Chapter 3
Chapter 3
17TH
CHAPTER 3
Ecosystems: What Are They
and How Do They Work?
Fig. 3-1a, p. 54
Hydrosphere
Geosphere
Biosphere
Fig. 3-2, p. 56
Atmosphere
Biosphere
(living organisms)
Soil
Rock
Crust
Mantle
Geosphere
(crust, mantle, core)
Mantle
Core
Atmosphere (air)
Hydrosphere (water)
Fig. 3-2, p. 56
Fig. 3-3a, p. 56
Fig. 3-4, p. 57
Solar
radiation
Radiated by
atmosphere
as heat
Reflected by
atmosphere
UV radiation
Most UV absorbed
by ozone
Troposphere
Heat added to
troposphere
Heat radiated
by the earth
Greenhouse effect
Absorbed
by the earth
Fig. 3-4, p. 57
Fig. 3-5, p. 58
Biosphere
Ecosystem
Community
Population
Organism
Cell
Molecule
Atom
Biosphere
Ecosystem
Community
Population
Organism
Cell
Molecule
Atom
Water
Hydrogen
Oxygen
Stepped Art
Fig. 3-5, p. 58
Water
Air
Nutrients
Rocks
Heat
Solar energy
Biotic
Living and once living
Ecosystem
Fig. 3-6, p. 59
Oxygen (O2)
Precipitaton
Producer
Secondary
consumer (fox)
Primary consumer
(rabbit)
Producers
Water
Decomposers
Chemosynthesis
Consumers, heterotrophs
Producers
Fig. 3-7a, p. 59
Consumers
Fig. 3-8a, p. 60
Detritivores
Feed on dead bodies of other organisms
Earthworms
Vultures
Decomposer
Fig. 3-9a, p. 61
Fig. 3-10, p. 61
Decomposers
Detritus feeders
Bark beetle
Long-horned engraving
beetle holes
Carpenter Termite
ant galleries
and
carpenter
ant work
Dry rot
fungus
Wood reduced
to powder Fungi
Time progression
Ecosystem Components
Fig. 3-11, p. 62
Heat
Chemical nutrients
(carbon dioxide,
oxygen, nitrogen,
minerals)
Heat
Heat
Producers (plants)
Decomposers
(bacteria, fungi)
Heat
Solar
energy
Consumers (plant
eaters, meat eaters)
Heat
Fig. 3-11, p. 62
Food web
Network of interconnected food chains
A Food Chain
Fig. 3-12, p. 63
First Trophic
Level
Second
Trophic
Level
Third Trophic
Level
Producers (plants)
Primary consumers
(herbivores)
Secondary
consumers
(carnivores)
Heat
Heat
Heat
Fourth Trophic
Level
Tertiary consumers
(top carnivores)
Heat
Solar
energy
Heat
Heat
Heat
Decomposers and
detritus feeders
Fig. 3-12, p. 63
A Food Web
Fig. 3-13, p. 64
Fig. 3-13, p. 64
Fig. 3-14, p. 65
Heat
Heat
Secondary
consumers (perch)
100
Heat
Primary consumers
(zooplankton)
Decomposers
Heat
1,000
Heat
10,000
Producers
(phytoplankton)
Fig. 3-14, p. 65
Tertiary
consumers
(human)
10
Secondary
consumers
(perch)
100
Primary
consumers
(zooplankton)
Heat
Heat
Heat
Decomposers
Heat
1,000
Heat
10,000
Producers
(phytoplankton)
Stepped Art
Fig. 3-14, p. 65
Fig. 3-15, p. 66
Terrestrial Ecosystems
Swamps and marshes
Tropical rain forest
Temperate forest
Northern coniferous forest (taiga)
Savanna
Agricultural land
Woodland and shrubland
Temperate grassland
Tundra (arctic and alpine)
Desert scrub
Extreme desert
Aquatic Ecosystems
Estuaries
Lakes and streams
Continental shelf
Open ocean
Fig. 3-15, p. 66
Hydrologic
Carbon
Nitrogen
Phosphorus
Sulfur
Fig. 3-16, p. 67
Condensation
Condensation
Ice and
snow
Transpiration
from plants
Precipitatio
n to land
Evaporation of
surface water
Evaporation
from ocean
Runoff
Lakes and
reservoirs
Precipitatio
n to ocean
Runoff
Infiltration and
percolation into
aquifer
Runoff
Groundwater
in aquifers
Overpumping
of aquifers
Water pollution
Runoff
Ocean
Natural process
Natural reservoir
Human impacts
Natural pathway
Pathway affected by human activities
Fig. 3-16, p. 67
Fig. 3-17, p. 68
Fig. 3-18, p. 69
Supplement 4, Fig 6
Supplement 4, Fig 3
Fig. 3-19, p. 70
Carbon dioxide in
atmosphere
Respiration
Photosynthesis
Animals
(consumers)
Diffusion
Burning
fossil fuels
Forest fires
Plants
(producers)
Deforestation
Transportation
Respiration
Carbon in
plants
(producers)
Carbon dioxide
dissolved in ocean
Carbon in
animals
(consumers)
Decomposition
Carbon in limestone
or dolomite
sediments
Carbon in
fossil fuels
Compaction
Process
Reservoir
Pathway affected by humans
Natural pathway
Fig. 3-19, p. 70
Supplement 9, Fig 14
Nitrification
Soil bacteria change ammonia and ammonium ions to
nitrate ions (NO3-)
Denitrification
Nitrate ions back to nitrogen gas
Fig. 3-20, p. 71
Process
Nitrogen in
atmosphere
Reservoir
Pathway affected by humans
Denitrification by bacteria
Nitrification by
bacteria
Natural pathway
Nitrogen oxides
from burning fuel
and using
inorganic
fertilizers
Nitrogen in
animals
(consumers)
Electrical storms
Volcanic
activity
Nitrogen
in plants
(producers)
Nitrates from
fertilizer
runoff and
decomposition
Decomposition
Uptake by plants
Nitrate in soil
Nitrogen loss
to deep ocean
sediments
Nitrogen
in ocean
sediments
Bacteria
Ammonia in soil
Fig. 3-20, p. 71
Supplement 9, Fig 16
Impacts
Fig. 3-21, p. 73
Process
Reservoir
Pathway affected by humans
Natural pathway
Phosphates
in sewage
Phosphates in
mining waste
Phosphates
in fertilizer
Runoff
Runoff
Sea
birds
Runoff
Erosion
Animals
(consumers)
Phosphate
dissolved
in water
Plants
(producers)
Plate
tectonics
Phosphate in
rock (fossil
bones,
guano)
Phosphate in
shallow ocean
sediments
Ocean food
webs
Phosphate
in deep
ocean
sediments
Bacteria
Fig. 3-21, p. 73
Fig. 3-22, p. 74
Sulfur dioxide
in atmosphere
Smelting
Burning Refining
coal
fossil fuels
Sulfur in
animals
(consumers)
Dimethyl
sulfide a
bacteria
byproduct
Sulfur in
plants
(producers)
Mining and
extraction
Sulfur
in ocean
sediments
Process
Reservoir
Pathway affected by
humans
Natural pathway
Sulfuric acid
and Sulfate
deposited
as acid rain
Uptake
by plants
Decay
Decay
Sulfur
in soil, rock
and fossil fuels
Fig. 3-22, p. 74
Jeddah