
Early colonizing pioneer species tolerate the novel conditions and initiate ecological processes.
Later species grow more slowly but are able to outcompete the colonizers after the pioneer
species change the soil by depositing organic matter, as the new species are highly
competitive. Reasonably predictable sequence of species: pioneer mid-succession
climax. (Hypothetical, dominance controlled succession.
2. Secondary succession
The re-colonization of a community after disturbance. This site supported a community that
doesn’t exist anymore
This is typical of coral reefs, where most reef fish are active by day and need hiding places to
shelter from predators (sharks) at night.
Suitable territories (with good hiding places) are patchy. When one becomes vacant,
individuals of different fish species have an equal chance of occupying it. All species are good
colonists of a gap and equal competitors. Species equivalent in ability to invade gaps.
Part V: Summary
Understanding meta-populations, patchiness and community structure is important for
conservation.
How can human society provide for its own needs and allow nature to thrive at the same time?
Ecosystem services & right to life.
We are undergoing the 6th mass extinction event on Earth: changes in land and sea use
(industrial farming); direct exploitation of organisms; climate change; pollution; invasive alien
species…
We need a new, sustainable, and fair society. It requires knowledge and vision to imagine what
it will be and to make it a reality.
One example: Suitable habitat patches need to be connected to allow wildlife to move freely.
Banff national park, Alberta. Parks Canada is installing 7 overpasses and 41 underpasses on the
section bisected by the Trans-Canada Highway. A 2014 study found that fencing off the road
and installing wildlife passes had maintained high genetic diversity in black and grizzly bear
populations. “When habitat is isolated, we can have impact on individual animals where they
might not be able to find water or food. We can also have impact on the genetic diversity of
populations,” says Mark Benson, a member of the human-wildlife coexistence team for Parks
Canada (Guardian newspaper 23.1.2021.)
In the UK, wildlife bridges are likely to form part of the government’s nature recovery network
which aims to link together biodiverse areas under a 25-year environment plan
After this, a few more article started to appear focusing on this new term. In 2007, Paul Kurtz,
Will Steffen and John McNeill publish a more robust paper arguing the Anthropocene.
Impacts are multifaceted including climate change, resource extraction, waste production,
overharvesting, and land cover change.
These impacts are breaching planetary boundaries and lead to fundamental shifts in Earth
procezone of uncertaintysses.
Human activity is interwound with planetary feedbacks.
The effects of human activity are leaving distinct stratigraphic record - hence the use of a
geological epoch.
They suggested that this new geological period started in the 1950s, when modern industry
increased in size and scale, rather than in the 18 th century.
The 1950s was the date proposed for the start of this period due to the great acceleration. In
2015, this was revised, and the great acceleratioMethylococcus capsulatusn was defined as a
distinct phase shift in the mid-20 th century. This affects Earth’s systems and also socio-
economic trends.
3. Planetary boundaries
There are fundamental limits to the amount of human disruption that can occur before we
observe widescale changes in Earth system processes.
The same 2015 paper showed different
variables that are approaching this limit to
where they cannot recover to pre-
anthropogenic levels. This includes climate
change, biogeochemical cycling (P, N), land-
system degradation and conversion, genetic
diversity…
4. Geological perspective
Now, in theory, we are in the Holocene epoch (Cenozoic) which started 11,700 years ago with
the end of the last major ice age. In this interglacial period humans developed agriculture, so it
is already defined by human activity.
Other argue that the shift we are currently seeing is so robust that an epoch is too low of a
categorization of time, so we should be talking about an “Anthropozoic era”.
AWG (Anthropocene Working Group) was established in 2009, reporting to the International
Commission on Stratigraphy, within the International Union of Geological Sciences.
In May 2019, the AWG completed a binding vote determining two major research questions:
"Should the Anthropocene be treated as a formal chrono-stratigraphic unit?"
"Should the primary guide for the base of the Anthropocene be one of the stratigraphic
signals around the mid-twentieth century of the Common Era?".
6. Anthropocene critiques
Many recent papers argue that there is a large range of geological evidence to support the
Anthropocene epoch (plastics and changes in biogeochemical cycles in sediments and soils,
radioactive signals, paleogeographic distribution of species around Earth).
The problem is that the mid 20 century is so recent that many of these strata are still forming
so it’s difficult to match the strict guidelines set by the International Union of Geological
Sciences, so some still argue that the proposed Anthropocene is unjustified: “It is too recent a
time period to be suited for geological definition” - “It is a political statement” - “It is valuable
as an informal concept but there is no need to formalize it” – “Human civilization is an event,
not an epoch” – “Anthropocene is a joke” – “Anthropocene is not an issue of stratigraphy but
rather pop culture”.
It's not certain that the recommendation of the AWG will be approved, leading to the
Anthropocene possibly not being declared an epoch.
Some others argue that AWG doesn’t have social scientists or historians and that geologists are
taking too much of a lead in defining the Anthropocene and the discussion should be much
more interdisciplinary.
Social scientists argue that geological thinking is leading the charge for qualifying the
Anthropocene. “The Anthropocene resembles an attempt to conceptually traverse the gap
between the natural and the social…through the construction of a bridge from one side only
(the geological), leading traffic in one direction opposite the actual process…”
7. Biosphere perspective
This perspective differs from the Earth’s systems perspective, as biosphere may be altered
while not necessarily altering
Earth’s system function. E.g. a
forest can lose biodiversity but
still retaining the properties that
makes it a forest as C
sequestration or the hydrological
cycle.
Even in the absence of extinction, there have been human-induced mixing of species, being a
change in the biosphere. Some people consider this as the second coming of Pangea, where all
physical boundaries that normally keep species separated have been removed due to human
interference. Some others consider the Earth as a large global scale archipelago where all
islands can be reached by all species.
This means that if in a million years someone check the paleontological record of Earth, they
would notice that new species appear in areas were they were not found before, being this a
strong anthropogenic signal.
8. Historical perspective
People have been proposing different starting dates of the Anthropocene, some being a lot of
years prior to the 1945 proposed date. Another discussion is whether the Anthropocene is a
new phenomenon or something that humans have been doing or inducing for millennia.
Ellis et al. 2016. Nature. This paper made a case that Anthropocene has deep roots in human
history. These roots are localized further back in history, but their effects eventually led to the
global scale perturbations we see today.
Megafauna hunting and extinction (10,000-50,000 years BP): This led to the increase of
human population and size.
Denominator: number of species in the same weight class present 50,000 years ago.
Numerator: present species. Large megafauna has the major differences
Crop domestication (5,000-10,000 years BP). Development of corn, bananas, sorghum, and
other modified plants.
Ruddiman argued that this should be the starting point because it wasn’t a localized event.
The development of flooded agriculture of rice in Asia emitted enough CO 2 to delay the
next ice age. According to his estimations, we should now be in the midst of another ice
age, but due to the emissions to the atmosphere, Earth’s temperature is rising instead of
declining.
Some disagree with this argument because ice ages are difficult to predict.
Colonization of America (1500 AD). It is estimated that 90% of native Americans died due
to slavery and disease. Some argue that this led to a regrowth of American forests which
coincides with a reduction of CO2, around the year 1650.
When 2ºC warming reached (future). Another planetary boundary that is discussed is
where the biosphere shifts from being a sink to a source of CO 2.
9. Cultural perspective
The Anthropocene has come to mean different things to different people – not necessarily
related to the natural sciences. There are a lot of books dedicated entirely to this concept,
which shows the flexibility of the concept. The Anthropocene concept has notably influenced
art and architecture.
11. Summary
The Anthropocene…
• Community structure: (i) species richness, relative abundance; (ii) types of species:
their functions & how they relate to each other.
• The structure is affected by: Conditions and resources present, Interactions within and
between species: competition, predation, mutualism… The action of foundation species
and keystone species and the frequency of disturbances or disruptive events.
It follows that disturbance/disruption caused by human activity can alter community structure,
dynamics & ecosystem services. This can occur by:
• Habitat destruction.
• Altering conditions (e.g. climate change).
• Altering the availability of resources.
• Reducing the abundance of keystone species.
• Disrupting interactions within / between species.
The importance of maintaining viable ecosystems, and the mechanisms by which ecological
communities’ function, are not widely appreciated.
All communities are connected, directly or indirectly, as part of the biosphere. The planet is
essentially one giant food web.
Anthropogenic change in 1 part of the system can affect multiple other parts.
The global rate of species extinction is 10x, possibly 100x higher than the average rate over the
last 10 million years. Around ¼ of animal and plant species under threat of extinction now. 1
million species face extinction within decades.
The extent and condition of natural ecosystems declined by 50%. Since 1970, 68% decline in
population size of mammals, birds, fish, amphibians, and reptiles.
IPBES (2019), Summary for policymakers of
40% of amphibians, 33% of reef forming corals, >33% of the global assessment report on biodiversity
mammals and 10% of insects are threatened with extinction. and ecosystem services
1. 5 main drivers
Changes in land and sea use. This is the most important driver. Humans have altered 75%
of land and 66% of marine environments since pre-industrial times.
Direct exploitation of organisms. In 2015, a third of marine stocks were being fished at
unsustainable levels.
Climate change. Global warming has already impacted almost half of threatened mammals
and one quarter of birds.
Pollution. Marine plastic pollution has
increased tenfold since 1980, with an
average 300-400M tons of waste dumped
annually into the world’s waters. N and
phosphate inputs also pollute
environments.
Invasive alien species. The numbers of
invasive alien species per country have
risen by about 70% since 1970.
Part III: Ex1, Human disturbance: Land use change for farming
The majority of Earth’s ice-free land surface is used to obtain food, mainly to produce meat.
12% of Earth’s surface is cropland, 37% is pastures, and 22% are forests used for timber,
managed by and for human activity. That’s 71% of Earth’s ice-free surface.
This usage of land is caused by food production, which has had an effect on global biomass of
mammals and birds.
2. Remaining areas of wilderness
3. Land use change and climate change
Human destruction of the Amazon rainforest, combined with climate change, has significantly
reduced rainfall in the region, which is essential for tree growth and survival. As we have seen,
it is the evapotranspiration of the trees that causes the rain, so without trees, the rainforest
ceases to exist at some point.
40% of the Amazon Forest is at a tipping point where it could transition to savannah, a total
ecosystem change that would lead to a precipitous reduction in carbon capture and
biodiversity.
Global diets should be much more plant-based, because of the disproportionate effect of
animal farming on biodiversity, land use and the environment.
The expansion of agricultural land into natural ecosystems results in mixing of wilds animals,
their pathogens, and farmed animals and humans. Increases risk of disease species jump.
Climate change causes changes in abundance and distribution of wild species animal hosts.
Alters risks of species jumps to humans. Most people now live in high-density towns and
cities, with global travel, increasing the rate at which zoonotic disease spread among human
society.
The transformation of wild area into crop land has
also resulted in human communities being bigger,
instead of sporadic villages. If people live in small
communities, the emerging infectious disease (such as
Ebola) would kill probably the entire village, but it
wouldn’t spread to the next villages.
Global trends of EID have been increasing over time in the last decades.
a zoonotic pathogens from wildlife b zoonotic, non-wildlife c drug resistant pathogens d vector
borne diseases (green low, red high)
Bats carry the highest proportion of zoonotic viruses of all mammalian orders. The world’s bats
carry >3000 coronaviruses (CoV). CoV strains in bats from Yunnan (China) most closely
resemble SARS-CoV-1 and SARS-CoV-2. Yunan, Laos, Myanmar are plausible places of origin for
these pathogens.
These areas are also the habitat of masked civets (Paguma larvata) and Sunda pangolins
(Manis javanica) which are thought to be intermediate hosts that transmitted SARS-CoV-1 and
SARS-CoV-2 to humans from wild animal markets. The number of CoVs in an area is correlated
with bat species richness.
Species richness is affected by climate change: it alters suitability of habitats and changes
spatial distribution (range shift). Range shifts result in changes in species composition in the
community.
A climate-vegetation model, combined with data on bat occurrence and habitat requirements,
was used to study effect of climate change on bat range shift. Climate-change driven increase
in bat richness in the region that is the likely origin of SARS-CoV-1 and SARS-CoV-2. A global
hotspot. Mechanistic link between climate change and emergence of SARS and COVID.
Estimated increase in the local number of bat species due to shifts in their geographical ranges
driven by climate change between the 1901-1930 and 1990-2019 period. The zoomed-in area
represents the likely spatial origin of the bat-borne ancestors of SARS-CoV-1 and 2. (Beyer,
Manica & Mora (2021). Shifts in global bat diversity suggest a possible role of climate change in
the emergence of SARS-CoV-1 and SARS-CoV-2. Science of the Total Environment, 767, 145413.)
Part V: Ex3, Keystone species impact - climate change disrupts a trophic cascade
Sea otters are a keystone species in the North Pacific. They eat sea urchins, the main predators
of kelp. If sea otters are abundant, kelp is abundant because they predate on sea urchins, this
Kelp is a foundational species. Kelp forest in the pacific north provides a habitat for many
marine species. Sea otters (Representative
Concentration PathwayEnhydra lutis) predate
This dramatic increase in juvenile white sharks in Monterey Bay, a critical area for sea otters,
caused a significant increase in sea otter mortality from white shark bites year-round. This is a
huge risk to the trophic cascade and ecosystem benefits (of kelp forests).
2. Whale pump
Baleen whales feed on krill at depth. Their faeces deposition in surface waters (it floats)
provides nitrogen for phytoplankton growth. Surface waters have low nutrient concentration,
so it’s a very important nitrogen pump for the ecosystem.
The plankton capture CO2 and are the base of the food chain for fish stocks. This nutrient
pump may be more important for marine productivity in coastal sees than nutrient input from
rivers.
Large scale
whale losses
through hunting is likely to have significantly reduced the effect of the pump. Conserving
whales should lead to an increase in fish stocks while previously, fishers have viewed whales as
competitors.
Part VI: How to save the planet and learning outcomes
• Human population stabilization: stop poverty, invest in education and women’s rights.
• Reduce our impact by focusing on 4 goals:
– Replace fossil fuels with renewables
– Upgrade to efficient food production and
reduce meat consumption.
– Manage the ocean – a global network of
no fish zones.
– Rewild the world – encourage nature
wherever we can.
It shows historical data from a number of centuries showing the relatively stable global
temperatures for the past thousand years or so. However, in recent history, since the start
of the industrial revolution (where instrumentation data starts black line) there is a
rapid increase of global temperature. All of these temperatures are relative to a baseline
between 1960 and 1990.
Focusing just on instrumentation data: it shows a lot of variability. The g lobal mean surface
temperatures have risen by about 1.2oC since the beginning of the last century. The rate of
warming over the last 50 years is almost double that over the last 100 years.
We can average out some of that noise (variability) by looking at averages of temperatures by
decades. We can still see the general upward trend.
1. Non-anthropogenic drivers
Sunspots (short-term)
Eruptions of the surface of the sun which increase temporarily
increase the radiative output, affecting the incident radiation coming
into the Earth.
Volcanoes (short-term)
A natural event that puts a lot of ash and particulate matter in
the sky, blocking the radiation from the sun, making
temperatures decrease.
Teleconnections (short-term)
Fluctuations of global climate that happens in a cyclical
regular basis (El Niño Southern Oscillation ENSO).
Tradewinds in the Pacific, which normally take water,
heat and moisture into South America suddenly shift
and take all that into the Pacific.
2. Anthropogenic drivers
(greenhouse gasses)
CO2
It is the most important greenhouse gas
(because its abundance), but not most
potent. Half-life in the atmosphere of ~31
years.
How did we incriminate CO2 for being responsible for this global warming?
The culprit CO2 became clear while we were investigating what effect would nuclear bombs
have in the isotopes of the atmosphere. Charles Keeling decided to monitor CO 2, and those
monitor stations have been monitoring CO2 levels until today for climate change purposes.
Mauna Loa is a very good place to monitor CO 2 because it is in the Pacific, so it is not
surrounded by other CO2 sources.
The temperature data is derived from 18O measurements. The CO2 concentration of air trapped
in the core. Carbon isotopes are used for dating.
CO2 changes (red) linked to temperature changes (blue) of Milankovitch cycles – feedback
loops!
Right now, CO2 levels are way off the graph, in a historical record. This shows how the amount
of CO2 that is in the atmosphere is not associated with natural origins or natural cycles. There
is some additional input going on.
The other, more close-up graph shows how it is easy to think that the origin of this increase is
due to anthropogenic effects.
If we plot the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere over time and altitude, we can see how there
are large peaks in the Northern Hemisphere driving this global trend.
There is also some variability with seasons. The driving force behind this seasonality is
photosynthesis.
The Northern Hemisphere is responsible due to its higher landmass and more people living in
it. Furthermore, it has been proven the relationship between fossil fuel burning (fossil fuel
emissions are increasing at the same rate as CO 2). With the increase of CO 2 we can also find a
decrease in O2 concentrations in the atmosphere, which would be
gone by burning fossil fuels.
Methane CH4
It’s the 2nd most important greenhouse gas in case of
radiative forcing after CO2. Short half-life in the
atmosphere of ~10 years. Molecule for molecule 25 times
as efficient as CO2 at absorbing re-radiated energy
If we look at the concentrations in Mauna Loa (in parts per billion, ppb) we can see a clear
upward trend. However, we can see a plateau in early 2000, maybe due to its short life. If
there is a reduction in methane production, we can see how the curve flattens.
The concentration of methane has been stable over a long period of time, over the past 10,000
years (data from ice scores). In the last 100 years, there has been a rapid increase. Cows
produce a lot of methane.
BIOGENIC SOURCES. Accounts for more than 70% of the global total. It’s based on methane
biogenesis (primary fermentation to acetic acid). Anaerobic environments
• CH3COOH CH4 + CO2
• CO2 + 4H2 CH4 + 2H2O
Sources include wetlands, rice agriculture (including associated trees), livestock, enteric
fermentation (inside guts of livestock) and slurries, 37% anthropogenic methane. (FAO figures).
Also landfills, forests, oceans. Also termites.
NON-BIOGENIC SOURCES. Emissions from fossil fuel mining and burning (natural gas,
petroleum, and coal). Biomass burning. Waste treatment. Geological sources (fossil CH 4 from
natural gas seepage in sedimentary basins and geothermal/volcanic CH 4).
Concentrations of N2O have risen from about 270ppb in pre-industrial times. Current levels are
about 326ppb (20% increase). Annual emissions have increased by 40-50% over that period,
due to human activity.
Sulphate aerosols
Most important source of aerosols. They originate from
natural sources e.g. Volcanoes, marine bacteria, and
anthropogenic sources e.g. Power stations burning coal which
is rich in sulphur. Sulphates can also be produced by chemical
action on sulphur dioxide. Short lifetime of particles (5 days)
so effects limited to close to sources.
If the effects of Sulphur aerosol of the year 2000 were removed, global temperature would rise
due to the loose of cooling effect.
3. Anthropogenic drivers (albedo and
land use)
The global average mean temperature has increased over the last 200 years. This change can
also be seen in the global average minimum and maximum temperatures during the day. We
can see how the temperature increase is faster during the night than during the day, so the
temperature difference between the two is smaller (blue graph).
This may occur because heat is absorbed by land and oceans during the day, which dampens
the effect of the heat accumulated during the day but contributes to the release of heat during
the night.
The global temperature shift can also differ by location. This pattern is not uniform. Bigger
landmasses are heated up more rapidly. The cooler part is due to the ice melting into the
ocean, meaning a loss of ice surface.
1. Precipitation trends
All of the climate inputs have an influence on the other, and once energy is put into the
system, it has knock-on effects for all of the components, that is why the climate system is so
complex. One of the effects is on the hydrological cycle, more heat means more evaporation,
having an impact on clouds and precipitations, intensifying the water cycle.
We can plot the rate of change of precipitation trends and see how in the last 100 years there
is not much change but in the last 50 years there is a lot of change, with areas becoming
wetter and other dryer.
Extreme weather events are increasing in number, which could explain how the increase in
precipitation is affecting the weather: the extra precipitation is not spread over the whole
year, but it is increasing the intensity of rainfall.
2. Climate feedback
Climate feedbacks: processes that can either amplify or diminish the effects of radiative
forcing. Precipitation, clouds, greening of forests, ice albedo…
Climate tipping points: When Earth’s climate abruptly moves between relatively stable states.
Ice loss, thawing permafrost and methane release, ocean circulations…
The climate has undergone rapid changes over the last 100 years and this trend has
accelerated. These changes are expected to continue BUT impacts of warming are multiple and
interconnected. Positive and negative feedbacks. Tipping points
1. Climate predictions
They contain multiple components, representative of local and global weather patterns and
feedback loops.
Key principles
• Take climate system from surface, up through troposphere to stratosphere
• Partition into series of boxes
• Model flow of energy between boxes
o i.e. heat from sea, and lateral movement to surrounding boxes over time
o Dynamic processes over range of scales.
• Huge amount of computing power needed for this
o Boxes have become smaller as computing power has increased
o More detail of energy flows is always improving.
It is interesting to see if as models become more complex and detailed, the predictions change.
The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) was established jointly by the World
Meteorological Organisation (WMO) and the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP).
Its purpose is to predict what future risks would be and to provide global and country level
policies.
The long-term nature and uncertainty of climate change and its driving forces require
scenarios that extend to the end of the 21st century.
The 1996 Plenary of the IPCC requested a “Special Report on Emissions Scenarios” (SRES).
Defined by 2000. These SRES scenarios are used up to and including IPCC 4 th assessment.
SRES involves four narrative scenarios "storylines" to describe alternative futures depending
on different emissions and global patterns.
They cover a wide range of key "future" characteristics such as demographic change, economic
development, and technological change.
Together they describe divergent futures that encompass a significant portion of the
underlying uncertainties in the main driving forces.
Developed 4 major scenario families – A1B most extreme. None included mitigation policies.
SRES was superseded by RCPs.
The 5th Assessment Report of IPCC has defined a set of 4 new scenarios (RCPs) from which
uncertainties in socio-eco and climate can be explored.
RCPs consist of the components of radiative forcing which serve as input for climate
modelling.
Identified by their total radiative forcing increase (Wm 2) in the year 2100 relative to 1750:
• 2.6 Wm2 for RCP2.6 - mitigation leading to peak and decline in emission ➔ low forcing
• 4.5 Wm2 for RCP4.5 – stabilization by 2100
• 6.0 Wm2 for RCP6.0 - stabilization after 2100 (closest scenario)
• 8.5 Wm2 for RCP8.5 – growth in
greenhouse gas emissions, which peak
after 2100 ➔ very high forcing
(extreme scenario, 98th percentile)
The RCPs represent a range of 21st century mitigation policies, as compared with baseline
trajectories SRES used in the 3rd and 4th IPCC Assessment Reports.
3. RCP projections
It is likely to exceed 2℃ for RCP 6.0 and RCP 8.5, and more likely than not to exceed 2℃ for
RCP 4.5.
4. Common trajectories
Depending on whether we are talking about RCP2.6 or RCP8.5 the intensity of the change
varies. In both scenarios, the greatest temperature increase is over land and in the high
northern latitudes. The Arctic regions are going to
suffer the most.
Greatest increases over the high northern temperate regions and the
equator.
Decrease around tropics and sub tropics. Continues trends in 20th century.
Precipitation
intensity increases
(max. 5 days of
rain), particularly in
tropical and high
latitudes, and it gets
really extreme in
RCP8.5. There is a
tendency to drying
of mid–continental
areas ➔ greater risk of drought wildfires.
This has a cascade of effects, affecting: a decrease in frost days, very likely that heatwaves will
become more intense, and the minimum temperatures will rise faster than maximum. Also,
increase in growing season, which could be beneficial, but taking into account all factors, it is
not.
To test how confident those models are, we could test these models by predicting backwards,
into the past, and see if they fit correctly.
These models fit in generally good, but there is a lot of noise, so an accurate annual prediction
still difficult.
1. Ocean temperature
Temperature varies with location and season due to currents and depth. In fact, that depth can
be a sink of all of that surface heat,
acting like a buffer. In reality, it’s
more complicated, as average surface
temperature has increase by ~0.4-0.8
in past 100 years and they will
continue to store that heat and then
release it for decades.
The implication of all of this heat content is the thermal expansion of water, not because
changes in the hydrological cycle.
Even if we stopped the emissions now, thermal expansion is a reality, and it would still happen.
4. Coral reefs
Corals become sequestered into the reef framework when the coral polyp dies. The greatest
abundance close to the equator. They are highly biodiverse ecosystems, an estimated 1 million
species in 400,000 Km2 (a 632km square) of reef. However, they are highly sensitive to climate
change.
Thermal threshold for coral bleaching is only 1-2℃ above summer maxima for 3-5 weeks. is
more common with warming. Thermal thresholds vary with latitude and sea temperatures –
corals highly adapted.
A bleached coral has no algae. It is not dead but very vulnerable. Corals can be recovered if the
bleach is mild, but it can produce major damage to entire coral reefs.
Corals are highly adapted and grow very slow, so they cannot respond to these changes and
shift their habitat range of individuals.
In this map is shown the maximum surface water temperatures and the major bleaching
events. In 1998 there was one of the worst bleaching events, also linked to El Niño years.
In the past 20 years there has been more bleaching events (great coral reef) linked to episodic
increases in ocean surface temperatures. Progressive bleaching events make recovery almost
impossible.
CO2 binds to water to make bicarbonate and H + ions. H+ increases the acidity, but also binds
free carbonate in solution, so carbonate unavailable to make calcium carbonate in shells.
Different emission scenarios show different changes in ocean acidification. There is also some
variability in location but it’s very uniform. We are looking at a change in sort of 0.3 units over
the next 60 years, a really significant change.
Rising in CO2 levels are likely to result in declining calcification which is linked to decrease in
ocean pH (more acid). It is calculated that doubling CO 2 would decrease calcification in
aragonite corals by 20 – 60 %. Warming temperatures put corals at risk of bleaching and death.
The reduction in coral cover would increase erosion.
A Bill to make provision about targets, plans and policies for improving the natural
environment.
For statements and reports about environmental protection; for the Office for
Environmental Protection.
About waste and resource efficiency.
About air quality.
For the recall of products that fail to meet environmental standards, about water.
About nature and biodiversity.
For conservation covenants.
About the regulation of chemicals; and for connected purposes.
Increasing population
Shortages/increased costs of: – Land – Water – Energy – Phosphate (fertiliser)
Reduction in fertiliser input (pollution, availability, cost)
Constraints on pesticide use (pollution, human concerns)
Effects of climate change other than water availability
Food versus fuel crops
Increased/decreased demand for animal products
Other ‘human’ factors – labour, food prices etc
4. ‘Choice’ of production systems
In the 21st century, farmers have many tools available to them to increase yield and quality.
However, some of the tools can have an adverse effect on the environment and possibly on
human health (e.g. pesticides). The use of tools depends on what is available to individual
farmers and costs versus benefits, so choosing is on them. In some circumstances some or all
of these tools are not available for economic (e.g. developing countries) or political reasons
(e.g. Cuba in the late 20th century).
Cuba. Until end 1980s agriculture heavily subsidised by Soviet bloc as they were a
communist country. They imported >50% calories consumed and 80-95% of wheat, beans,
fertilisers, pesticides, animal feed. In 1990, the trade with Soviet bloc collapsed leading to
shortages and limited access to petrol, pesticides, fertilisers…
Government policy had to adopt an alternative model using local knowledge, skills, and
resources. They used oxen instead of tractors, Integrated Pest Management, and farmer
cooperation. Taken time to work – intensive organic gardens in urban areas. Sustainable
agriculture in rural areas, biological control, rotation, compost production, polyculture,
intercropping, green manures. Still problems but population now fed much better than in
mid 1990s and now Cuba is opening up to the world…
5. Different farming systems
Conventional. It uses all available tools to maximise yield and quality. It changes over time.
Organic. Production system which avoids or largely excludes the use of synthetically
compounded fertilizers, pesticides, growth regulators, and livestock feed additives. To the
maximum extent feasible, organic farming systems rely upon crop rotations, crop residues,
animal manMethylococcus capsulatusures, legumes, green manures, off-farm organic
wastes, mechanical cultivation, mineral-bearing rocks, and aspects of biological pest
control to maintain soil productivity and tilth, to supply plant nutrients, and to control
insects, weeds, and other pests (USDA, 1980).
Low-Input agriculture - has been defined as a production activity that uses synthetic
fertilizers or pesticides below rates commonly recommended. It does not mean
elimination of these materials. Yields are maintained through greater emphasis on cultural
practices, Integrated Pest Management, and utilization of on-farm resources and
management.
The environmental impact of these different farming systems can be assessed by LCA. LCA (life-
cycle analysis) is a technique to assess the environmental aspects and potential impacts
associated with a product, process, or service, by compiling an inventory of relevant energy
and material inputs and environmental releases, evaluating the potential environmental
impacts associated with the identified inputs and releases, and interpreting the results to help
make a more informed decision.
One thing you can measure is global warming potential (t CO2) over 100 years per ton of food.
6. Organic production
Doesn’t use synthetic inputs like pesticides and fertilisers and doesn’t provide much pollution
from those types of inputs. This has been suggested that might contribute to reducing our
impact on the environment.
Organic production is likely to use more land to produce the same yield and it may use less
energy per unit area (by not using synthetic fertilisers) but not necessarily per ton because
the yield per area is still decreased. It uses more fuel (tractors) but generates less pollution by
pesticides.
In the graph organic and conventional productions are compared by calculating the ratio of
organic impact divided by non-organic impact. Different food commodities are compared by a
number of environmental impacts.
There have been studies comparing the environmental impact of vegetable protein
(soyabeans) with meat production. Meat production has much more impact comparing with
soyabeans.
8. Intensification versus extensification
A land-sparing scenario (B & C) is one in which farmland is higher yielding (and therefore often
less biodiverse), but since high farm productivity means that less land is needed to achieve a
given level of output, this could allow more non-farmland to be spared for nature. In a land
sharing scenario (A), farmland is less high yielding (measured in terms of e.g. cereal output)
but more biodiverse. However, for the same level of food output, as compared with a land
sparing scenario, less land is available solely for nature conservation. Is used in organic
production.
Re-wilding. Large-scale restoration of ecosystems where nature can take care of itself. It can
be done in the space left in land-sparing scenarios.
Using knowledge. Good crop rotation (not growing crops of the same plant family in the
same land in consecutive years) and soils management strategies. Matching fertiliser and
water requirements to the crop. Monitoring and forecasting pests and diseases (so
pesticides are only applied when it is absolutely necessary).
Precision farming. Instead a field as one unit where everything is the same, you can treat
different parts of the land differently using yourMethylococcus capsulatu farm equipment.
Apply more fertilisers or more weed control in certain areas. This is possible due to new
sensors, remote GPS, and other tools. An example of this is a mechanical hoe that uses
vision guidance to reduce weeds without damaging the crops (lettuces). There is a lot of
potential with robots and drones.
o High precision positioning systems (like GPS) - accuracy when driving in the field.
o Automated steering systems: reduce human error and are the key to effective site
management.
o Geomapping: used to produce maps including soil type, nutrients levels etc in
layers and assign that information to the particular field location.
o Sensors and remote sensing: collect data from a distance to evaluating soil and
crop health (moisture, nutrients, compaction, crop diseases). Data sensors can be
mounted on moving machines.
o Integrated electronic communications between components in a system for
example, between tractor and farm office, tractor and dealer or spray can and
sprayer.
o Variable rate technology (VRT): ability to adapt parameters on a machine to
apply, for instance, seed or fertiliser according to the exact variations in plant
growth, or soil nutrients and type.
Crops genetics. Varieties that are resistant to pests and disease. Varieties that use
nutrients and water more efficiently. Varieties that are more competitive against weeds.
This can be achieved through conventional plant breeding and genetic modification. Both
approaches require identification of genes for which molecular techniques are very useful.
Same idea applies to animals.
10. Ecosystem service provision by land managers
The land used for food, fibre, or fuel production (provisioning services) can also deliver a
number of other ecosystem services such as: Water regulation (quantity and quality) and
various services associated with biodiversity.
Land managers can reduce the pressure on existing services and manage the land in a way
that provides additional services.
11. LEAF
LEAF encourages farmers to adopt Integrated Farm Management (IFM), promote the benefits
of IFM to consumers, raise awareness of the way many farmers are responding to current
concerns. Includes crop rotation, managing hedgerows for wildlife, and using pesticides and
fertilisers only when necessary.
In 2018, an estimated 55.3 per cent of the world’s population lived in urban settlements. By
2030, urban areas are projected to house 60 per cent of people globally and one in every three
people will live in cities with at least half a million inhabitants. That is why urban, or peri urban
agriculture could be a need in the future. Rooftop farmers or vertical farming.
Insects can be food for humans or animals. They are a good source of proteins. Presentation of
the world's first cultured hamburger (synthetic meat) (unbaked here) at a news conference in
London on 5 August 2013. The cultured meat product was developed by a team of scientists
from Maastricht University led by Mark Post at a cost of €250,000.
Lecture 19 – Mitigation
The world changes even without mans influence (e.g. tectonic drift). However, mankind can
accelerate than process (Tuvalu island might be the first country to be wiped off the map by
global warming. Max height above see 4.5m).
We have problems with peak oil (extracting less than demanded, affecting climate), peak soil
(are we eliminating the limited agricultural land because we are not farming appropriately?),
peak water (due to rising population, more rainfall in form of floods or droughts), peak
biodiversity loss, peak population, and peak GDP (poverty and development).
Involves an iterative risk management process that includes both adaptation (learning how to
live with those problems) and mitigation (alleviate problems). It needs to consider climate
change damages, co-benefits, sustainability, and equity and attitudes to risk.
2. Mitigation potential
Economic potential. Considers social costs and benefits and social discount rates assuming
that market efficiency is improved by policies and measures and barriers are removed. It
considers what is the impact of dealing with climate change in the economy.
Market potential. Based on private costs and private discount rates. It is expected to occur
under forecast market conditions. It includes policies and measures currently in place. It
notes that barriers limit the actual uptake.
What do we do with fuel going forward? How are we going to heat our houses or run our cars?
One way of mitigation is putting a tax to businesses on carbon emissions. Mitigation potential
goes up with a big tax (100$ instead of 20$ per ton) so businesses avoid emitting GHGs. But is
this affordable?
3. Great
green wall
There is a debate
about the impact of
growing trees on
climate change. If they are planted in the wrong place you could make the situation worse. We
are still seeing deforestation in Brazil despite the anti-deforestation policies.
The great green wall is a project in which local trees are being planted through the south
border of the Sahara Desert in order to mitigate its expansion.
4. Resource efficiency
Mitigation, through reducing greenhouse gas emissions, will primarily be addressed through
greater resource efficiency including:
• Improving energy efficiency performance of new and existing buildings and influencing
behaviour of occupants
• Reducing the need to travel and ensuring good accessibility to public and other
sustainable modes of transport
• Promoting land use that acts as carbon sinks
• Encouraging development and use of renewable energy (energy sector)
• Reducing the amount of biodegradable waste landfilled
5. Energy sector
This sector is probably one of the most important ones we have to target. All energy
originates from the sun (e.g. Wind, Solar, Oil, Gas etc) it is how we harvest that energy which
could be crucial. It is estimated that solar cells if efficient could supply all our energy
requirements.
0.7
18 – 19.8
stunky