Topic 5

Ecosystem

A community of living organisms (biotic) interacting with each other and their non-living environment (abiotic) as a functional unit. Term coined by Arthur Tansley (1935).

A. Components of an Ecosystem

Biotic & Abiotic Components

ComponentTypeExamples
Producers (Autotrophs)BioticPlants, algae, cyanobacteria — make their own food via photosynthesis; base of all food chains
Primary ConsumersBioticHerbivores that eat producers directly (grasshoppers, rabbits, caterpillars, deer)
Secondary ConsumersBioticCarnivores that eat primary consumers (frogs, small fish, foxes)
Tertiary ConsumersBioticTop predators (eagles, sharks, lions, crocodiles)
DecomposersBioticFungi and bacteria — break down dead organic matter, returning nutrients to the soil
Abiotic FactorsAbioticSunlight, temperature, water, soil type, pH, wind, humidity, minerals
⚡ MCQ Tip Biotic = living. Abiotic = non-living. Decomposers = bacteria AND fungi. Producers are always at the base of food chains. Tansley (1935) coined "ecosystem".

B. Food Chains, Food Webs & Energy Flow

Energy Flow & the 10% Rule

  • Food chain: A linear sequence showing who eats whom → Grass → Grasshopper → Frog → Snake → Eagle
  • Food web: A complex, interconnected network of multiple food chains in an ecosystem
  • Energy flows in ONE direction only — from producers (sun) through consumers
  • 10% Rule (Lindeman's efficiency): Only 10% of energy is transferred to the next trophic level; 90% is lost as heat, movement, and metabolic processes
  • Trophic level: The position an organism occupies in the food chain
  • Arrows in a food chain point in the direction of energy flow (from prey to predator)
Energy Transfer Rule Energy at next level = 10% of previous level If producers have 10,000 kJ → primary consumers get 1,000 kJ → secondary get 100 kJ → tertiary get 10 kJ

C. Biogeochemical Cycles

Four Major Cycles

CycleKey Points
Carbon CycleCO₂ absorbed by plants (photosynthesis); returned to atmosphere by respiration, decomposition, and combustion of fossil fuels
Nitrogen CycleN₂ (gas) fixed by nitrogen-fixing bacteria (Rhizobium) → ammonia → nitrites → nitrates → absorbed by plants → returned by denitrifying bacteria
Water CycleEvaporation (water → vapour) → Condensation (clouds) → Precipitation (rain/snow) → Runoff/infiltration → back to oceans
Oxygen CycleO₂ released by photosynthesis; consumed by aerobic respiration and combustion; closely linked to carbon cycle

D. Ecological Terms

Key Definitions

TermDefinition
HabitatThe specific physical place where an organism naturally lives (e.g. a pond, oak tree, desert burrow)
NicheThe role and position of an organism in its ecosystem — what it eats, when it's active, where it shelters, how it affects others
PopulationAll individuals of the same species living in the same area at the same time
CommunityAll populations of different species living and interacting in the same area
BiomeA large geographical region defined by its characteristic climate and organisms (e.g. tropical rainforest, desert, tundra, grassland)
BiodiversityThe variety of life in an area — includes species diversity, genetic diversity, and ecosystem diversity
⚡ Hierarchy Individual → Population → Community → Ecosystem → Biome → Biosphere

Quick MCQ Revision

FactAnswer
Term "ecosystem" coined byArthur Tansley (1935)
Energy transfer efficiency10% — only 10% passes to next trophic level; 90% lost as heat
Decomposers areBacteria and fungi — break down dead organic matter
Abiotic factorsNon-living: sunlight, temperature, water, soil, pH, wind
Biotic factorsLiving: producers, consumers, decomposers
Trophic levelPosition of an organism in a food chain
Population vs CommunityPopulation = same species; Community = all species in an area
Nitrogen fixationRhizobium bacteria convert N₂ gas → ammonia in soil
Key