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Trophic Levels & Ecological Pyramids June 20, 2022 Energy Flow in Ecosystems 1

Trophic Levels & Ecological Pyramids

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Trophic Levels & Ecological Pyramids. Trophic Levels. Each step in a food chain or food web is called a trophic level. Primary producers always make up the first trophic level. Various consumers occupy every other level. Some examples are shown. Energy Flow. Trophic Levels. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Trophic Levels  &  Ecological Pyramids

Trophic Levels &

Ecological Pyramids

April 20, 2023Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Page 2: Trophic Levels  &  Ecological Pyramids

Trophic Levels

Each step in a food chain or food web is called a trophic level. Primary producers always make up the first trophic level. Various consumers occupy every other level. Some examples

are shown.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

Page 3: Trophic Levels  &  Ecological Pyramids

Trophic Levels

Producers

Quaternary Consumers

Tertiary Consumers

Secondary Consumers

Primary Consumers

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Ecological Pyramids

Ecological pyramids show the relative amount of energy or matter contained within each trophic level in a given food chain or food web.

There are three different types of ecological pyramids: pyramids of energy, pyramids of biomass, and pyramids of numbers

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Ecological Pyramids

1. What do the three types of ecological pyramids illustrate?

Pyramids of energy show the relative amount of energy available at each trophic level.

A pyramid of biomass illustrates the relative amount of living organic matter at each trophic level.

A pyramid of numbers shows the relative number of individual organisms at each trophic level in an ecosystem.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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1. Pyramids of Energy

There is theoretically no limit to the number of trophic levels in a food web or the number of organisms that live on each level.

However, only a small portion of the energy that passes through any given trophic level is ultimately stored in the bodies of organisms at the next level.

Organisms expend much of the energy they acquire on life processes, such as respiration, movement, growth, and reproduction.

Most of the remaining energy is released into the environment as heat—a byproduct of these activities.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Pyramids of Energy

On average, about 10 percent of the energy available within one trophic level is transferred to the next trophic level (trophic efficiency)

The more levels that exist between a producer and a consumer, the smaller the percentage of the original energy from producers that is available to that consumer.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Tertiary consumers

Secondary consumers

Primary consumers

Producers

10 kcal

100 kcal

1,000 kcal

10,000 kcal

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

Pyramids of Energy

Page 9: Trophic Levels  &  Ecological Pyramids

Advantages Takes into account the PRODUCTIVITY Addresses the fact that weight for weight, two species do not

necessarily have the same energy contentDisadvantages

Very difficult to obtain data Destructive Problems identifying trophic level

Pyramids of energy

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

Page 10: Trophic Levels  &  Ecological Pyramids

2. Pyramids of Biomass

The total amount of living tissue within a given trophic level is called its biomass.

The amount of biomass a given trophic level can support is determined, in part, by the amount of energy available.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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2. Pyramids of Biomass

Illustrates the relative amount of living organic matter at each trophic level.

Indicates the total dry mass of the organisms in each trophic level

Typically, the greatest biomass is at the base of the pyramid, as is seen in the field ecosystem modeled here.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Pyramids of Biomass

How might this data be collected?

a) Individual organisms weighed and counted.

b) Dry mass should be compared to eliminate errors due to water content

Advantages The data is more accurate. Eliminates misleading

problems of producer size differences

Disadvantages Laborious and expensive Destructive Can also be misleading in

some circumstances

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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3. Pyramids of Numbers

A pyramid of numbers shows the relative number of individual organisms at each trophic level in an ecosystem.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

Log numbers

Producers

Herbivores

1st level Carnivore

2nd level carnivore

3rd level carnivore

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3. Pyramids of Numbers

In most ecosystems, the shape of the pyramid of numbers is similar to the shape of the pyramid of biomass for the same ecosystem, with the numbers of individuals on each level decreasing from the level below it.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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3. Pyramids of Numbers

In some cases, however, consumers are much smaller than organisms they feed upon.

Thousands of insects may graze on a single tree, for example. The tree has a lot of biomass, but represents only one organism.

In such cases, the pyramid of numbers may be turned upside down, but the pyramid of biomass usually still has the normal orientation.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

numbers

Producers

herbivores

1st level carnivore

2nd level carnivore

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Advantage Data relatively easy to collect using simple

sampling

Disadvantages Producers vary in size Large range of numbers Trophic level difficult to work out

Pyramids of Number

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Associated terms with energy production and energy flow.

Primary production: Fixation of energy by autotrophs in an ecosystem.

Rate of primary production: Amount of energy fixed over a given period of time.

Gross primary production (GPP): Total amount of energy fixed by autotrophs.

Net primary production (NPP): Amount of energy leftover after autotrophs have met their

metabolic needs.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Primary Productivity in Ecosystems

Gross primary productivity (GPP)• The rate at which an ecosystem's producers capture and store a

given amount of chemical energy as biomass in a given length of time.

Net primary productivity (NPP)• Rate at which all the plants in an ecosystem produce net useful

chemical energy; equal to the difference between the rate at which the plants in an ecosystem produce useful chemical energy (gross primary productivity) and the rate at which they use some of that energy through cellular respiration.

• (NPP = GPP – Respiration)

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Coral reefs and Marine ecosystems have the highest primary productivity?

WHY?Highest rates of primary production by marine

phytoplankton are generally concentrated in areas with higher levels of nutrient availability.

Highest rates found along continental margins. Nutrient run-off from land. Sediment disturbance

Open ocean tends to be nutrient poor. Vertical mixing main nutrient source.

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Terrestrial primary production generally increases with moisture and temperature

•Rosenwitz studied net primary production across biomes

•Compare NPP to actual evapotranspiration

What controls primary productivity?

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems

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Terrestrial and aquatic primary production is also limited by nutrient availability

What controls primary productivity?

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Energy Flow in Ecosystems