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Unit 1Lesson 5 2 min read

Environmental Science: Ecosystems and Biomes

5/18

Learning Objectives

Define an ecosystem and distinguish between biotic and abiotic factors.
Describe the flow of energy through an ecosystem using the concepts of producers, consumers, and decomposers.
Define a biome and identify several major terrestrial biomes based on their climate and characteristic vegetation.

The Web of Life: Ecosystems

An ecosystem is a biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment.

Biotic Factors: The living or once-living components of an ecosystem. Examples: plants, animals, fungi, bacteria.
Abiotic Factors: The non-living chemical and physical parts of the environment that affect living organisms. Examples: sunlight, temperature, soil composition, water, pH.

Energy Flow in Ecosystems

Energy flows through an ecosystem in one direction.

1.Producers (or Autotrophs): Organisms that produce their own food, usually through photosynthesis. They form the base of the food web. Examples: plants, algae.
2.Consumers (or Heterotrophs): Organisms that obtain energy by feeding on other organisms.
Primary Consumers (Herbivores): Eat producers (e.g., rabbits).
Secondary Consumers (Carnivores/Omnivores): Eat primary consumers (e.g., foxes).
Tertiary Consumers: Eat secondary consumers (e.g., eagles).
3.Decomposers: Organisms that break down dead organic matter, returning essential nutrients to the soil. Examples: bacteria, fungi.

Only about 10% of the energy from one trophic level is transferred to the next. The rest is lost as heat.

Global Life Zones: Biomes

A biome is a large community of vegetation and wildlife adapted to a specific climate. The major terrestrial biomes are classified based on their dominant vegetation, which is determined by temperature and precipitation.

Major Terrestrial Biomes:

Tropical Rainforest: Found near the equator. Characterized by high temperatures, high rainfall, and extremely high biodiversity.
Desert: Characterized by very low rainfall (less than 25 cm per year). Can be hot or cold. Organisms have adaptations to conserve water.
Grassland (Savanna/Prairie): Dominated by grasses rather than large shrubs or trees. Characterized by seasonal rainfall, with wet and dry seasons.
Temperate Deciduous Forest: Has four distinct seasons. Characterized by trees that lose their leaves in the fall (e.g., oak, maple).
Taiga (Boreal Forest): The largest terrestrial biome. Characterized by long, cold winters and coniferous (cone-bearing) trees like pine and spruce.
Tundra: Characterized by extremely cold temperatures, a short growing season, and a layer of permanently frozen soil called permafrost. Vegetation consists of low-growing shrubs, mosses, and lichens.

Key Terms

Ecosystem
A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment.
Biome
A large naturally occurring community of flora and fauna occupying a major habitat, e.g., forest or tundra.
Biotic Factor
A living component of an ecosystem.
Abiotic Factor
A non-living condition or thing, as climate or habitat, that influences or affects an ecosystem and the organisms in it.
Trophic Level
Each of several hierarchical levels in an ecosystem, comprising organisms that share the same function in the food chain and the same nutritional relationship to the primary sources of energy.

Check Your Understanding

1

What is the difference between biotic and abiotic factors in an ecosystem?

2

If a producer level in an ecosystem contains 10,000 Joules of energy, approximately how much energy would be available to a secondary consumer?

3

Which terrestrial biome is characterized by coniferous trees, long, cold winters, and is the largest by area?