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NATURAL RESOURCES
POND ECOSYSTEM
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
POND ECOSYSTEM
CONCLUSION
REFERENCES
INTRODUCTION
Natural resources are materials and components (something that can be used) that can be found
within the environment. Every man-made product is composed of natural resources (at its
fundamental level). A natural resource may exist as a separate entity such as fresh water, and air,
as well as a living organism such as a fish, or it may exist in an alternate form which must be
processed to obtain the resource such as metal ores, oil, and most forms of energy. Ecosystem is
the basic functional unit with which ecology deals since it includes both the organisms and non
living environment ,each influencing the properties of the other and both necessary for the
maintenance of life on earth. A pond ecosystem refers to fresh water ecosystem where there are
communities of organism dependent on each other with the prevailing water environment for
their nutrients and survival.Usually ponds are shallow water bodies with a depth of 12-15 feet
in which the sun rays can penetrate to the bottom permitting the growth of plants there. There is
usually a diverse array of aquatic life, with a few examples including algae, snails, fish, beetles,
water bugs, frogs, turtles, otters and muskrats. Top predators may include large fish, herons, or
alligators. The different functional components of a Pond ecosystem are- Filtration System,
Rocks and Gravel, Recirculation system, fish, aquatic plants.
POND ECOSYSTEM
Pond Ecosystem consists of 2 types of components:
Abiotic Components- The abiotic substances of Pond ecosystem are formed as a result of
the mixture of some organic and inorganic materials.The basic components are
water,oxygen,carbon dioxide ,salts of calcium and nitrogen etc.Only a small amount of
these elements are present in soluble state in pond water,but a large amount is held in
reserve solid form in the bottom sediments as well as within the organisms.Various
organisms get their nourishment from these abiotic substances.The rate of release of
reserve nutrients ,the solar input and the cycle of temperature ,day length and other
climatic conditions regulate the function of the Pond ecosystem.
Producers:-The produers are of two types-larger rooted and floating vegetations together
termed
macrophytes
and
phytoplanktons-which
are
microscopic
floating
algae.Phytoplanktons are available upto the depth of water where light penetrates.The
phytoplanktons are filamentous alga like Ulothrix, Oedogonium, Spirogyra, Anabena,
Oscillatoria and minute floating plants like Microcystis, Gloeotrichina, volvox etc.The
macrophytes include marginal emergent plants like Typha, Acerus, Ipomea, submerged
plants like Hydrilla, Utricularia, Trapa, Nymphrea etc ; surface floating plants like Pistea
,Lemna, Wolffia,Eichhornia,Salvinia etc.
o
Decomposers:- Most of the decomposers of Pond ecosystem are saprophytes but some
parasites are also found Bacteria, fungi like Aspergillus, Cladosporium Rhizopus,
Alternaria, Fusarium, Saprolegnia etc are decomposers.Generally the decomposers either
live in the soil layer beneath water or in the mud.They act on dead and decayed organic
matter of plants and animals and supply raw materials to the producers.
energy from autotrophs .So larvae are primary consumers.These primary consumers are taken as
food by prawn, small carnivorous fishes etc and so they collect energy from larvae.They are
called secondary consumers.Large fishes consume secondary consumers and are called tertiary
consumer. A pond's ecosystem food chain has three basic trophic levels.
First trophic level- represents the producer and autotrophs, such as phytoplankton and plants.
Producers prepare their own food with the energy emitted from the sun through a process known
as photosynthesis.
Second trophic level- consists of herbivores, such as insects, crustaceans, and invertebrates that
inhabit the pond and consume the plants.
Third trophic level- comprises of carnivores, such as various sizes of fish, which feed on both
the plants and herbivores.
Fourth trophic level- Saprotrophic organisms, also known as decomposers located on the
bottom of the food chain, help decompose dead organic matter, which further breaks down into
carbon dioxide and essential nutrients, such as nitrogen, phosphorus, and magnesium. These
nutrients supply the necessary life force for the first trophic level organisms to produce food for
the second trophic organisms, which results in the perpetual flow of energy in the pond's
ecosystem.
There is usually a diverse array of aquatic life, with a few examples including algae, snails, fish,
beetles, water bugs, frogs, turtles, otters and muskrats. Top predators may include large fish,
herons, or alligators. Since fish are a major predator upon amphibian larvae, ponds that dry up
each year, thereby killing resident fish, provide important refugia for amphibian breeding. Ponds
that dry up completely each year are often known as vernal pools. Some ponds are produced by
animal activity, including alligator holes and beaver ponds, and these add important diversity to
landscapes.
CONCLUSION
A pond ecosystem consists of four habitats, including the shore, surface film, open water, and
bottom water. The shore, depending on its rocky, sandy, or muddy composition, lures in various
organisms. The pond's surface breeds excellent ground for water striders, marsh traders, freefloating organisms, and organisms that can walk on the surface of water. An open-water habitat
permits sizable fish, plankton, phytoplankton, and zooplankton to grow. Phytoplankton includes
a large variety of algae, while zooplankton refers to insect larvae, rotifers, small crustaceans and
invertebrates. Fish feed on plankton, or tiny organisms. The bottom-water habitat varies
depending upon the pond's depth. Shallow ponds with sandy bottoms provide a nesting
environment for earthworms, snails, and insects. Deep-ended ponds have muddy bottoms, which
allow various microorganisms, such as flatworms, rat-tailed maggots, and dragonfly nymphs to
reproduce and survive.
An ecosystem pond works with Mother Nature to provide food, shelter, and safety to the wildlife
around it. It also provides you with an all-natural, low-maintenance piece of paradise. Ponds are
an important part of the biosphere.
REFERENCES
1- http://www.tutorvista.com/biology/pond-ecosystem
2- http://www.caryinstitute.org/sites/default/files/public/downloads/curriculum
project/1B3_pond_ecosystem_reading.pdf
3- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aquatic_ecosystem
4- http://www.thewaterpage.com/pond-ecosystem.htm
5- http://www.enotes.com/homework-help/can-anyone-explain-me-pond-ecosystem-plz-urgent-355016
6- https://www.google.co.in/search?q=pond+ecosystem&client=ubuntu&hs=mc5
&channel=fs&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ved=0CAcQ_AUoAWoVChMIrHuhsemyAIVB3COCh2gtg9i&biw=1369&bih=773#imgdii=NDttkTkoHOZ8M%3A%3BNDttkTkoHOZ8M%3A%3BF5AtuAR8uLmH7M%3A&imgrc=NDttk Tko-HOZ8M%3A
7- https://www.google.co.in/search?q=natural+resources&client=ubuntu&channel
=fs&biw=1369&bih=773&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&sqi=2&ved=0CAYQ_
AUoAWoVChMIp72w1cimyAIVxQeOCh2gagld#channel=fs&tbm=isch&q=pond
+natural+resources&imgdii=2rtHwnxgDejt8M%3A%3B2rtHwnxgDejt8M%3A%3
BACiSpfK5-z6aCM%3A&imgrc=2rtHwnxgDejt8M%3A