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Organisms such as plants and animals need energy for growth, movement and reproduction. They get this in the form of nutrients from the food they eat.The main source of energy for life on earth is the sun. The sun provides energy to producers that use photosynthesis to grow and become food for consumers.Consumers include herbivores, carnivores and omnivores. Decomposers break down discarded plant and animal (organic) materials into simpler substances, whichreturns nutrients to the soil and atmosphere for new plants to use to grow.
A food chain is a series of nutrients and energy moving through a chain of organisms. Below is an example of a simple food chain in a grassland. Thearrows show the movement of energy from one organism to another.
IMAGES sourced from: http://www.flickr.com/photos/blueridgekitties/4625665988/sizes/o/in/photostream/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/zest-pk/924783392/sizes/m/in/photostream/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/e3000/5922771249/sizes/l/in/photostream/
Can you trace a food chain of the vegetables, fruit, cheese, eggs or meat that you had for breakfast or will have for dinner?
A food web is made up of a number of food chains. It represents the different feeding relationships in an ecosystem or a biome. It is usually morecomplicated than a food chain because organisms can get their energy or food from more than one source. The presence of a number of food sources makes thesystem more stable. If one organism is removed, the whole system will not collapse, unlike in a single food chain.
(image source: http://per8eocreview.wikispaces.com/ )
(source: http://www.oercommons.org/courses/got-energy-spinning-a-food-web/view)
The trophic level of an organism is the position it holds in a food chain and depends on how much energy it consumes or produces. The trophic level of eachorganism can be drawn as a pyramid starting with the producers at the bottom and moving up through the food chain.
The organism at the bottom gives the most energy and needs the least and the organism at the top needs the most energy and releases the least. Energy islost from activities at every level - through heat, egestion, urination andreproduction (pregnancy and egg-laying). This is why there is less and less energy as you move up the pyramid.
Producers, eg. Plants are on the first level, or bottom of the pyramid, because they produce their own nutrients using energy from the sun and therefore have alot of energy to pass on.
Primary Consumers, eg. Herbivores are on the second level because they feed off plants
Secondary Consumers, eg. Carnivores feed on herbivores so they get their energy from plants indirectly and are on the third level.
Tertiary Consumers, eg. Carnivores feed on organisms below them in the pyramid
(image source: http://per8eocreview.wikispaces.com/)
Figure 3. Food pyramid
Trophic levels can be drawn as a pyramid of numbers, where each level shows the number of organisms (look at figure 3). They can also contain the biomass of apopulation. The biomass is the mass of living organisms in an ecosystem.
Look at the food web and the diagram showing the different trophic levels.
(source: http://www.learner.org/courses/envsci/interactives/ecology/ )
VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TE6wqG4nb3M
This a catchy song about food chains to help you remember.
VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-YwW-iWxLr4&NR=1
Bill Nye the Science Guy talks about the Food Web
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