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Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

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Page 1: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Feeding Relationships

Food ChainsFood Webs

Trophic Levels10% RuleBiomass

Page 2: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Food ChainFood chainA series of steps in an ecosystem in which organisms transfer energy by eating and by being eaten.

The sun is the original energy source for producers, but consumers rely on carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids for energy from the food they eat.

Page 3: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

The arrows in a food chain show the flow of energy from the sun or hydrothermal vent to a top predator

Check Point:

Explain the significance of the arrow direction in a food chain

Page 4: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Food WebsFood WebNetwork of complex of feeding relationships.

A food web links all the food chains in an ecosystem together.

Page 5: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Draw Food Chain and Food Web

Page 6: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Trophic LevelsA step in a food chain or web is called a trophic level

Page 7: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Trophic Levels

Each consumer depends on the trophic level below for energy

Autotroph

Organism that is able to capture energy from sunlight or chemicals and make their own food.

Ex. Plant and Algae

Heterotroph

Organism that obtains food by consuming other living things, also called a consumer.

Ex. Lion and human

Page 8: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Autotrophs &Heterotrophs

SunAutotrophHeterotroph

Primary producers are autotrophs

Consumers are heterotrophs

Primary Producer Primary ConsumerSecondary Consumer

Tertiary ConsumerQuaternary Consumer

Page 9: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Food Web Analysis

Are there any primary consumers that can also be a secondary consumer?What would happen to the food web if –

A) The harvest mice where to die off in the area?

B) The algae died?

C) The grasshopper died?

Page 10: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Food Web

Food web Explains all of the feeding relationships at each trophic level in a community.

A food web is more realistic than a food chain since most organisms feed on more that one organism.

Page 11: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Food Web Example

Grass & Seeds

Grasshopper

American Kestrel Loggerhead Shrike

Cricket

Shrew

SparrowDeer Mouse

Cooper’s Hawk

Page 12: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Food Web Activity

Page 13: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

10% Rule

As energy is transferred from one trophic level to the next 90% of the energy is lost as heat to the environment

Why do we call it the 10 % rule?Only 10% of the available energy is transferred to the next trophic level

Page 14: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

• New 10 % rule diagram so students can model their own

Page 15: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

10% Rule

• Have the students create a diagram

Page 16: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Ecological Pyramids

• Ecological pyramids – show the relationships in food chains and food webs

• The bottom of the food pyramid represents the producers, the next level the herbivores, the next the 1st carnivore, and the next and/or top carnivore.

Producer

Herbivore

Carnivore

Page 17: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass
Page 18: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass
Page 19: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass
Page 20: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Ecological Pyramids

•Ecologists recognize three different types of ecological pyramids:•energy pyramids

•biomass pyramids

•pyramids of numbers

Page 21: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Energy Pyramid

• Energy Pyramid- Shows the relative amount of energy at each trophic level.

Page 22: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Energy Pyramid

Page 23: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Biomass Pyramid

•Biomass- The total amount of living organic matter at each trophic level.

Page 24: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Biomass Pyramid

Page 25: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Pyramid of Numbers

• Pyramid of numbers- Shows the relative number of individual organisms at each trophic level.

Page 26: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Pyramid of Numbers

Page 27: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

What is Ecology?

Ecology- The study of organisms and how they interact with their environment. (includes both biotic and abiotic factors).

Page 28: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

What is an Ecosystem?

Ecosystem- A collection of the organisms that live in a particular place together with their nonliving or physical environment.

Page 29: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Biotic & Abiotic Factors

Biotic factors – the biological influences on an organism within an ecosystem, the living cast of living characters.

Page 30: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Biotic v. Abiotic Factors

Abiotic factors – physical or non living factors that influence an ecosystem.

Page 31: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Levels of Organization within an Ecosystem

The study of ecology ranges from the study of individual organisms to the study of the entire biosphere.

1. Species (Individual)2. Population3. Community4. Ecosystem5. Biome 6. Biosphere

Page 32: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Levels of Organization

1. A species is a group of organisms that can breed and produce fertile offspring. (ex: black bears)

2. A population is a group of individuals that belong to the same species and live in the same area (ex: all the black bears in Yellowstone Park)

Page 33: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Levels of Organization

3. A community is a group of different populations that live together in a defined area. Exp. lions and tigers and bears living in the same area

4. A ecosystem is a collection of all the organisms that live in a particular place, together with their physical environment

Page 34: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Levels of Organization

5. A biome is a group of ecosystems that have the same climate and dominant communities.

6. A biosphere is the parts of the earth in which life exists, including land, water, air and atmosphere.

Page 35: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Ecology: Levels of Organization

Page 36: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

The Niche

An organisms' niche is the full range of physical and biological conditions in which the organism lives and the way in which it uses those conditions.

Page 37: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

The Niche

A organisms niche includes - the type of food it consumes - how it obtains food - physical conditions necessary to survive- the organism's reproductive pattern

Page 38: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

Niche v. Habitat

An organisms habitat is where it lives. An organisms niche is how it lives.

Page 39: Feeding Relationships Food Chains Food Webs Trophic Levels 10% Rule Biomass

No two species can share the No two species can share the same niche in the same same niche in the same habitat.habitat.

Bay-Breasted WarblerFeeds in the middlepart of the tree

Spruce treeYellow-Rumped WarblerFeeds in the lower part of the tree andat the bases of the middle branches

Cape May WarblerFeeds at the tips of branchesnear the top of the tree