The document discusses ecosystems, defining them as complex sets of interactions between organisms and their environment. It describes the biotic and abiotic components that make up ecosystems, including producers, consumers, and decomposers, as well as climatic and soil factors. Ecosystems have processes like nutrient cycling, food chains, and energy flow between trophic levels. Human activities like pollution, overharvesting, and habitat destruction can stress ecosystems and disrupt their functions, compromising ecosystem and human health. Preventing ecosystem disruption is more effective than restoration.
The document discusses ecosystems, defining them as complex sets of interactions between organisms and their environment. It describes the biotic and abiotic components that make up ecosystems, including producers, consumers, and decomposers, as well as climatic and soil factors. Ecosystems have processes like nutrient cycling, food chains, and energy flow between trophic levels. Human activities like pollution, overharvesting, and habitat destruction can stress ecosystems and disrupt their functions, compromising ecosystem and human health. Preventing ecosystem disruption is more effective than restoration.
The document discusses ecosystems, defining them as complex sets of interactions between organisms and their environment. It describes the biotic and abiotic components that make up ecosystems, including producers, consumers, and decomposers, as well as climatic and soil factors. Ecosystems have processes like nutrient cycling, food chains, and energy flow between trophic levels. Human activities like pollution, overharvesting, and habitat destruction can stress ecosystems and disrupt their functions, compromising ecosystem and human health. Preventing ecosystem disruption is more effective than restoration.
The document discusses ecosystems, defining them as complex sets of interactions between organisms and their environment. It describes the biotic and abiotic components that make up ecosystems, including producers, consumers, and decomposers, as well as climatic and soil factors. Ecosystems have processes like nutrient cycling, food chains, and energy flow between trophic levels. Human activities like pollution, overharvesting, and habitat destruction can stress ecosystems and disrupt their functions, compromising ecosystem and human health. Preventing ecosystem disruption is more effective than restoration.
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ECOSYSTEM
The health of humans, like all living organisms, is dependent on an ecosystem
that sustains life. An ecosystem is a complex set of relationships between living and non- living organism and their physical environment. The term an ecosystem is originally defined by Tansley (1935). An ecosystem is defined as the network of interactions among organisms, and between organisms and their environment they can come in any size but usually encompass specific, limited spaces although according to some scientists the entire planet is an ecosystem or an ecosystem is defined as a complex, dynamic community of organisms including plants, animals and micro-organisms that all interact among themselves as well as with the environment that they live in. There are two types of components that make up an ecosystem’s characteristics and these are biotic and abiotic factors. The biological or biotic components of an ecosystem include both living organisms and products of these organisms. The biotic components are broadly categorized as producers, and consumers of different classes such as herbivores (animals that eat plants), carnivores (animals that eat flesh of other animals), omnivores (animals that consume both plants and animals as available) and lastly scavengers (animals that eat dead plant and animal matters). While the non- biological or abiotic components include climatic and edaphic features, in particular climatic components like sunlight, temperature, air and water supply along with soil component such as soil nutrients which are very important contributing factors of ecosystem operation. Ecosystem has a processes and these includes decomposition, production (of plant matter), water cycle, nutrient cycling, and fluxes of nutrients and energy. During the process of production and consumption, energy is passed along, or flows, from one organism to another. The flow of food energy in an ecosystem progress is called a food chain in which one step follows another—primary consumers eat producers, secondary consumers eat primary consumers, and so on. A food web is the natural interconnection of food chains and a graphical representation of what-eats-what in an ecological community. In order to identify the relationship between organism in an ecosystem there is what we called ecological pyramid it shows the number of organisms, biomass, and productivity at each trophic level. Ecological pyramid refers also to energy pyramid, pyramid of biomass, pyramid of numbers. Ecosystem varies widely, with respect to both its biotic and abiotic composition and their interactions. Broadly speaking, habitat wise there are two major categories of ecosystem, viz., terrestrial or land ecosystem or biome and aquatic ecosystem. Each of them, again, is divided into several ecosystem types depending on atmospheric temperature, rainfall and soil or substrate nature. The habitat condition varies widely from coastal areas, to mountains, deserts, hills, and alluvial plains in both tropical and subtropical zones. The major ecosystem types in terrestrial habitat are these-grassland, rain forest, deciduous forest, mountain, desert, coastal, alpine and glacier zones. Energy moves life. The cycle of energy is based on the flow of energy through different trophic levels in an ecosystem. Our ecosystem is maintained by the cycling energy and nutrients obtained from different external sources. Each and every ecosystem provides a number of goods and services to mankind directly or indirectly. These includes material supply like food, fiber, fuel, medicines and bio-chemicals; or it helps in control of flood, erosion, habitat protection, waste recycling, recreation and so on. In short, ecosystems are what sustain both humans and animals, providing them with energy, nutrients, oxygen, water and shelter, among other things. However, as years passed by our ecosystems are slowly become dysfunctional, particularly under chronic stress from human activity. For example, the human disturbance and discharge of nutrients from sewage, industrial waste, or agricultural runoff into lakes or rivers affects the normal functioning of the ecosystem, and can result in severe impairment. Stress from human activity is a major factor in transforming healthy ecosystems to sick ecosystems. Five major sources of human-induced (anthropogenic) stresses have been identified by D. J. Rapport and A. M. Friend (1979): physical restructuring, overharvesting, waste residuals, introduction of exotic species, and global change. Physical Restructuring. Activities such as wetland drainage, removal of shoals in lakes, damming of rivers, and road construction fragment the landscape and alter and damage critical habitat. These activities also disrupt nutrient cycling, and cause the loss of biodiversity. Overharvesting. Overexploitation is commonplace when it comes to harvesting of wildlife, fisheries, and forests. Over long periods of time, stocks of preferred species are reduced. For example, the giant redwoods that once thrived along the California coast now exist only in remnant patches because of overharvesting. Waste Residuals. Discharges from municipal, industrial, and agricultural sources into the air, water, and land have severely compromised many of the earth's ecosystems. The effects are particularly apparent in aquatic ecosystems. Introduction of Exotic Species. The spread of exotics has become a problem in almost every ecosystem of the world. Transporting species from their native habitat to entirely new ecosystems can wreck havoc, as the new environments are often without natural checks and balances for the new species. Global Change. Rapid climate change (or climate warming) is an emerging potential global stress on all of the earth's ecosystems. In evolutionary time, there have of course been large fluctuations in climate. These anthropogenic stresses have compromised ecosystem function in most regions of the world, resulting in ecosystem distress syndrome (EDS). EDS is characterized by a group of signs, including abnormalities in nutrient cycling, productivity, species diversity and richness, biotic structure, disease prevalence, soil fertility, and so on. The consequences of these changes for human health are not inconsiderable. Impoverished biotic communities are natural harbors for pathogens that affect humans and other species. That kind of phenomena can have adverse impacts to every species and organisms on earth. It will also result to ecological imbalances triggered by global climate change and other causes are responsible for increased human health risks. Given the difficulties in reversing ecosystem degradation, and the many associated human health risks that arise with the loss of ecosystem health, the most effective approach is simply the prevention of ecosystem disruption. However, like many common-sense approaches, this is easier said than done. Even where it has been possible to restore some of the ecological functions of degraded ecosystems, and thus improve ecosystem health, the restoration seldom results in reestablishment of the pristine biotic community. The best that can be achieved in most cases is reestablishment of the key ecological functions that provide the required ecosystem services, such as the regulation of water, primary and secondary productivity, nutrient cycling, and pollination. In all such efforts, key indicators of ecosystem health (vigor, productivity, and resilience) are essential to monitor progress. Standard ecological indicators can be used for this purpose (e.g., measures of productivity, species composition, nutrient flows, soil fertility) along with socioeconomic and human health indicators. Experience in efforts to restore highly damaged ecosystems suggests that ecosystem-health prevention is far more effective than restoration. For marine ecosystems, setting aside protective zones that afford a sanctuary for fish and wildlife has considerable promise. Many countries are adopting policies to establish such areas with the prospect that these healthy regions can serve as a reservoir for biota that have become depleted in the unprotected areas. Yet this remedy is not without its limits. However, at the dawn of the twenty-first century, the past is not necessarily the best guide to the future. The human population is at an alltime high, and associated pressures of human activity have led to increasing degradation of the earth's ecosystems. As ultimately healthy ecosystems are essential for life of all biota, including humans, current global and regional trends are ominous. Under these circumstances, a tradeoff between immediate material gains and long-term sustainability of humans on the planet may be the only option. If so, the solution to sustaining human health and ecosystem health becomes one of devising a new politic that places sustaining life support systems as a precondition for betterment of the human condition and the ecosystem.