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VIDEO
CONNECTION: 
Workshop
6
PYRAMID of NUMBERS
We can represent the numbers of producers and consumers co-existing in
an ecosystem by constructing a pyramid of numbers. By counting the numbers
of organisms in an ecosystem, it is generally found that there is a progressive
drop in numbers from producers, to primary and secondary consumers. This
decrease in numbers occurs because of the energy losses when one organism
feeds on another.

PYRAMID of BIOMASS
It is possible to estimate the mass of all the organisms living in a
given area or ecosystem. This estimation is known as the biomass. If the
mass of the producers and each type of consumer is recorded, a pyramid
can be constructed showing that the biomass of the producers is generally
far greater than that of the consumers.
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PYRAMID of ENERGY
Energy flows through ecosystems from producers to the various levels
of consumers. Each time an organism eats another, not all the energy is
transferred. Only about 10% of the energy of a producer is transferred
to the consumer that eats it. Therefore, there is a progressive loss of
energy at each level of a food chain. We can represent the amount of energy
at each level as a part of a pyramid.

RESOURCES
The Flow of Energy: Higher Trophic Levels
http://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange1/current/lectures/kling/highertrophic/trophic2.html
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DECOMPOSITION
This is the process whereby the remains of dead animals and plants or
their excreta, are broken down to their smallest components by organisms
known as decomposers. Decomposers include fungi and bacteria. When an
organism excretes or it dies, its matter is acted on by larger organisms,
such as worms, insect larvae and larger fungi. These organisms digest
the matter into smaller pieces. The organisms which complete the process
of decomposition are the microbes (microscopic bacteria and fungi). They
are too small to 'eat' solid food, so they release chemicals onto the
food and form a liquid nutrient soup. They absorb nutrients from this
soup, but some nutrients seep into the soil to be used by plants. Decomposers
therefore recycle matter in ecosystems. Compost heaps make use of the
process of decomposition. The nutrients released by the decomposers in
the compost heap are placed on and in the soil surrounding plants.
RESOURCES
Making and Using Compost
Explanation of decomposition and compost
http://muextension.missouri.edu/xplor/agguides/hort/g06956.htm
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LAW of CONSERVATION of ENERGY
Energy exists in different forms and can be transformed from one form
into another. When these transformations occur, energy is not destroyed
and neither is energy made. Transformation of energy just exchanges one
form of energy for another.
In physics, the law of conservation of Energy says that in an isolated,
closed system, the amount of energy is constant. Energy can change forms
(such as from potential energy to kinetic energy), but the total amount
energy remains the constant.
This idea of energy transformation without the destruction or formation
of energy within a system is stated as a law in the field of science.
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ENERGY FLOW in ECOSYSTEMS
The organisms in any ecosystem are inter-related by their food requirements.
When a green plant uses light energy to make its food (sugar) it only
uses a small percentage minute amount of the energy in the Ssunlight ’s
available energy fallen on it. In this food-making process, light energy
is transformed into chemical energy. The plant uses the sugar it has made
to build new cells., Iit also uses the sugar as a source of energy to
drive the chemical reactions occurring in its cells. The transformations
that the energy in sugar undergoes always result in some energy transforming
into heat energy. Some of this heat energy escapes to the surroundings.
When a snail eats a plant, it cannot get the heat energy back that the
plant lost to its surroundings, so the snail never gets all of the the
plant’s original energy the plant absorbed from the sunlight.. At all
levels of the food chain, the animal doing the eating never gets all of
the energy that its food source had (because heat energy will always have
been lost to the surroundings and the animal rarely eats every part of
its food source anyway).
So energy has to be constantly supplied to an ecosystem. because you
can’t recycle energy in a food chain. Animals and plants cannot don’t
have a way of reclaiming the heat energy lost to the surroundings. atmosphere.
RESOURCES
Environmental Biology Sequence Ecosystems
http://www.marietta.edu/~biol/102/ecosystem.html
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AEROBIC RESPIRATION
This is the process whereby living things release the chemical energy
in sugar for their use. The process occurs inside the cells of living
things and requires oxygen (hence it is called aerobic) that has been
gained by the organism from its surroundings. All of the energy that was
stored in the sugar when it was made during photosynthesis is released
during aerobic respiration. Some of the released energy is radiated from
the organism as heat. The remainder of the energy is used to make a new
chemical called ADENOSINE TRIPHOSPHATE (ATP), which can be broken down
easily inside of cells to release the energy. An analogy is to think of
sugar as a bank account of stored energy that has to be turned into cash.
The ATP is the cash and is the immediately available energy for the cell’s
use.
Not only is energy released from sugar during aerobic respiration, but
sugar is also broken down into its constituents, carbon dioxide and water.

Aerobic respiration and photosynthesis can therefore be seen to be complementary
processes. Photosynthesis using the energy of light, joins the carbon
dioxide made during respiration to hydrogen from water in order to make
sugar and oxygen. The energy in sugar is released during aerobic respiration
using the oxygen made as a bi-product of photosynthesis.

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BALANCE of NATURE
Ecosystems are in a state of continuous change. There may be increases
in the number of carnivores in a particular season, or decreases in the
number of producers, but over a period of time the ecosystem adjusts to
reset the relationship between the numbers of the various organisms. The
balance of nature is rather like a see-saw going up on one side and down
on the other, eventually returning to a middle, balanced position. Humans
can upset this balance (e.g. when they pollute an ecosystem so that a
particular group of susceptible organisms die) with such drastic effects
that the ecosystem cannot recover.
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