Categories: All - ecosystem - species - impact - climate

by MAANASI YASOTHARAN 4 years ago

236

What does it mean that an Ecosystem is Sustainable?

A sustainable ecosystem maintains its balance through a network of interactions among producers, primary consumers, and secondary consumers. The food web plays a crucial role in this balance, where changes in the population of one species can ripple through the ecosystem, affecting other species and plant life.

What does
it mean that
an
Ecosystem is
Sustainable?

What does it mean that an Ecosystem is Sustainable?

What humans can do

We can find ways to prevent damage to the ecosystem. And keep it sustainable. These are a few.
Don't travel as much. Flights emit CO2.
Recycle things or throw things into garbage instead of lazily dropping them outside. Which is called littering.
Unplug devices when not using them. To reduce using electricity.
Reduce Reuse Recycle

Earth 4 Spheres

The biosphere receives gases, heat, and sunlight (energy) from the atmosphere. It receives water from the hydrosphere and a living medium from the geosphere.
No sphere can work on its own.
Biosphere
All life on Earth.
Atmosphere
All the gases surrounding Earth.
Lithosphere
All of solid Earth.
Hydrosphere
All water under, on and over Earth's surface.

Photosynthesis

1. Plant draws up water through its roots. 2. The leaves take CO2 from the air. 3. The leaves trap energy from sunlight. 4. Plant uses energy of the sunlight to turn H2O & CO2 into sugars and O2. 5. Plant releases oxygen into the air. 6. Plant uses sugars for growth.
It is the process of which plants produce chemical energy from light energy to fuel them. Since they don't consume another organism for survival.

Producer Consumer

The reason we need Producers: Plants use photosynthesis. So if they die, Then those consumers who only eat plants and/or animals will eventually all die. Humans on top of the food chain will then die. There will be no chance on survival without producers/plants.
Consumer: Organism that consumes food
Consumers are animals. Animals don't make their own food.

Examples: -Weasel -Hawk -Red Squirrel

Producer: Organism that produces its own food
Producers are plants. Plants don't consume other organisms

Examples: -Grass -Trees -Fruits -Algae

Biome

Subtopic
Unstable Ecosystems:
Abiotic: Arctic ecosystem is cold. If the temperature becomes warmer then global warming has occurred. Arctic Shouldn't be warm. The organisms living there will begin to lose their population.
Biotic: Humans may kill animals with a higher population thinking an ecosystem isn't balanced. They don't know that with time the population of the organism will decrease.
A biome is a geographical region defined by climate. It has specific Biotic and Abiotic Features.
Example: Boreal Forest

Abiotic Features: -Warmer than tundra -No permafrost -Changeable weather -Soil contains some water and is acidic precipitation -40 cm/yr or more

Biotic Features: -Coniferous trees -Seed eating birds -Squirrels -Voles -Snow shoe hares -Black bears -Pine martens -Grey wolves

Abiotic: Non Living Features
Biotic: Living features

Food Web

Say the population of Hares decrease.
The organisms who eat the Hare (Lynx, Goshawk, Great Horned Owl) will eventually have their population decrease.

Then, more of those organisms will eat the Red Squirrel. So the Red Squirrel's population will decrease.

This means, the plants the Red Squirrel eats, such as Pine Trees, will begin to increase.

Then the Primary Consumers' populations will eventually rise again.

All of this makes a balanced Ecosystem. In which humans have disrupted.

Producers: -Wild Grasses -Aspen Tree -Blueberry Bush -Pine Tree
Primary Consumers: -Snowshoe Hare -Red Squirrel

Tertiary/Secondary Consumers: -Weasel -Lynx -Goshawk -Great Horned Owl

Cellular Respiration

When cells convert sugars into energy.

Ecosystem

Ecosystem: Where plants and animals work together to form a bubble of life. Ecosystems have both biotic (living) and abiotic (non living) things.
Undisturbed Ecosystem: Undisturbed if it hasn't been altered by humans. Such as trees being cut down. Or if none of those minor disturbances occur.
Disturbed Ecosystem: Minor disturbances include floods, small wildland fires and disease outbreaks through plants and animals. These things can change the populations of the ecosystem.

Importance of Biodiversity

Biodiversity gives functional ecosystems. Ecosystems give oxygen, clean air, water pollination of plants. The more variety of organisms, the less chance of ecological catastrophe or extinction.
Bonus: Variety of life on Earth can give us many fun things to do. Recreational activities may rely on unique biodiversity. Examples: Birdwatching, Fishing, Camping.
Biodiversity: Word used to describe enormous variety of life in Earth. The word can be used more specifically to describe life in one ecosystem.

Human Activity

Humans have greatly impacted the environment.
Examples of human impact:

-Cut down trees -Dumping Mercury in the river -Burning Fossil Fuels -Non Native species

What these things have caused:

Humans don't always cause Non Native Species, but they are responsible for a lot of them. Without thinking, bring species into a new ecosystem. That species becomes so invasive, that it eventually transfers into this new ecosystem.

-Burning Fossil Fuels: Caused climate change. Burning fossil fuels such as coal and oil has increased the concentration of atmospheric carbon dioxide.

-Mercury in the river: People rely on eating fish and/or drinking water from the river. They get mercury poisoning.

-Cutting down trees: Animals have lost their habitat.

Climate Change

Climate Change is due to many HUman Activities. Which particularly affect the carbon cycle.
Ways it affects the carbon cycle: All of this increases the amount of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.

Transportation. Vehicles emit CO2.

Industrialized agriculture: Use of artificial pesticides and artificial fertilizers, can leach into groundwater. It is toxic to people and animals.

Clear cutting forests.