Tracers as AIDS in assessing ecosystem function
Saturday, March 2, 2013
9:17 PM
Labels: ecosystem , energy , energy powered , environment , 0 comments
Labels: ecosystem , energy , energy powered , environment , 0 comments
Just as the microscope extends our power
of observation of the details of structure of components in the ecosystem, so
tracers extend our power of observation of function. By tracers we mean small
amounts of easily detected substances that can be used to follow and quantify
the flow of materials or movement of organisms not otherwise visible or
detectable by ordinary means. Tracers can take many forms ranging from days
used to trace water movement to isotopes that can be used to measure nutrient
exchange between organisms and environment because they are easily ecosystem detectable
by special instruments. Justifiable concern about radioactive pollution has
overshadowed the fact that radioactive tracers provide valuable tools for
study. Many vital elements have radioactive isotopes with short half – lives
(that is, decay to nonradioactive form in a few days), which can be detected
and measured in such small quantities so that tracer amounts introduced into
the ecosystem will have no measurable
effect on the process being measured or the organisms present. And an isotope
does not have to be radioactive to be useful as a tracer. The nonradioactive
isotope nitrogen – 15, for example, has been very useful in the study of the
all important ecosystem nitrogen cycle.
ecosystem laboratory experiments in pond
ecosystem laboratory experiments in pond
Experiments with radioactive tracers
provide excellent ecosystem laboratory experiments to follow a field study of the pond.
For example paired bottles of filtered pond of filtered pond water can be set
up. Each ‘’spiked’’ with tracer amount of radioactive phosphorus (32p). in one
of a pair of bottles a gram o two of a large, leafy submerged aquatic plant is
placed, and in the other, a known weight of filamentous or phytoplankton algae.
The uptake by the plants is easily monitored by withdrawing and filtering small
samples of water at intervals over a period of several hours, and counting the
samples in a suitable; decrease in radioactivity of the water provides a
relative measure of the amount of phosphorus moving into the plant biomass. The
much more rapid uptake per unit weight of small plants, as compared with the
large one, provides a dramatic illustration of the differences ecosystem in nutrient
turnover rates, as previously discussed.
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