Environement and Ecosystem
Environement and Ecosystem
Environement and Ecosystem
Environement
and
Ecosystem
Key environmental problems
Basic causes and sustainable solutions
IPAT Equation
Ecosystem
Earth – life support system
Ecosystem components
Food Chain, Food Web
Energy flow in ecosystem
Ecological succession- stages involved,
Primary and secondary succession,
Hydrarch, mesarch, xerarch
Nutrient, water, carbon, nitrogen cycles
Effect of human activities on these cycles.
Multidisciplinary nature
• Local Issues
River pollution
Dams
Man-animal conflicts
Solid waste disposal
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Need for public awareness
• The goals of sustainable development cannot be achieved by any
government without the participatory role of public which is possible only
when they aware about ecological and environmental issues.
• Chinese proverb “If you plan for one year, plant rice, if you plan for 10
years, plant trees and if you plan for 100 years, educate people.”
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Indian Environmentalists
Rajender Singh
M.C. Metha
Water Conservation
Green advocate
“Waterman of India”
Ramon Magsaysay awardee
Ramon Magsaysay awardee
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Indian Environmentalists
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What is environment?
Air
Living organisms
Soil
water Humans
Materials
Air, water, land, living organisms and materials surrounding us and their interactions together
constitute environment
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Earth’s Life-Support System Has Four Major Components
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Ecology
Definition:
•Ecology is the study of interactions among organisms or group of organisms with
their environment.
• The environment consists of both biotic components (living organisms) and abiotic
•Habitat refers to the physical and chemical factors of the place where the
organisms live.
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Ecosystem
Definition:
The term ecosystem was first coined by A.G. Tansley 1935.
‘eco’ means environment and ‘system’ implies a complex
of co-ordinated units.
An ecosystem is a community of different species interacting
with one another and with their non-living environment
exchanging energy and matter.
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Levels of the organization of
matter in nature.
(producers) (Consumers)
(decomposers)
Proteins, micro and
Carbohydrates macro
1. Primary consumers elements
2. Secondary consumers
3. Tertiary consumers
4. Quaternary consumers 25
Biotic
• Producers – Green plants which can synthesize their food
themselves (Plants)
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• Consumers
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• Decomposer
– They derive their nutrition by breaking down the
complex organic molecules to simpler organic
compounds and finally into inorganic nutrients.
(bacteria and fungi)
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Abiotic Structure
• Physical factors:
– The sunlight, average temp, annual rainfall, wind,
soil type, water availability etc. are some of the important
physical features which have strong influence on the
ecosystem
• Chemical factors:
– Availability of major essential nutrients like carbon,
nitrogen, phosphorous, potassium, hydrogen, oxygen and
sulphur largely influence the functioning of the ecosystem
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Functions of an Ecosystem
In the ecosystem, biotic components and other materials like N, C, H2O circulated within and
outside of the system.
The energy is transferred from one trophic level to the other in the form of a chain called as
food chain.
Climatic changes
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Grazing food chain Detritus food chain
Eagle Fish
Snake Crab
Rabbit Algae
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FOOD WEB
Definition: The interlocking pattern of various food chains in an ecosystem is known as food
web.
In a food web, many food chains are interconnected, where different types of organisms are
connected at different tropic levels, so that there are a number of opportunities of eating and
being eaten at each tropic level.
Example: Insects, rates, deer’s, etc. may eat Grass; these may be eaten by carnivores (Snake,
tiger). Thus, there is an interlocking of various food chains called food webs.
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Natural Capital:
The main structural components of an ecosystem (energy, chemicals, and organisms).
Nutrient cycling and the flow of energy—first from the sun, then through organisms, and
finally into the environment as low-quality heat
Energy flow in the Ecosystem
Energy is needed for every biological activity.
In the biological world, the energy flows from sun to plants and then to all
heterotrophic organisms like micro-organisms, animals, and man i.e. from
producers to consumers. 1% of the total sunlight falling on the green plants is
utilized in photosynthesis.
This is sufficient to maintain all life on this earth. There is no 100% flow of
energy from producers to consumers. Some is always lost to environment.
Because of this, energy cannot be recycled in an ecosystem ‘it can only flow
one way’.
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The flow of energy follows the two laws of
thermodynamics
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I law of thermodynamics: The law states that energy can
neither be created nor be destroyed but it can be transformed from one
form to another. Similarly, solar energy utilized by green plants
(producers) in photosynthesis converted into biochemical energy of
plants and later into that of consumers
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II law of thermodynamics: The law states that energy
transformation involves degradation or dissipation of energy from a
concentrated to a dispersed form. We have seen dissipation of energy
occurs at every trophic level. There is loss of 90% energy, only 10% is
transferred from one trophic level to the other.
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Models of ecological energy flow
The elements and compounds that make up nutrients move continually through air,
water, soil, rock, and living organisms within ecosystems, as well as in the biosphere in
• Nutrients move in circular paths through biotic & abiotic components known as
biogeochemical cycle.
eg:- C,N,S,O,H,P.
• Nutrients move to foodchain & ultimately reach detritus compartment & causes
decomposition.
We clear vegetation from land for agriculture, mining, road building, and other activities,
and cover much of the land with buildings, concrete, and asphalt. This increases runoff,
reduces infiltration that would normally recharge groundwater supplies, accelerates
topsoil erosion, and increases the risk of flooding.
We increase flooding when we drain and fill wetlands for farming and urban
development. Wetlands provide the natural service of flood control, acting like sponges to
absorb and hold overflows of water from drenching rains or rapidly melting snow.
NITROGEN CYCLE
Cyclic movement of nitrogen in different chemical forms
from the environment to organisms and then back to the
environment.
• N2 is present in atm in large amount-78%
• N2 taken up by plants & used in metabolism for biosynthesis of amino acids proteins,
vitamins.
• After the death of plants & animals, the organic nitrogen in dead tissues is
decomposed by several groups of ammonifying & nitrifying bacteria which convert
nitrates into ammonia, nitrates & nitrites again used by plants.
• Phosphates moving with surface run-off reaches the oceans & are lost
into the deep sediments.
• But sea birds eat sea-fishes which are P rich and the droppings or excreta
of the birds return the P in land
Much of the earth’s sulfur is stored underground in rocks and minerals and in the form of
Hydrogen sulfide (H2S)—a colorless, highly poisonous gas - rotten-egg smell - released from
active volcanoes, from organic matter broken down by anaerobic decomposers in flooded
swamps, bogs, and tidal flats.
Sulfur dioxide (SO2) a colorless and suffocating gas, also comes from volcanoes.
Particles of sulfate salts enter the atmosphere from sea spray, dust storms, and forest fires.
Plant roots absorb sulfate ions and incorporate the sulfur as an essential component of many
proteins.
Sulfur Cycle
Ecological succession
Ecological succession
• Types:
Primary Succession
Secondary Succession
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Process of Succession
• Nudation : It is the development of a bare area without any life form.
• Reaction : The living organism grow use water and nutrients from the substratum
and modify the environment in such a way that it become unsuitable for the
existing species and favor some new species and leads to several seral
communities.
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Ecological successions starting on different types of areas are
named differently
Phytoplankton
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Xerosere
Mosses community
Climax - Forest
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