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Investigation 5, Part 4Trophic Levels
Warm upDefine producers, consumers and
decomposers.Organisms that make their own food are
producers.Organisms that eat other organisms are called
consumers.Dead organisms are broken down and
consumed by microorganisms called decomposers.
ReviewWhat is food?
Energy rich substances like starch and sugar.Where is food made?
In producer organisms that engage in photosynthesis like plants and algae.
Where is food used in the food web?Every organism uses food including producers,
consumers and decomposers.What is the point of consuming food?
To obtain the energy needed for life.
Mono LakeRevisit your webs with your groups again.Lay your cards out with producers at the
bottom, the primary consumers, etc.
Questions/Mono LakeHow does energy enter the Mono Lake ecosystem?
Sunlight captured by the algae during photosynthesis.How else? (This one is tricky!)
Migratory birds.Do migratory birds bring in energy or do they take it out?
They have more mass when they leave, so they take it out.Algae manufacture food. What happens to the food made
by the algae?Some is used by the algae, some by the primary consumers
that eat the algae, the rest is used by decomposers.What happens to the energy eaten by the brine shrimp?
Some is used by the shrimp, some by the consumers that eat them, some to decomposers. (Waste and dead shrimp.)
Trophic LevelsThe levels in a food web are called trophic levels.Energy enters the food web in the form of sugars and
other energy rich chemicals made by producers.When primary consumers eat the producers the
energy is transferred to the next trophic level. And so on……The names we have been using for roles in the
ecosystem are the names of the trophic levels. As you move from producers up through the
consumers, each trophic level gets farther away from the origional source, which is usually light from the Sun.
Energy LevelsLook at your web.Take a few minutes to trace the movement of energy
through the trophic levels in your web.
Energy should start at the Sun, transfer to food in one of the producers, move from organism to organism through the trophic levels and end up at decomposers where it passes to the environment.
A short energy path might be: Sun- planktonic algae-decomposer-environment.
A long path might be: Sun-benthic algae-brine fly-snowy plover-California gull-coyote-decomposer-environment.
Energy Transfer QuestionIs all the energy consumed by a primary
consumer, such as a brine shrimp, transferred to the secondary consumer, like a gull, when the brine shrimp is eaten?
Example: A brine shrimp eats 10 g of algae in it’s life before the gull eats it, does the gull get 10 g of food energy when it eats the brine shrimp?
Discuss with a partner next to you. Think of this question as we read Tropic
Levels.
ReadPage 20: Energy TransferWhat is the basic idea of this section?
Most of the energy that is consumed at one trophic level is NOT incorporated into new biomass at that trophic level.
Most of the food consumed is used by the organisms to run the machinery of life. Things like digesting food, moving, pumping blood, producing offspring, etc….
Only about 10% of the energy consumed at a trophic level is incorporated into the body tissue or offspring at the level. Only 10% of the food energy consumed at one trophic level is available for food for the next level.
Write this information in your journal.
10% IdeaWe have not considered this rule when
looking at Mono Lake.Based on the 10% rule, could you have an
ecosystem in which there lived 100 kg of algae, 100 kg of brine shrimp, and 100 kg of California gulls?No
Make a Food ChainIn your journal, make one Mono Lake food
chain, (not the whole web) showing the use of food (energy) and the production of biomass a each level.
Use the picture on page 19 as a model.
Biomass ModelsI have cups with colored beads. Each bead
represents 1 kg of biomass in Mono Lake. (One bead is not one organism.)
Different colors represent different organisms.
We can use these beads to make a physical representation of the trohpic levels in Mono Lake.
What Color?Dark Green: Benthic algaeLight Green: Planktonic algaeRed: Brine shrimpBlack: Brine fliesGray: California gulls
Try ItOne red bead represents?
1 kg of brine shrimp.What are brine shrimp going to eat?
Planktonic algae.Using the 10% rule, you need to now put enough algae on
your pipe cleaner to feed your 1 kg of shrimp.Lets see them? Did you get it right? How many beads did
you put on?10!That represents the 10 kg of algae biomass that your brine
shrimp consumed to produce your 1 kg brine shrimp biomass.
10%...remember?
ChallengeConstruct 1 kg of gull biomass.What do California gulls eat?
Brine shimp and brine flies.Can you show how much biomass went into
producing a kg of California gull biomass with the beads in your cup?You will need to show not only the gull
biomass, and the food they eat (brine flies and shrimp) but the algae (both kinds) the brine shrimp and flies eat as well.
Wrap Up:Does a healthy ecosystem produce the same
amount of biomass at each level?No
If the amount of biomass varies, which trophic level has the most biomass? Why?The greatest biomass has to be in the
producers. They are the foundation of the food web. The
more producers, the more primary consumers, etc.
Wrap Up:If brine shrimp eat 10 kg of algae to produce 1 kg
of brine shrimp biomass, where does the other 9 kg of biomass go?Biomass is consumed for energy to run the processes
of life. 90% is converted into energy, simple chemicals (carbon dioxide and water) and waste.
What happens to an ecosystem if one population fails?Populations at trophic levels higher than the failure
might experience stress or failure due to lack of food. Populations at lower trophic levels might thrive if
there are less predators.