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illustrations by Sabine Deviche Words to know before you read
What is an ecosystem? We hear the word ecosystems in the news and at school but just what are ecosystems? To start off, let's take a quick look at the word because it holds some clues to its meaning. "Eco" comes from ancient Greek and Latin and means "house". So "eco" means that all of the parts exist together, as if they were together in a house. You have probably heard the word "system" in lots of places, and it means "interacting parts". So "system" tells us that not only do the parts exist together as if they were in one house, but the parts also affect one another. Think of the last time you were outdoors. You were probably outside your house or your school. What did you see? You maybe saw living things like grass and people. You may also remember non-living things like concrete, soil, or maybe puddles or snowbanks. An ecosystem contains all of those parts that you can see, like soil, water, insects, rocks, birds, trees, and people. There are also parts you cannot see with your eye, including microscopic organisms like bacteria and fungi, or molecules of food and nutrients that are in water, soil, and air. Often, ecosystems are confused with another word- habitat. This describes the conditions a particular organism needs to live. For example, a whale needs salty water and fish to eat, gophers need plants to eat and soil to burrow in, and giant sequoias (a tree) need lots of water and soil nutrients. Ecosystems include much more than just the requirements needed for a particular type of organism to live. Ecosystems include interactions among many types of organisms and abiotic parts of the environment too.
How do ecosystems work and what do they do? Now that we know that ecosystems are all around us, let's try to figure out what exactly ecosystems do. Since we know that ecosystems are made up of many interacting abiotic and biotic parts, those interactions must hold the key to what ecosystems can do. First, an ecosystem needs energy to work. Just like the computer you are using to read this, an ecosystem cannot function without energy. In many ecosystems, energy first enters the ecosystem from the sun. You may have heard of solar-powered electricity. Well, many ecosystems are also solar-powered. Plants and some bacteria can capture energy from sunlight and store it in their tissues. They use the energy to grow and reproduce. The energy captured by plants doesn't stay there forever. Plants are food for consumers, so the energy in plant tissues is passed on to organisms that eat plants. Predators get their energy by eating consumers. Dead plants and animals are food for tiny micro-organisms like bacteria and fungi. You probably know these feeding relationships as a food web. The food web allows energy to flow through the ecosystem and power the activities of many organisms (including people).
If you have ever taken vitamins, been told to eat your vegetables, or sipped an energy drink, you know that food contains more than just energy. Organisms get essential nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus from their food in addition to energy. Nutrients cycle through the abiotic and biotic parts of ecosystems and are passed between organisms in a food web. Nutrients may also be converted in forms, move around the ecosystem in water or wind, or may leave the ecosystem entirely. Follow the salmon below to catch up with what happens to nutrients once they leave the ecosystem. You may have heard that ecosystems are delicate and that they can change with only the slightest outside influence. Ecosystems are always changing, so it is true that ecosystems rarely stay the same for long periods of time. But ecosystems are far from delicate. Sometimes changes in ecosystems are slow and gradual, like a forest growing from a group of seedlings to mature old trees. Other times changes happen suddenly. Fires, floods, or volcano eruptions can quickly remove most of the biotic parts from an ecosystem and can even change the abiotic parts.
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