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Define and give examples of the following:

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Presentation on theme: "Define and give examples of the following:"— Presentation transcript:

1 Define and give examples of the following:
Bell Ringer: Define and give examples of the following: Autotroph Heterotroph Herbivore Omnivore Carnivore Decomposer

2 Feeding Relationships & Energy Flow

3 Feeding Relationships
There are 3 main types of feeding relationships 1. Producer - Consumer 2. Predator - Prey 3. Parasite - Host How do they trap the sun’s energy? Through what process? What is that process similar to in animal cells?

4 Feeding Relationships
Producer- all autotrophs (plants), they trap energy from the sun Bottom of the food chain How do they trap the sun’s energy? Through what process? What is that process similar to in animal cells?

5 Feeding Relationships
Consumer- all heterotrophs: they ingest food containing the sun’s energy Herbivores Carnivores Omnivores Decomposers Energy moves up the food chain through the producer/consumer relationship.

6 Feeding Relationships
CONSUMERS Primary consumers Eat plants Herbivores Secondary, tertiary … consumers Prey animals Carnivores or Omnivores Herbivores are the 1st step up the food chain, they eat the producers

7 Feeding Relationships
Consumer-Carnivores-eat meat Predators Hunt prey animals for food. Scavengers are a type of carnivore that eat dead animals, or carrion. Vultures, hyenas, crabs, deep sea fish-talk about distance from the sun and must eat the dead things that sink to the bottom, bottom feeders

8 Feeding Relationships
Consumer- Carnivores- eat meat Scavengers Feed on carrion, dead animals Scavengers are a type of carnivore that eat dead animals, or carrion. Vultures, hyenas, crabs, deep sea fish-talk about distance from the sun and must eat the dead things that sink to the bottom, bottom feeders

9 Feeding Relationships
Consumer- Omnivores -eat both plants and animals Humans and bears are omnivores but a large and important subset of omnivores are the decomposers. They breakdown dead producers and release the energy back into circulation.

10 Feeding Relationships
Consumer- Decomposers Breakdown the complex compounds of dead and decaying plants and animals into simpler molecules that can be absorbed Humans and bears are omnivores but a large and important subset of omnivores are the decomposers. They breakdown dead producers and release the energy back into circulation.

11 Label Your Organism: Producer, Herbivore, Carnivore, Omnivore, Decomposer, or Scavenger

12 Where would it go in our food web?
Nitrosomonas is a genus of bacteria and a decomposer in the coral reef. Where would it go in our food web?

13 Bellringer Draw a food chain with at least 5 organisms Must include:
1 producer 4 consumers (one must be a decomposer)

14 Energy Flow Food chain- simple model that shows how energy moves through an ecosystem in ONE direction The ARROW shows where the ENERGY goes!

15 Trophic Levels Each link in a food chain is known as a trophic level. Trophic levels represent a feeding step in the transfer of energy in an ecosystem.

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17 Energy Flow Food web- shows all possible feeding relationships in a community at each trophic level Represents a network of interconnected food chains Remember: ARROW = ENERGY

18 Trophic Levels Only 10% of the energy is able to be stored in the organisms tissues and transferred to the next trophic level. The rest of the energy was used by the organism for life processes or given off as heat.

19 Food chain Food web (just 1 path of energy) (all possible energy paths)

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24 Ecological Pyramids 3 Types: Biomass Pyramid Energy Pyramid
Amount of living tissue in an ecosystem Energy Pyramid Flow of energy in an ecosystem Pyramid of Numbers Number of organisms in each trophic level These 3 types may be combined!

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26 Biomass Biomass- the amount of organic matter comprising a group of organisms in a habitat. As you move up a food chain, both available energy AND biomass decrease. WHY???

27 Biomass Pyramid Note: Kilogram (Kg) is a unit of mass.

28 E N R G Y Energy Pyramid Producers- Autotrophs 0.1% 1% 10%
Heat E N R G Y 0.1% Tertiary consumers- top carnivores 1% Heat Secondary consumers-small carnivores Heat 10% Primary consumers- Herbivores 100% Producers- Autotrophs

29 Energy Pyramid Note: Joules (J) & Kilocalories (C) are units of energy

30 Pyramid of Numbers


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