APES mini quiz
Calculate the amount of energy available to a tertiary consumer in the following ecosystem. 100,000. J of energy produced by plants in the ecosystem (after respiration)
100 J of energy
2nd Law of Thermodynamics
Each time energy is transferred, some of its heat is lost
Explain why a relatively large forest can only support a small number of wolves.
In a large forest, the prey population is limited by the availability of food resources. This causes the number of wolves that a forest can support to decrease because of the available resources.
Ecological Efficiency
The portion of incoming sunlight that is captured by plants and converted into biomass (Net Primary Productivity)
Respiration loss
plants use up some of their energy they generate by photosynthesis by doing cell respiration
Primary Productivity basics
rate that solar energy is converted into organic compounds
Gross Primary Productivity
the total amount of sun energy (light) that plants capture and convert to energy (glucose) through photosynthesis
Calculating Biomass & Energy
Move the decimal point one spot to the left (divide by 10)
Equation
NPP = GPP - RL
Describe the process of net primary productivity
Net primary productivity is Gross Primary Productivity minus the respiration lost.
10% rule biomass
Since energy is needed for growth and only 10% of energy is transferred from one level to the next, only 10% of the biomass can be grown.
Net Primary Productivity
The amount of energy leftover for consumers after plants have used some for respiration
Describe the relationship between primary productivity and biodiversity
The greater the biodiversity, the greater the Primary Productivity and stability of the ecosystem.
Basic trends
The higher the PP in a area, the higher the plant growth rate (more food and shelter available for animals, which means higher biodiversity)