1. Biosphere - This is where all living things on Earth live. Humans live in a
biosphere
2. Biomes - A large naturally occurring community of flora and fauna occupying a major habitat. 3. Ecosystem - A biological community of interacting organisms and their physical environment. 4. Community - All the organisms living in a particular area or place: "local communities". 5. Populations - A particular section, group, or type of people or animals living in an area or country. 6. Organism' 7. Habitat 8. Niche - rule of organisms in an area or within the environment.
The ecosystem is a core concept in Biology and Ecology, serving as the level of biological organization in which organisms
interact simultaneously with each other and with their environment. As such,
ecosystems are a level above that of the ecological community (organisms of
different species interacting with each other) but are at a level below, or
equal to, biomes and the biosphere. Essentially, biomes are regional ecosystems, and the biosphere is the
largest of all possible ecosystems.
Ecosystems include living organisms, the dead organic matter produced by
them, the abiotic environment within which the organisms live and exchange
elements (soils, water, atmosphere), and the interactions between these components. Ecosystems embody the
concept that living organisms continually interact with each other and with the
environment to produce complex systems with emergent properties, such that
"the whole is greater than the sum of its parts" and "everything
is connected".
The spatial boundaries, component organisms and the matter and energy content and flux within
ecosystems may be defined and measured. However, unlike organisms or energy,
ecosystems are inherently conceptual, in that different observers may
legitimately define their boundaries and components differently. For example, a
single patch of trees together with the soil, organisms and atmosphere
interacting with them may define a forest ecosystem, yet the entirety of all organisms, their environment, and
their interactions across an entire forested region in the Amazon might also be defined as a single forest ecosystem. Some have even
called the interacting system of organisms that live within the guts of most
animals as an ecosystem, despite their residence within a single organism,
which violates the levels of organization definition of ecosystems. Moreover,
interactions between ecosystem components are as much a part of the definition
of ecosystems as their constituent organisms, matter and energy. Despite the
apparent contradictions that result from the flexibility of the ecosystem
concept, it is just this flexibility that has made it such a useful and
enduring concept.
Ecosystems might be observed in a lot of ways, so there isn’t a set of
components which make up an ecosystem. However, all ecosystems have to include
both abiotic and biotic components, the interactions, and a known source of
energy. The simplest but least representative of ecosystems therefore contains
just one living plant – the biotic component, in a small terrarium with light
exposure to which water source with essential nutrients for the plant’s growth
has been added – the abiotic environment. The other extreme is the biosphere,
which has all of Earth's organisms and the interactions between them and
Earth’s systems – the abiotic environment. And of course, the majority of
ecosystems fall in between the extremes of complexity.
At a core functional level, ecosystems normally contain primary producers able to harvest energy from sunlight by photosynthesis and to use the energy to turn carbon dioxide with other inorganic chemicals in the organic building blocks of life. The consumers feed upon this captured energy, while decomposers not only feed on the energy, but also break up the organic matter into the inorganic constituents, for them to be used again by the producers. Those interactions among the producers and organisms which consume and decompose are called trophic interactions, composed of trophic levels in the energy pyramid, and the most energy and mass are in the primary producers, at the base, while the higher levels of the pyramid, beginning with the primary consumers that feed on primary producers, the secondary consumers which feed on these, and so forth. Trophic interactions are described in a more detailed form as the food chain, which organizes the specific organisms by the trophic distance from the primary producers, and with food webs, which map the feeding interactions between all the organisms in the ecosystem. Together, the processes of matter cycling and energy transfer are essential in finding out ecosystem function and structure and defining the kinds of interactions between the environment and its organisms. It should also be noted most ecosystems have a wide array of species, and the diversity ought to be considered part and parcel of the ecosystem structure.
Producers: convert light energy into chemical energy, produce organic
compounds from inorganic compounds.
Primary consumers: producers feed Secondary producers: to feed on, primary (omnivores, saprophytes, carnivores etc..)
Decomposers: feed on dead matter and debris. Returns the ecosystem all
organic matter extracted from soil (fungi and bacteria). They are vital to the ecosystem
Biomes/ˈbaɪoʊmz/ are climatically and geographically defined as contiguous areas with similar climatic conditions on the Earth, such as communities of plants, animals, and soil organisms,[1] and are often referred to as ecosystems. Some parts of the earth have more or less the same kind of abiotic and biotic factors spread over a
large area, creating a typical ecosystem over that area. Such major ecosystems
are termed as biomes. Biomes are defined by factors such as plant structures
(such as trees, shrubs, and grasses), leaf
types (such as broadleaf and
needleleaf), plant spacing (forest, woodland, savanna), and
climate. Unlike ecozones, biomes
are not defined by genetic, taxonomic, or historical similarities. Biomes are
often identified with particular patterns of ecological
succession and climax vegetation
(quasiequilibrium state of the local ecosystem). An ecosystem has many biotopes and a
biome is a major habitat type. A
major habitat type, however, is a compromise, as it has an intrinsic inhomogeneity. Some examples of habitats are ponds, trees, streams, creeks, under
rocks and burrows in the sand or soil.
The biodiversity
characteristic of each extinction, especially the diversity of fauna and
subdominant plant forms, is a function of abiotic factors and the biomass productivity of the dominant vegetation. In terrestrial biomes, species diversity tends to correlate positively
with net primary productivity, moisture availability, and temperature.[2]
Ecoregions are
grouped into both biomes and ecozones.
A fundamental classification of biomes are:
Biomes are often known in English by local names. For example, a temperate grassland or shrubland biome is known commonly as steppe in central Asia, prairie in North America, and pampas in South America.
Tropical grasslands are known as savanna in Australia, whereas in southern Africa they are known as certain
kinds of veld (from Afrikaans).
Sometimes an entire biome may be targeted for protection, especially
under an individual nation's biodiversity action plan.
Climate is a major factor determining the distribution of terrestrial
biomes. Among the
important climatic factors are:
The most widely used systems of classifying biomes correspond to latitude (or temperature zoning) and humidity. Biodiversity generally increases away from the poles towards the equator and increases with humidity.
The distribution of vegetation types as a function of mean annual
temperature and precipitation.
In this scheme, climates are classified based on the biological effects
of temperature and rainfall on vegetation under the assumption that these two abiotic factors are the largest determinants of the type of vegetation found in
an area. Holdridge uses the four axes to define 30 so-called "humidity
provinces", which are clearly visible in the Holdridge diagram. While his
scheme largely ignores soil and sun exposure, Holdridge did acknowledge that
these, too, were important factors in biome determination.
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Naila Davila: CI- 23391378 esc 71
Diana Yanez : CI- 22656844 esc 84
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