Environement 1
Environement 1
Environement 1
Lithosphere
Hydrosphere
Atmosphere
Biosphere
Lithosphere
The cover of rock
constituting the earth’s
crust is called
“Lithosphere”.
Soil and Rocks are the
important part of
lithosphere.
Hydroshpere
It includes all the surface
and groundwater
resources e.g. Oceans,
Seas, rivers, streams,
Lakes, reservoirs, dams,
Glaciers, polar ice caps
and groundwater.
Atmosphere
The atmosphere
comprises of mixture
of gases: Nitrogen,
Oxygen, hydrogen etc.
It extends up to 500
kms, above the
surface of earth.
Biosphere
This is region of the
Earth where life exists.
It extending from about
10 kms below the sea
levels 6 kms above
the sea levels.
What is pollution?
Introduction of pollutants
into the environment which
deteriorate the nature and
harm living resources and
ecosystems thereby
endangering human health.
TYPES OF POLLUTION
ENVIRONMENTAL POLLUTION
AIR NOISE
LIGHT
SOIL
AND…
Living organisms…
◦ Plants
◦ Animals
◦ microorganisms in soil, etc.
To study Ecology involves…
For non-living (abiotic)
For living (biotic)
◦ Climatology animal behavior
◦ Hydrology etc.
◦ Oceanography
◦ Geology
◦ soil analysis, etc.
Biotic
Abiotic
What is an ecosystem?
System = regularly interacting
and interdependent components
forming a unified whole
Ecosystem = an ecological
system;
= a community and its physical
environment treated together
as a functional system
Ecosystem Services
The human economy depends upon the services
performed for free by ecosystems.
The ecosystem services supplied annually are
worth many trillions of dollars.
Economic development that destroys habitats
and impairs services can create costs to
humanity over the long term that may greatly
exceed the short-term economic benefits of the
development.
These costs are generally hidden from traditional
economic accounting, but are nonetheless real
and are usually borne by society at large.
Ecosystems:
Fundamental Characteristics
Structure:
◦ Living (biotic)
◦ Nonliving (abiotic)
Process:
◦ Energy flow
◦ Cycling of matter
◦ (chemicals)
Change:
◦ Dynamic (not static)
◦ Succession, etc.
Abiotic components:
ABIOTIC components:
Solar energy provides practically all the
energy for ecosystems.
Inorganic substances, e.g., sulfur, boron,
tend to cycle through ecosystems.
Organic compounds, such as proteins,
carbohydrates, lipids, and other complex
molecules, form a link between biotic and
abiotic components of the system.
BIOTIC components
The biotic components of an ecosystem
can be classified according to their mode
of energy acquisition.
In this type of classification, there are:
Autotrophs and Heterotrophs
Organisms that produce their own food
from an energy source, such as the sun,
and inorganic compounds.
Organisms that consume other organisms
as a food source.
The End