2.3 Flows of energy and matter

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115 Terms

1
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what are the names of the packets in which energy leaves the sun

photons

2
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what is the energy leaving the sun per second per square metre

63 million joules per second per square meter

3
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what is the solar energy reaching the top layer of the atmosphere of the earth

1,400 J s^-1 m^-2 or 1,400 watts per second

4
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what is the only way that life can turn solar energy into food

through photosynthesis by green plants

5
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how much energy that hits a leaf is absorbed

40%

6
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how much solar energy is reflected by a leaf

about 5%

7
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how much solar energy passes straight through a leaf

about 5%

8
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what colour lights do plants use in photosynthesis

red and blue wavelengths

9
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of the 40% of solar energy absorbed by a leaf, how much can be used

about 9%

10
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what is the GPP of a plant

the 9% of energy that can be used by the leaf

11
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how much of the GPP of a plant is needed in respiration

just under half

12
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how much of the energy hitting the leaf becomes new plant material

5.5%

13
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how much of the solar radiation hitting the earth do plants capture

0.06% of it

14
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what is the efficiency of the conversion of energy to food in terrestrial systems

2-3%

15
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what is the efficiency of conversion of energy to food in aquatic systems

about 1%

16
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what does net productivity result from

the fact that all organisms have to respire to stay alive so some of this energy is used up in staying alive instead of being used to grow

17
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why do we usually talk about productivity and not production in ecology

so we know the area and time period to which we refer

18
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how do autotrophs produce energy

light energy is converted into chemical energy by photosynthesis using chlorophyll within the cells of plants

19
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what are the first organisms in the the production chain

plants and algae

20
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how can you theoretically calculate a plants energy uptake

by measuring the amount of sugar produced

21
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why is sugar production difficult to measure

much of it is used up by plants almost as soon as it is produced

22
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what is an ecosystems NPP

the rate at which plants accumulate dry mass

23
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what is NPP usually measured in

g/m^2

24
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what are the two main uses for glucose produced in photosynthesis

to provide for growth, maintenance and reproduction with energy being lost as heat, and deposited in cells as new material and represents stored dried mass

25
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what does NPP represent

the difference between the rate at which plants photosynthesize and the rate at which they respire

26
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what is the accumulation of dry mass usually termed

biomass

27
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what is the theoretical maximum amount of energy that is available to all the animals

the total amount of plant material

28
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what can happen to plant material in food chains

lost from food chains as it dies and decays, eaten by herbivores which means it is removed from primary productivity

29
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what are the two ways the amount of biomass produced varies

spatially, temporally

30
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biomass produced varies spatially because

some biomes have much higher NPP rates than others

31
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biomass produced varies temporally because

many plants have seasonal patterns of productivity linked to changing availability of basic resources

32
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what is assimilated food energy

the food that crosses the gut wall of animals and is absorbed and used to power life processes

33
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how is the assimilated food energy used

in cellular respiration, removed as nitrogenous waste, in most animals urine, the rest is stored in the dry mass of new body tissue

34
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what happens to the ingested material that passes straight through the herbivore

it is released as faeces and provides the animal with no energy

35
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net productivity of herbivores =

energy in food digested - the energy lost in egestion - energy used in respiration

36
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how much of the energy in their diets do carnivores assimilate

80%

37
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how much of their diet do carnivores egest

less than 20%

38
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how is the higher energy intake of carnivores offset

by increased respiration during hunting

39
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how much of the energy in their diet do herbivores assimilate

about 40%

40
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how much of the energy in their diet do herbivores egest

60%

41
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which is more efficient, transfers or transformations

transfers

42
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describe the flow of energy through an ecosystem

energy flows through an ecosystem in one direction, starting as solar radiation and leaving as heat energy

43
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what are biogeochemical cycles

Pathways by which a chemical substance moves through both biotic & abiotic compartments of earth

44
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how many elements cycle through the ecosystem

about 40

45
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what phases do all biogeochemical cycles have

organic and inorganic phases

46
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which phase of biogeochemical cycles determines how much is available to living organisms

the efficiency of movement through the organic phase

47
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where does the major reservoir for all the main elements tend to be

outside the food chain as inorganic molecules in rock and soils

48
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which phase of biogeochemical cycles is slower

the inorganic phase

49
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what are the major biogeochemical cycles

carbon, water, nitrogen, sulphur, phosphorous

50
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what are some organic carbon sinks

organisms in the biosphere, fossilized life forms

51
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what are some inorganic carbon sinks

sedimentary rocks, the oceans, soil, atmosphere

52
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where does the carbon cycle occur

in the ecosphere

53
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how is carbon fixed

by photosynthesis

54
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how is carbon released back into the atmosphere

through respiration, through the combustion of fossil fuels and biomass, when dead organisms decompose, when plants are harvested for food, firewood or processing

55
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how has humanity disrupted the balance of the carbon cycle

through increased combustion, land use changes and deforestation

56
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what are our current global carbon emissions from fossil fuels

5.5 GtC

57
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how much of our global fossil fuel emissions is from burning natural gas

20%

58
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how much of our global fossil fuel emissions is from burning coal

40%

59
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how much of our global fossil fuel emissions is from burning oil

40%

60
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how many GtC enter the atmosphere each year due to deforestation

1.6 GtC

61
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how much of the carbon that enters the atmosphere stays in the atmosphere

about 2.4-3.2 GtC

62
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how many GtC is fixed by new growth in forests per year

0.5 GtC

63
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how many GtC are stored in the atmosphere

750

64
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how many GtC are stored in biomass

650

65
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how many GtC are stored in soils

1,500

66
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how many GtC are stored in oceans

1,720

67
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how many GtC have we added to the atmosphere since the pre-industrial period

200 GtC

68
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is atmospheric nitrogen available to plants and animals

no

69
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what are some nitrogen stores

organisms, soil, fossil fuels, the atmosphere, in water

70
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what are the flows in the nitrogen cycle

nitrogen fixation, nitrification, denitrification, feeding (absorption, assimilation, consumption), excretion, death and decomposition

71
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what form must nitrogen be in for plants to take it up

ammonium ions or nitrates

72
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what form to animals obtain nitrogen from plants

in the form of amino acids and nucleotides

73
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what are the three main stages of the nitrogen cycle

nitrogen fixation, nitrification, denitrification

74
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what is nitrogen fixation

when atmospheric nitrogen is made available to plants through the fixation of atmospheric nitrogen

75
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what are the five ways nitrogen can be fixed

bacteria in soil, bacteria in roots, cyanobacteria, lightning, the haber process

76
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give an example of a nitrogen fixing bacteria that lives in the soil

azotobacter

77
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give an example of a nitrogen fixing bacteria that lives symbiotically in the root nodules of plants

rhizobium

78
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what is the cause of high productivity of rice fields

cyanobacteria

79
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how does lighting fix bacteria

by causing the oxidation of nitrogen gas to nitrate which can be washed into the soil

80
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what are nitrifying bacteria

those that can convert ammonium to nitrates

81
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give an example of a nitrifying bacteria

nitrosomonas

82
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give an example of a bacteria that converts nitrites to nitrates

nitrobacter

83
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what do denitrifying bacteria do

convert nitrate and nitrite ions to nitrogen gas in waterlogged and anaerobic conditions

84
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give an example of a denitrifying bacteria

pseudomonas denitrificans

85
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what are some important organisms in decomposition

insects, worms, fungi, bacteria

86
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what do decomposers do

break down proteins, producing different ions: ammonium, nitrite, nitrate

87
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what do organisms do once they have taken in nitrogen

assimilate it into more complex molecules

88
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what does protein synthesis do

turns inorganic nitrogen compounds into more complex amino acids and then these join to form proteins

89
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how do people remove from the nitrogen cycle

when people remove animals and plants for food, and in human sewage

90
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how can humans add to the nitrogen cycle

by using the haber process, by planting crops with root nodules containing nitrogen fixing bacteria

91
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what is one way eutrophication may occur

excessive flow of rainwater through a porous soil will wash away the nitrates into rivers, which can cause eutrophicationi

92
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what do energy flow diagrams allow

easy comparison of various organisms

93
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what do energy flow diagrams show

the energy entering and leaving each trophic level and the loss of energy through respiration and transfer of material as energy to the decomposers

94
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what are the quantities we need to know to establish assimilation and productivity efficiencies

what proportion of the NPP from one trophic level is assimilated by the next, how much of this assimilated material is turned into the tissues of the organism and how much is respired

95
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what is trophic efficiency

the efficiency of transfer from one trophic level to the next

96
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what is the average trophic efficiency

10%

97
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what is the range of trophic efficiencies

5-20%

98
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a community of small mammals in a grassland may only have a trophic efficiency of 0.1%, why might this be

they are warm blooded, have a high metabolic rate and have a large surface area compared to their volume, this means they lose a lot of heat to the environment

99
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what is the trophic efficiency of zooplankton

up to 20%

100
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cold blooded animals have ...... assimilation rates than warm blooded animals

slower