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Desert Ecosystem
Organisms which can be found in the desert ecosystem
Producers - organisms which get energy from sunlight and turn it into food energy- convert
inorganic chemical and use solar energy to generate chemical energy
Consumers (primary and secondary) - carnivores that consume animals or vegetation at the
trophic levels (position occupied in food chain) below them
Predators – the tertiary consumers (carnivores) which eat the secondary consumers at the lower
trophic level.
Desert examples:
The primary producers (autotrophs) are grasses, soil bacteria
The primary consumers (herbivores) are ants, bats, grasshoppers, ground squirrels
The secondary consumers (carnivores) are: scorpion
The tertiary consumers (carnivores) are eagles, mountain lions, fox, coyote, owl, roadrunner,
Name the organisms that can be found in your ecosystem.
Label major organisms that live in your selected ecosystem: P for producers, C for consumers,
and D for decomposers.
In addition to the simple listing on the diagram below, there are additional producers, consumers
and decomposers in a desert ecosystem.
cacti - P
snakes - C
lizards - C
maggots - D
fungi - D
insects - C
scorpion - C
rabbits - C
wild cats - C
dingoes - C
antelope - C
rodents (mice, rats) - C
deer - C
birds – C
grasses - P
trees - P
shrubs - P
wildflowers - P
tortoises – C
tarantulas – C
bacteria – D
earthworms – D
beetles – D
millipedes - D
Write a summary of your food web that:
· Addresses the following items:
1. Name of each plant or animal
2. How it obtains energy
3. What eats it
4. How it has adapted to the ecosystem
Name of Plant/
Animal
How it obtains
energy
What eats it
How it has adapted
to the ecosystem
Eagles
Snakes, lizards and
small reptiles,
squirrels and other
small rodents
Very few for adults ..
eggs and baby’s are
at risk from small
predators
Has keen sense of
vision to find food.
Sharp beak to break
bones of prey
Coyote
Lizards and small
reptiles, antelope and
other grazers
Generally none.
Large teeth to break
bones of prey, stealth
Mountain Lion
Antelope and other
grazers
Generally none.
Large teeth to break
bones of prey, speed
Badger
Squirrels and other
small rodents, lizards
and small reptiles,
snakes
Not common, but
eagles, mountain
lions, coyotes may
Large teeth to break
bones of prey
Snakes
Insects, small rodents
Eagles and hawks
Quick to strike, can go
long time without
eating
Lizards and small
reptiles
Insects
Snakes, birds and
some other mammals
Some can camouflage
into desert colors
Bat
Insects
Snakes, birds
Nocturnal for best
hunting
Squirrels and other
small rodents
Primary producers
Snakes, badger, eagle
Hiding places
Insects
Primary producers
Bats, lizards, small
reptiles
Bad taste, smell and
some secretions that
aren’t pleasant
Antelope and other
grazers
Primary producers
Coyote, mountain
lion
Fleet footed, travel in
herds
Sagebrush
Nutrients from the soil
Rabbits, insects and
small rodents
Shallow root system
Soil bacteria
Nutrients from
sunlight
Single celled
organisms
Meant to be eaten
Cacti
Nutrients from the soil
Insects some small
rodents
Spines
Desert wildflowers
Nutrients from the soil
Insects, desert rats,
seeds are eaten by
Seasonal
birds
Describes the major categories of organisms: producers, consumers, and decomposers.
Producers are organisms that are autotrophic. Thus they can create their own food from using the
sunlight. Desert systems have very few producers, but the ones that exist are sturdy and have
adapted to the harsh conditions. The producers are cacti, sage brush, wildflowers, and soil
bacteria. There are many consumers which must hunt to obtain their food and energy. In a desert
ecosystem, there are mammals eating reptiles and other mammals, reptiles and small mammals
eating rodents and insects. There are bats (mammals) which eat insects but do not have a
predator. The decomposers (maggots, worms, bacteria) dispose of the large mammals as well as
many of the other consumers and producers. The decomposers are found in the soils.
Describes the interactions between organisms in your ecosystem.
There are numerous interactions that take place in a desert. There are the typical types of
interactions that take place between predator and prey. There are three major types of symbiotic
relationships which exist:
Mutualism: Bats pollinate many of the cacti and agaves by ingesting the nectar in their flowers.
Commensalism: Some small snakes will take over an abandoned rodent holes.
Parasitism: As in any ecosystem, there is the chance for potential disease spread by insects or
other parasites.
Lists the abiotic (non-living) factors present in your ecosystem.
Extreme temperature variations, intense sunlight, lack of water, dry air. (temperature, sunlight,
water, air)
What are the benefits of the biodiversity found in your ecosystem?
The greatest benefit of biodiversity is that it promotes the health of the desert ecosystem as well
as the genetic diversity and thus favors a stable system. Although it seems that there is not a
substantial amount of life in deserts, this is not true. Deserts have high biodiversity. Many
animals in the desert are nocturnal which controls their need for moisture. Many plants have
developed a resistance to drought. Others have developed long tap roots to penetrate the water
table or developed a wide root system to maximize water absorption from a greater area.
Adaptations also allow some plants to lower the surface velocity of wind and thus protect the
ground from erosion. Additional biodiversity for erosion protection can also be seen in small
fungi and microscopic plant organisms which lie on the sand surface.
Evaluates potential hazards caused by humans that might affect your ecosystem’s stability,
such as environmental pollution. What effect does this hazard have on the biodiversity in
your ecosystem?
As with all ecosystems on the planet, survival of the ecosystem’s stability is being threatened by
a “combination of human exploitation and climate change” (Conner, paragraph 1). When an
ecosystem is threatened, species are lost, habitats are destroyed and weather patterns disrupted.
One ecosystem’s damage is not isolated, as the house of cards begins to fall and other
ecosystems are affected by the changes in the first.
Deserts are being threatened by loss of “underground aquifers and a poisoning of the soil by
salinization” (Conner, paragraph 4). Deserts are drying out. Twenty five percent of the Earth’s
land surface is desert and it would be ignorant to think that a loss of stability in the desert
ecosystems would not affect human habitats. Deserts and desert plants which have adapted to the
amount of water received from glacial melts will die when there is not enough melt to fill the
rivers and thus the underground water systems of the desert.
2: Research your ecosystem on the internet: what are the producers in the ecosystem (those
organisms which get energy from sunlight and turn it into food energy- plants and such).
Start with identifying your producers in your ecosystem.
Producers in a desert ecosystem are sagebrush, cacti, soil bacteria and desert wildflowers.
3: Identify the primary consumers: which organisms get their energy from the producers?
(clue: these will be herbivores since they eat the plants which get the energy originally from
the sunlight)
Primary consumers in a desert ecosystem are rodents, insects and grazing animals (i.e.antelope).
4: Identify the secondary consumers: these are the animals which are carnivores and eat
the primary consumers. They get their energy from consuming smaller creatures; ranging
from insects to rabbits and small birds.
Secondary consumers in a desert ecosystem are small mammals, snakes, lizards and other small
reptiles, and bats.
5: Identify your tertiary consumers: these are always those organisms which are the final
step in the food chain. They are the larger carnivores that nothing else eats, such as coyote,
fox, hawks, eagles, wolf and bears.
The tertiary consumers in a desert ecosystem are large cats (mountain lions), fox, coyote and
hunting birds such as eagles and raptors.
6: Now create your diagram of your food chain inserting and labeling your producers, your
primary consumers, your secondary consumers, and your tertiary consumers. Draw arrows from
each organism to the organism that consumes it
The organisms displayed in my food web from top trophic level to lowest trophic level are the
larger predators (eagle, coyote, mountain lion) which eat smaller predators (snake, lizard, small
reptiles). The eagle also eats a plant eater, the squirrel and other rodents. The coyote and
mountain lion also eat the antelope (plant eater, grazer). These smaller predators (badger, snakes,
lizards, small reptiles and bat) in turn eat plant eating primary consumers (squirrel, rodents,
insects). Some small predators eat each other, such as the badger which eats lizards and small
reptiles and snakes.
References
Connor, Steve, Desert life threatened by climate change and human exploitation, The
Independent, (June 5, 2006). Retrieved May 2013 from
http://www.independent.co.uk/environment/desert-life-threatened-by-climate-changeand-human-exploitation-481116.html
Food Web in the Sagebrush-Steppe Ecosystem (June 29, 2009), Diagram adapted from
http://www.gsseser.com/trial/colorbook/food_web.html