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Transcript
Limits on Energy
Transfer and
Ecological
Pyramids
SNC1P1
Findlay
Learning Goals and Success Criteria
I
will learn about the limits on energy transfer in an
ecosystem.
 I can produce an ecological pyramid to represent
the energy transfer within an ecosystem.
Trophic Levels
 One
way to group living things is by the amount of
energy they gain from their food.
 Trophic Level – the position that an organism
occupies in its food chain
 You can determine to what trophic level an
organism belongs by looking at its food chain:
spruce tree
→
deer
→
wolf
Limits on Energy Transfer
 Energy
is constantly being changed from one
form to another in an ecosystem.
 Consider:
spruce tree → deer → wolf
 Energy
transfer starts when plants convert light to
sugar. However not all the chemical energy that
a plant creates is available to the animal that eats
it. WHY?
Limits on Energy Transfer
 The
tree needs and uses some of that energy to
stay alive and grow
 The deer does not eat all parts of the tree
 Therefore,
only about 10% of the energy that the
tree creates is available to the deer.
 Even


less energy is available to the wolf because:
The deer uses energy to grow, look for food, hide
from predators, mate, and feed its young
The wolf does not eat the fur or hooves of the deer
Limits on Energy Transfer
 On
average, only 10% of the energy available at
one trophic level will be passed on to the next.
 The
further up a food chain you travel, the less
energy that is available. This sets a limit on the
number of trophic levels in a food chain.
Ecological Pyramids
 Graphs
called pyramids can be used to represent
energy flow in food chains – allows us to compare
ecosystems.
 Pyramid

of Energy
measures the amount of energy available at each
trophic level
Ecological Pyramids
Ecological Pyramids
 Pyramid


 If
of Numbers
counts the number of organisms at each trophic
level
usually same shape as pyramid of energy – WHY?
there’s less energy available at higher levels,
fewer organisms can be supported. The snake
has to eat 10 mice to gain just as much energy
that one mouse gained from 1 insect.
Ecological Pyramids
 Pyramid

of Biomass
the mass of dry tissues in plants and animals at each
trophic level