Grassland: Ecosystem in Australia
Transcription
Grassland: Ecosystem in Australia
Content 1 : Biome Description Grassland: Ecosystem in Australia What are grasslands? The distribution of Grassland Biome Grassland is mainly a vegetation domination, where it covers more than 40 percent of the Earth’s land surface. It is geographically widespread than any other group of plants and could be found in possibly every single continent except Antarctica. About 35 percent of the continent receives so little rain, it is effectively desert. Organisms such as birds, mice, and ground squirrels live on or below the ground feeding on the vegetation. It is also a place of changing colors, in winter, the grasslands are white; the grasslands turn green in spring; in the summer days, the plants wilt and turns into yellow or brown. Ultimately, the climate determines the growing season for plants, including grassland biomes. [1] In general, grasslands occupy the interior of continents, where rainfall is limited because of the far distance from ocean. They are also found in areas that are too dry for most trees to survive and also places where it is not as shaded. Crops and plants situated in shady areas will not be able to go through photosynthesis due to the limited source of energy available. Climatogram Grasslands are divided into two types on Earth: temperature grasslands and tropical savanna grassland. ! ! Temperature grasslands occupy regions with a temperature climate and is most found in North America, eastern Europe, Turkey, northern Iran, central Asia, and part of southern China. On the other hand, Savanna grassland are mainly found in Africa, south America, and Australia. The weather will always be warm Savanna grasslands, since occasionally the regions will cause precipitation, leading to more frequent rainfalls. Eventually, there will be abundance of grasses, which results in a biome of grassland. [1] This climatogram shows the precipitation and temperature rates for grassland regions in Australia. In general, the temperature is fairly warm throughout the entire year while precipitation is fairly high. abiotic factor influences on the structure of Grassland biome Australia used to be a land of rivers, lakes, and forests. However, its climate turned drier about 10 million years ago. Eventually the lakes disappeared as forests shrank because trees needed plentiful supply of water. However, grasses remained sustainable because it can manage with less source of water. Consequentially, the retreat of forest was accompanied by the expansion of grassland. [1] Content 2 : BioSphere of the ecosystem [2] Food web The relationship among plants and animals are shown in the diagram above, where the arrows illustrates the source linking to the sink for all matter and energy flows. The plants uses photosynthesis to make carbohydrates out of carbon dioxide and water. This food is later eaten by animals, and since plants produce it they are identified as producers. Herbivore then become primary consumers because they eat plant food directly. Carnivores feed on primary consumers such as Dingo so they are secondary consumers, which are also the top predators in this food web. In this scenario, the rabbit is considered as one of the keystone species because it is the largest influence in this food web that causes the existence of Dingo and Wedge-Tailed Eagle which are the secondary consumers. Dingo is the largest terrestrial predator in Australia, which serves as the apex species in this food web. Eventually, when organisms die, bacterias can help break down any organic matters in the ecosystem. [1] *90% loss per trophic level on average* Content 3: :Tropic Structure Pyramid of Numbers [4] Secondary consumers: Dingo and Wedge-Tailed Eagle 354,000 organisms/km^2 Primary consumers: goat, brown hare, rabbit, red kangaroo 708,000 organisms/km^2 Producers: Green grass, blackberries, wild grasses, weeds 5,842,000 organisms/km^2 Pyramid of Biomass Secondary consumers: Dingo and Wedge-Tailed Eagle (1610g/km^2) Primary consumers: goat, brown hare, rabbit, red kangaroo 2495g/km^2 Producers: Green grass, blackberries, wild grasses, weeds 3,204,032 g/km^2 I found this information on the internet, which provides me the approximate number of individuals in each trophic level to satisfy the ecosystem of grassland in Australia. This assumption is based off a production of 6 million plants in grassland ecosystem, in which if calculated, the primary consumers only obtain 10 percent of the energy producers releases because organisms uses energy for respiration, movement, and reproducing more offsprings. *5,842,000 divided by 708,000 = 0.12 = 12 (approximately) [4,5] I found this information on the internet, which provides me the approximate biomass in each trophic level to satisfy the ecosystem of grassland in Australia. This assumption is based off a production of 6 million plants in grassland ecosystem, in which if calculated, the primary consumers only obtain 10 percent of the energy producers releases because organisms uses energy for respiration, movement, and reproducing more offsprings. Content 4: :Carbon cycle Carbon cycle [2] In a grassland ecosystem, the carbon cycle specifically focuses on the photosynthesis process, where autotrophs absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and convert it into carbohydrates, lipids and all the other carbon compounds that they require. By doing so, it allows a reduction in the carbon dioxide concentration of the atmosphere. With the combination of carbon dioxide, gas, and sunlight in the atmosphere, it produces plants in grasslands regions, which are producers and source of food obtained by primary consumers. As seen in the diagram, plants would eventually be fed by heterotrophic organisms, and herbivores will be fed by carnivores. This food web is a cycle that continues until the plants wilt or animals die from conditions such as the inability to undergo the ecology of “survival of the fittest”. Dead bodies or wilted plants will get decomposed by bacteria, algae, and much more that would later be fragmented and soak into the soil. Fossilization then takes place to create fossil fuels that are later released to the atmosphere again. [3] Meanwhile, humans begin to use fossil fuels for industrial purposes and for factory goods. In relationship to how human activities have affected our society, factories and other burning activities have released an abundance of carbon into the atmosphere, which creates an unbalanced and interfered the natural process of carbon cycle. This influence causes a high concentration of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere that is redundant for our carbon cycle. [3] Content 5: Evolution and Adaptation [8] Weeds ! These two organisms, weeds and dingos were selected in a grassland type ecosystem due to several factors. First of all, grasslands occur in deep interior of continents that are far from the ocean. Since the climate of grasslands are too dry fairly warm, and rainfall is generally low, the carbon cycle allows carbon dioxide to emerge with gas and sunlight to produce weeds, which are the autotrophs and producers of the ecosystem. As more grass type plants dominate the entire region, adaptation factors starts to form in the environment, selecting a community of organisms. ! However, due to the unevenly distributed rainfall in grasslands throughout the year, grasses have varying productivity rates. Perhaps primary consumers vary in eating long grass or short grass, therefore when rainfall is particularly low during a season, one of the extreme phenotypes in primary consumers may be selected. This is an example of directional selection, which causes a shift in the population. As a result, the secondary consumer would also vary. Nonetheless, Dingos are one of the examples. Another way Dingos are selected is through the process of domestication. Dingos are wild dogs that live on Australian grasslands. However, it has been discovered that present day dingos are descended from a pair of domesticated dogs that entered Australia from Indonesia about 5,000 years ago. ! Organism can either be evolved naturally or domesticated through cultivating and taming them. [7] [9] Dingo ! Sources: ! [1] Strelecky, Richard Garratt, et al. Biomes of the Earth: Grasslands. New York: An imprint of Infobase Publishing, 2006. Print.! ! [2] http://aanikacollingwoodscience7.weebly.com/food-web.html! ! [3] http://www.biologydiscussion.com/essay/food-chain-in-ecosystem-explained-with-diagrams/1669! ! [4] http://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange1/current/lectures/kling/energyflow/highertrophic/trophic2.html! ! [5] http://www.biomass.net/Biomass-and-Trophic-Levels.html! ! [6] http://signgehki.xoom.it/prevx-cs33/loforv.html! ! [7] http://encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Grassland+ecosystem! ! [8] http://nwfarmsandfood.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/weeds.jpg! ! [9] http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/5a/Dingo_face444.jpg! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !