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4.1 Roles of Living Things 1. Identify the roles of producers, consumers, and decomposers. 2. Explain the concept of trophic level. 3. Infer why the number of organisms at a given trophic level is smaller than in the preceding level. Roles of Living Things The organisms of most ecosystems gather food in three basic ways: as producers, consumers, or decomposers. Energy enters the ecosystem only at the level of the producer. All other organisms depend on the energy first captured by the producers. Producers Organisms that make their own food from inorganic molecules and energy are called producers. Plants are the most familiar producers. Almost all producers capture energy from the sun and use it to make food through photosynthesis. (The reactions of photosynthesis use the energy from sunlight to combine carbon dioxide and water to produce sugars). Photosynthesis 6H2O + 6CO2 ----------> C6H12O6+ 6O2 http://earthguide.ucsd.edu/earthguide/diagrams/photosynthesis/photosynthesis.html Producers Plants are the most important producers in terrestrial (land) ecosystems. In aquatic (water) ecosystems, small photosynthetic Protists and bacteria are the most important producers. Consumers Organisms that cannot make their own food are called consumers. All animals are consumers, as are fungi and many Protists and bacteria. Consumers obtain energy by eating other organisms. Consumers There are four basic kinds of consumers: 1. Organisms that eat only plants are called herbivores. Because only eat producers, scientists call them primary consumers. Many insects and birds are herbivores, as are grazing animals such as cows, buffalo, and antelope. The bodies of herbivores are adapted to gathering, grinding, and digesting plants. Consumers 2. Carnivores capture and eat herbivores or other carnivores. Carnivores that eat primary consumers are called secondary consumers, and those that eat other carnivores are called tertiary consumers. Lions are carnivores, as are snakes, hawks, and spiders. The bodies of carnivores are adapted to hunting, capturing, and eating prey. Consumers 3. Some consumers, including human beings, are omnivores, eating both producers and consumers. (bears and chimpanzees) Omnivores act as primary, secondary, or tertiary consumers depending on what they eat. A person who eats a potato acts as a primary consumer. If the same person eats a hamburger, however, the person acts as a secondary consumer. Consumers 4. Scavengers usually do not hunt living prey, but instead feed on the bodies of dead organisms. Scavengers will eat dead plants or feed on the bodies of herbivores, carnivores, or anything else they find. Like omnivores, scavengers act as secondary, tertiary, or higher consumers depending on what they eat. Vultures and hyenas are scavengers, as well as many insects. Scavengers start the process by which nutrients from dead bodies are returned to environment. Decomposers Bacteria and fungi that consume the bodies of dead organisms and other organic wastes are called decomposers. They consume a variety of dead organic matter, from the fallen leaves of a tree to the bodies of herbivores and carnivores. Bacteria and fungi also break down the organic matter in animal waste. Decomposers are crucial to the ecosystem because they recycle nutrients from organisms back into the environment. Trophic Levels Scientists call the different feeding levels of organisms in an ecosystem trophic levels. “troph” meaning to feed or nourish. A trophic level is a layer in the structure of feeding relationships in an ecosystem. Producers make up the first trophic level, and consumers make up several more trophic levels. Producers are called autotrophs, which are the sole point of entry for new energy into the ecosystem. Consumers called heterotrophs form the second and higher trophic levels in the ecosystem. Most ecosystems have three, four or five trophic levels depending on the levels below it. Trophic Level Trophic Level Trophic Levels 4.1 Homework Many places on the ocean floor are so deep that sunlight cannot penetrate. Because there is no sunlight in these places, there can be no photosynthesis. But the ocean floor still supports an ecosystem. How is this possible.