By the end of this chapter you'll be able to…

  • 1Define biosphere and explain its vertical limits (from ocean trenches to lower atmosphere) and relationship to lithosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere
  • 2Describe ecosystem structure: abiotic components (sunlight, water, nutrients) and biotic components (producers, consumers, decomposers)
  • 3Construct a food chain and a food web; explain why energy decreases at each trophic level (10% Rule / Lindeman's Rule)
  • 4Describe the major biomes of the world (tropical rainforest, savanna, desert, temperate grassland, temperate deciduous forest, taiga, tundra) and match each to its climate zone
  • 5Explain how human activities disrupt ecosystems and the consequences for biodiversity and ecosystem services
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Why this chapter matters
Every current environmental policy debate — deforestation, ocean acidification, biodiversity loss, climate change — depends on understanding how life and the physical environment interact. This chapter introduces the biosphere as a system: how energy flows (food chains), how matter cycles (water, carbon, nitrogen), and how different biomes represent the Earth's different ecosystem responses to climate. It's also the conceptual foundation for Chapter 16 (Biodiversity).

Before you start — revise these

A 5-minute refresher here will save you 30 minutes of confusion below.

Life on the Earth

"The biosphere is a thin green film on the surface of a rocky planet — and it's the only one we know of in the universe."

1. Chapter Overview

The BIOSPHERE is the narrow zone where life exists — the intersection of the lithosphere (land), atmosphere (air), and hydrosphere (water). This chapter covers: ECOSYSTEMS (their structure and function), FOOD CHAINS AND WEBS (who eats whom), ENERGY FLOW (how the Sun powers everything), and BIOGEOCHEMICAL CYCLES (how carbon, nitrogen, and water circulate through the living and non-living world).


2. The Biosphere

  • The LIFE ZONE of the Earth
  • Extends from the deepest ocean floors to the highest mountain summits (where microbes/algae are found)
  • BUT: most life is concentrated in a THIN LAYER near the surface
  • The biosphere is a UNIQUE feature of Earth (so far as we know)
  • It is an INTERCONNECTED system — what happens in one part affects the whole

3. Ecosystem — Structure and Function

What Is an Ecosystem?

  • A FUNCTIONAL UNIT where LIVING ORGANISMS interact with each other and their PHYSICAL ENVIRONMENT
  • Can be: HUGE (a tropical rainforest, an ocean) or SMALL (a pond, a rotting log)
  • Two main components: BIOTIC (living) + ABIOTIC (non-living)

Structure

ComponentWhat It Includes
AbioticSunlight, temperature, water, soil, nutrients, gases (O₂, CO₂)
Biotic (Producers/Autotrophs)Plants, algae, cyanobacteria — MAKE their own food (photosynthesis)
Biotic (Consumers/Heterotrophs)Animals — Primary (herbivores), Secondary (carnivores), Tertiary (top carnivores)
Biotic (Decomposers)Bacteria, fungi — break down DEAD organic matter, return nutrients to soil

Function

  • ENERGY FLOWS through the ecosystem (ONE-WAY — from Sun → producers → consumers → decomposers → lost as heat)
  • MATERIALS (nutrients) CYCLE within the ecosystem (NOT lost — reused)

4. Food Chains and Food Webs

Food Chain

  • A LINEAR sequence of who eats whom
  • Example: Grass → Grasshopper → Frog → Snake → Eagle
  • Each step = a TROPHIC LEVEL
  • Energy DECREASES at each level (~90% lost as heat at each step — only ~10% transfers to the next level)
  • This LOSS limits food chain length (rarely more than 4-5 levels)

Food Web

  • In reality: organisms eat MANY things, not one
  • Interconnected FOOD CHAINS form a FOOD WEB
  • Food webs are MORE STABLE than simple chains (if one species declines, others can compensate)

Ecological Pyramid

  • Pyramid of numbers, biomass, or energy
  • Always UPRIGHT for energy (energy ALWAYS decreases up the chain)

5. Biogeochemical Cycles

Materials CIRCULATE through the biosphere. The THREE key cycles:

1. Carbon Cycle

  • Carbon moves between: atmosphere (CO₂), oceans (dissolved CO₂ and carbonates), living organisms (organic carbon), and rocks (limestone, fossil fuels)
  • Plants TAKE IN CO₂ (photosynthesis) → animals EAT plants → respiration RETURNS CO₂
  • Decomposition, burning of fossil fuels → CO₂ released
  • Oceans are a MAJOR carbon sink (absorb ~30% of human CO₂ emissions — causing ocean acidification)

2. Nitrogen Cycle

  • Atmosphere is 78% N₂ — but organisms CAN'T USE nitrogen gas directly
  • NITROGEN FIXATION: bacteria (Rhizobium in legume roots) and lightning → convert N₂ to usable forms
  • Plants absorb nitrates → animals eat plants → waste/death → decomposers return nitrogen to soil
  • DENITRIFICATION: bacteria convert nitrates back to N₂ gas → returns to atmosphere
  • Nitrogen is a LIMITING nutrient for plant growth

3. Water (Hydrological) Cycle

  • Evaporation (oceans) → condensation (clouds) → precipitation (rain/snow) → runoff (rivers) → back to ocean
  • Plants TRANSPIRE water → adds to atmospheric moisture
  • The SUN drives the water cycle
  • Oceans: the main source and final destination

6. Exam Focus

  1. Ecosystem — structure (abiotic + biotic: producers, consumers, decomposers)
  2. Food chain vs food web — difference, trophic levels, energy loss
  3. Biogeochemical cycles — carbon, nitrogen, water — outline each
  4. Nitrogen fixation — why essential (organisms can't use N₂ gas)
  5. The biosphere as the intersection of lithosphere, atmosphere, hydrosphere

7. Common Mistakes

  1. Energy cycles in the ecosystem like nutrients — NO. Energy FLOWS ONE-WAY (Sun → plants → animals → decomposers → lost as heat). Nutrients CYCLE. Energy does NOT cycle.
  2. Oxygen is the most abundant gas in the atmosphere (78%) — NO. NITROGEN is 78%. Oxygen is 21%. Don't confuse them.

8. Conclusion

The biosphere is the thin, vibrant film where LIFE interfaces with EARTH:

  • ECOSYSTEM: Living + non-living, interacting as a functional unit
  • ENERGY FLOW: Sun → producers → consumers → decomposers → heat. One-way, diminishing.
  • NUTRIENT CYCLES: Carbon, nitrogen, water — endlessly recycled. Life depends on these cycles.
  • THE BIG PICTURE: The biosphere is NOT separate from the lithosphere, atmosphere, and hydrosphere. It IS their intersection — and it transforms them all.

We live in the biosphere. We depend on the biosphere. We are changing the biosphere — faster than at any time in human history.

Key formulas & results

Everything you need to memorise, in one card. Screenshot this for revision.

Lindeman's 10% Energy Rule
Energy available at trophic level n+1 = 10% of energy at trophic level n
Example: 1000 kcal of grass → 100 kcal in rabbit → 10 kcal in fox → 1 kcal in eagle. This is WHY food chains rarely exceed 5 levels — too little energy survives to higher levels
Trophic Levels
T1: Producers (plants, algae — photosynthesis) → T2: Primary consumers (herbivores) → T3: Secondary consumers (carnivores) → T4: Tertiary consumers (apex predators) + Decomposers (bacteria, fungi — break all levels)
Decomposers are not in the food chain but are essential — they recycle nutrients from dead organisms back to soil/water for producers
Biome-Climate Relationship
High temperature + High rainfall = Tropical Rainforest | High temperature + Low rainfall = Desert/Savanna | Low temperature + Moderate rainfall = Tundra/Taiga
Temperature (latitude) determines biome more than rainfall. As you move from equator to poles: Rainforest → Savanna → Desert → Steppe → Temperate Forest → Taiga → Tundra
Ecosystem Services (value)
Provisioning (food, water, timber) + Regulating (climate regulation, pollination) + Cultural (recreation, aesthetics) + Supporting (nutrient cycling, soil formation) = Total Ecosystem Service Value
Costanza et al. (1997) estimated global ecosystem services at $33 trillion/year — exceeding global GDP at that time. This made the economic case for conservation
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Common mistakes & fixes

These are the exact errors that cost students marks in board exams. Read them once, save yourself the trouble.

WATCH OUT
Saying decomposers are part of the food chain
Decomposers (bacteria, fungi, earthworms) break down DEAD organic matter from ALL trophic levels — they are NOT a trophic level in the food chain. They form a separate 'detritus food chain.' Their role is NUTRIENT RECYCLING — without them, nutrients would remain locked in dead organisms and producers would starve.
WATCH OUT
Confusing food chain with food web
A food chain is a LINEAR sequence (grass → rabbit → fox → eagle). In reality, no organism eats only one thing — real feeding relationships form a FOOD WEB (interconnected multiple food chains). Food webs are more stable than simple chains — if one prey species declines, predators switch to others.
WATCH OUT
Thinking all deserts are hot
Deserts are defined by LOW PRECIPITATION (<250mm/year), not by temperature. Cold deserts: Gobi Desert (China/Mongolia), Ladakh (India) — cold and dry. Hot deserts: Sahara, Thar. India's Thar is a hot desert; Ladakh's Changthang is a cold desert — both are deserts by definition.
WATCH OUT
Saying the biosphere is only the surface of the Earth
The biosphere extends from the deepest ocean trenches (e.g., Mariana Trench, ~11km depth — bacteria live there) to ~6–8 km altitude in the atmosphere (birds, spores). It occupies a thin zone where the lithosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere overlap — but it is NOT just the surface.

Practice problems

Try each one yourself before tapping "Show solution". Active recall > rereading.

Q1EASY· Food Chain and Energy
A grassland food chain is: Grass → Grasshopper → Frog → Snake → Eagle. If the grass contains 10,000 kcal of energy, (a) how much energy does the grasshopper receive? (b) How much does the eagle receive? (c) Why is it inefficient for humans to eat meat instead of grain?
Show solution
(a) Grasshopper receives 10% of grass energy = 10% × 10,000 = **1,000 kcal**. (b) Energy transfer at each level: Grasshopper 1,000 → Frog 100 → Snake 10 → Eagle **1 kcal**. The eagle receives only 1/10,000th (0.01%) of the energy stored in the original grass. (c) Human inefficiency of meat-eating: If humans eat grain (T1→T2 = 10% efficiency), 1,000 kcal of grain gives 100 kcal to humans. If humans eat beef raised on grain (T1→T2→T3), 1,000 kcal of grain → 100 kcal beef → 10 kcal to humans. Eating meat requires 10× more grain for the same caloric benefit. This is why the same land can feed 10× more vegetarians than meat-eaters — directly relevant to India's food security and land use policy.
Q2MEDIUM· Biomes
Match each biome to its climate conditions and give ONE specific location and ONE characteristic plant or animal adaptation: (a) Tropical Rainforest (b) Taiga/Boreal Forest (c) Desert (d) Tundra
Show solution
(a) **Tropical Rainforest**: Climate — high temperature (24–27°C year-round) + high rainfall (200cm+). Location: Amazon Basin (Brazil), Congo Basin (Africa), Western Ghats (India). Adaptation: Emergent trees with buttress roots (shallow soil, so roots spread wide for support and nutrient absorption); thick bark not needed (no freezing); canopy stratification maximises light capture in dense vegetation. (b) **Taiga (Boreal Forest)**: Climate — short, cool summer (3–5 months) + cold, long winter (−30°C) + moderate precipitation (40–100cm, mostly snow). Location: Siberia, Canada, Scandinavia; parts of Himachal Pradesh at high altitudes. Adaptation: Conical shape of conifers (pine, fir, spruce) — snow slides off instead of accumulating and breaking branches; needle-shaped leaves with waxy coating prevent water loss in frozen winters (physiological drought). (c) **Desert**: Climate — high temperature (40–50°C by day, near 0°C at night) + very low rainfall (<250mm/year). Location: Sahara, Thar (India), Arabian Desert. Adaptation: Cacti — shallow but wide-spreading roots absorb rare rainfall quickly; succulent stems store water; thorns instead of leaves (reduce transpiration; deter grazers). (d) **Tundra**: Climate — permanently frozen subsoil (permafrost), extremely cold (−30°C to −10°C), very short growing season (60 days), low precipitation. Location: Arctic regions, high Himalayas (Ladakh). Adaptation: Cushion plants — grow low (avoid freezing wind); long roots reach deep nutrients; mosses and lichens dominate (most flowering plants can't survive).
Q3HARD· Ecosystem Disruption
The Sariska Tiger Reserve in Rajasthan lost ALL its tigers by 2005 due to poaching, despite being a protected area. Using the concepts of food chain, food web, and ecosystem stability, explain: (a) what happens to the ecosystem when apex predators are removed, (b) why food webs are more stable than simple food chains, and (c) what conservation strategy can restore apex predator populations.
Show solution
(a) **Removing apex predators — Trophic Cascade**: Tigers (top predators) control deer and nilgai (herbivore) populations. Without tigers: → Deer/nilgai populations explode (no predation pressure) → Herbivores overgraze the forest understory and grass layer → Grasses, shrubs, and tree seedlings are consumed faster than they regenerate → Forest cover declines → soil erosion increases → water bodies silt up → Secondary consumers (wolves, leopards) that depended on the same prey may also decline This is a **trophic cascade** — removing one species at the top restructures the entire ecosystem below. Yellowstone's wolf reintroduction (1995) demonstrated this: without wolves, elk had overgrazed riverbanks, causing erosion; with wolves restored, vegetation recovered and rivers became more stable. (b) **Food web stability**: In a simple food chain (grass → deer → tiger), if deer disease kills 80% of deer, tigers starve immediately. In a food WEB, tigers also eat wild boar, peacock, and smaller mammals. If deer decline, tigers shift prey. The redundancy of multiple connections buffers against species loss — this is called **functional redundancy**. Ecosystems with complex food webs (high biodiversity) are more resilient to disturbance than simple chains. (c) **Conservation strategy — source-sink reintroduction**: Sariska used **translocation from Ranthambore** — tigers were relocated from a healthy 'source' population to the depleted 'sink' reserve. Key steps: (i) Eliminate poaching: patrol density increased; villages near core zone relocated with compensation. (ii) Restore prey base: herbivore numbers monitored; vegetation managed to support deer. (iii) Reduce human-wildlife conflict: livestock loss compensated immediately — removes incentive for retaliatory killing. (iv) Genetic diversity: bring tigers from different source populations to prevent inbreeding in small populations. By 2024, Sariska has ~30 tigers — a conservation success demonstrating that ecosystem restoration is possible with sustained effort.

5-minute revision

The whole chapter, distilled. Read this the night before the exam.

  • Biosphere: zone where lithosphere + hydrosphere + atmosphere overlap; extends from ocean trenches (~11km depth) to ~6–8km altitude
  • Ecosystem = Abiotic (sunlight, water, minerals, temperature) + Biotic (Producers/T1, Primary consumers/T2, Secondary consumers/T3, Apex predators/T4, Decomposers)
  • Lindeman's 10% Rule: energy at each trophic level = 10% of previous level. 10,000 → 1,000 → 100 → 10 → 1 kcal. Reason: 90% lost as heat, metabolic activity, respiration
  • Major biomes pole-to-equator: Tundra → Taiga → Temperate Deciduous → Temperate Grassland → Mediterranean → Desert → Savanna → Tropical Rainforest
  • Decomposers: bacteria + fungi. NOT in food chain. Break down dead matter → recycle nutrients to producers. Detritus food chain = separate from grazing food chain
  • Trophic cascade: removing apex predator → prey population explodes → overgrazing → vegetation loss → whole ecosystem restructures

CBSE marks blueprint

Where the marks come from in this chapter — so you can plan your prep.

Typical chapter weightage: 5-6 marks

Question typeMarks eachTypical countWhat it tests
Short Answer (SA)31-2Define ecosystem; construct a food chain with 4 trophic levels; apply 10% rule to calculate energy at each level; identify biome from climate description
Long Answer (LA)5-61Compare biomes (climate, vegetation, adaptations); explain food web vs food chain; discuss human impact on ecosystems with examples; ecosystem services
Prep strategy
  • The 10% energy rule is a guaranteed calculation — always apply it correctly: divide by 10 at each trophic level. A 4-trophic-level chain starting at 10,000 kcal ends at 1 kcal. The implication (why meat is inefficient food) is a common application question.
  • Biome identification questions give you 2-3 climate clues and ask you to name the biome. Practice the matrix: high temp + high rain = tropical rainforest; low temp + low rain = tundra; high temp + low rain = desert. Write this matrix in your rough work during exam.
  • For India-specific connections: Thar Desert (hot desert biome), Ladakh (cold desert/tundra), Western Ghats (tropical rainforest), Himalayan middle zone (temperate deciduous/coniferous). Examiners love questions that connect global biome theory to India.

Where this shows up in the real world

This chapter isn't just an exam topic — it lives in the world around you.

Project Tiger and Ecosystem Restoration

Project Tiger (1973) was India's first major ecosystem restoration programme. It didn't just protect tigers — it protected entire forest ecosystems. India now has 53 tiger reserves covering 75,000 km² of forest. Tiger population grew from 1,827 (2014) to 3,167 (2022 census). The tiger is an 'umbrella species' — protecting it protects the entire food web below it.

Coral Reef Bleaching

Coral reefs are among the most biodiverse ecosystems (25% of all marine species). Rising ocean temperatures (by 1–2°C) cause coral bleaching — corals expel the symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) that give them colour and provide 90% of their nutrition. Without algae, corals die. India's Lakshadweep and Andaman reefs have experienced bleaching. This chapter's ecosystem concepts explain WHY bleaching is catastrophic — the entire reef food web collapses without the coral base.

Exam strategy

Battle-tested tips from teachers and toppers for this chapter.

  1. Energy flow questions ALWAYS require a diagram or table — show trophic levels with energy values. Don't write a paragraph; write the chain with numbers at each level
  2. When comparing biomes: 4 criteria structure = climate (temperature + rainfall) + vegetation type + animal adaptations + Indian example. This 4-part structure turns a vague essay into a focused answer
  3. Decomposer questions are frequently tricky — state clearly that decomposers are NOT a trophic level in the GRAZING food chain, but form the base of a separate DETRITUS food chain. This distinction earns full marks

Going beyond the textbook

For olympiad aspirants and curious learners — topics that build on this chapter.

  • Study the Gaia Hypothesis (James Lovelock, 1972): Earth's biota collectively regulate the environment (temperature, atmospheric composition, ocean salinity) to maintain conditions suitable for life. This is controversial scientifically — research the evidence for and against
  • Keystone species concept: some species have disproportionate impact on ecosystem structure relative to their biomass. Sea otters control sea urchin populations; without otters, urchins devastate kelp forests. Identify India's keystone species (tigers in forests; elephants as 'ecosystem engineers')

Where else this chapter is tested

CBSE board isn't the only one — other exams test this chapter too.

CBSE Class 11 BoardHigh
CUET GeographyHigh
UPSC Prelims + Mains (GS-3: Environment, Biodiversity)Very High

Questions students ask

The real ones — pulled from the Q&A community and tutor sessions.

The 10% energy rule limits chain length. Starting with 10,000 kcal: Level 5 receives only 1 kcal. At 6 levels, only 0.1 kcal — too little energy to support a viable organism population. This fundamental energy constraint explains why apex predators are always rare (lions, tigers, eagles) — they get tiny fractions of the original solar energy captured by plants.

Ecosystem services are benefits humans receive from ecosystems for FREE: pollination (bees pollinate ₹2.5 lakh crore worth of Indian crops annually), water purification (wetlands filter groundwater), flood control (mangroves absorb storm surges), climate regulation (forests absorb CO₂), soil formation (decomposers create agricultural soil). If we had to buy these services commercially, the cost would exceed global GDP. Protection of ecosystems is therefore economically rational — not just a moral choice.
Verified by the tuition.in editorial team
Last reviewed on 27 May 2026. Written and reviewed by subject-matter experts — read about our process.
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