bioproduktivitet
Bioproduktivitet is a term used in ecology to describe the rate at which living organisms produce biomass within an ecosystem. It encompasses both primary production, the creation of organic matter by photosynthetic organisms such as plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, and secondary production, the biomass produced by consumers and decomposers. In practice, bioproduktivitet is often expressed as the amount of carbon fixed or biomass formed per unit area per time, such as grams of carbon per square meter per year (g C m^-2 yr^-1).
Primary productivity is commonly described in terms of gross primary production (GPP) and net primary production
Measurement methods include biomass harvests, measurements of soil and plant respiration, eddy covariance techniques, and satellite-based
Applications and significance of bioproduktivitet include understanding carbon cycling, climate regulation, and ecosystem services. It informs
Relation to related terms: primary productivity refers specifically to autotrophs, while secondary productivity concerns heterotrophs. Bioproduktivitet