Boundaries of Ecosystem
Boundaries of Ecosystem
Boundaries of Ecosystem
On
Boundaries Of Ecosystem
Course Title: Plant Ecology-2
Course Code: BOT-603
Submitted to:
Date of Submission-15-12-2021
What is Ecosystem
A System that includes all living organisms ( biotic factors) in an area as well as its
physical environment ( abiotic factors ) functioning together as a unit .
An ecosystem is made up of plant , animals ,microorganisms, soil ,rocks ,minerals ,water
sources and the local atmosphere interacting with one another .
What is Boundary
Something that indicates or fixes a limit or extent
Those two trees mark the boundary of our property
The mountain range that forms the country’s northern boundary .
Ecological boundary
The ecosystem does not occur alone. Ecosystem boundaries are zones of transitions
between two adjacent habitats.
Their boundaries are not well defined and the may overlap.
There are certain areas where their boundaries are well defined it includes the pond and
the land ecosystems .
They have some common organisms which include birds .
There are exchange of inorganic nutrients between them.
They occur naturally in all biomes but the extent of boundaries has been greatly increased
by antropogenic habitat modification.
Important tips of ecosystem :
The limnology is defined as the stud of lakes.
The epilimnion is defined as the upper layer of warm water which occurs in the
stratified lake.
The hypolimnion is defined as the lower layer of cold dense water which occurs in
the stratified lake .
The endemics are defined as the distribution of plants in a specific area.
The canopy is defined as the part of forest which formed by the tress .
The alpine is defined as the region above the altitude of the present vegetation .
As these boarders are not rigids the ecosystem tend to blend with each other scientist
called this blending as ecotone.
Ecosystem Boundaries
Biotic and Abiotic components provide boundaries that distinguish one ecosystem from another.
Some ecosystems, such as caves and lakes have very distinctive boundaries . however in most
ecosystems it is difficult to determine where one ecosystems stops and the next beings .
Watershed: a stream and all the terrestrial surface that drains into it
Classification
Ecologists use the term boundary to refer to a wide range of range of real and conceptual
structures
Ecological boundaries can be classified in many ways
Origin and maintenance
Spatial structure
Function
Temporal dynamic
Sub Divisions
Exogeneous origin : Boundaries between new lava flows and older vegetation
Endogenous origin : a forest edge maintained by the joint effects of succession and seed
predation would have endogeneous origin.
Spatial Structure
Different ecologists may use boundary to mean structures that are two – dimensional or
three – dimensional
Mental or physical ; microscopic to regional in size ; step functions or gradients ;
reflective , absorptive , or permeable , and so on
As long as usage is so varied , it is important for ecologists to specify the type of
boundary they are investigating.
Boundary Function
Boundaries transform materials ; for instance , many materials are transformed at oxic-
anoxic boundaries in groundwaters or where groundwaters discharge into surface waters
Ecological boundaries are transmissive or permeable: may allow only some fraction of
materials , energy , or organisms to pass
Ecological boundaries are absorptive : most of the mechanical energy contained in waves
is absorbed in the surface zone boundary that separates land and water
Boundaries are reflective Organisms or materials that approach the boundary are returned to
the patch from which they originated