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Objectives

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Explain how energy transfer in a food web is more complex than energy transfer in ... communities of worms, clams, crabs, mussels, and barnacles, exist in total ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Objectives


1
Objectives
  • Describe how energy is transferred from the sun
    or other energy sources to producers and then to
    consumers
  • Describe how consumers depend on producers
  • List and identify types of consumers
  • Explain how energy transfer in a food web is more
    complex than energy transfer in a food chain
  • Explain why an energy pyramid is a representation
    of trophic levels

2
What is made out of the following ingredients?
  • ½ bathtub of oxygen
  • 50 glasses of water
  • ½ cup sugar
  • ½ cup calcium
  • 1/10th thimbleful of salt
  • a small pinch of assorted elements such as
    phosphorus, potassium, nitrogen, sulfur,
    magnesium, and iron
  • a mystery ingredient

What is the mystery ingredient?
Where does that energy come from?
Where does the energy in food come from?
3
Life Depends on the Sun
  • Almost every living organism gets its energy from
    the sun.
  • Energy from the sun enters an ecosystem when
    plants use sunlight to make sugar molecules.
  • This happens through a process called
    photosynthesis.

4
Life Depends on the Sun
  • Photosynthesis is the process by which plants,
    algae, and some bacteria use sunlight, carbon
    dioxide, and water to produce carbohydrates and
    oxygen.

5
From Producers to Consumers
  • Because plants make their own food, they are
    called producers.
  • A producer is an organism that can make organic
    molecules from inorganic molecules.
  • Producers are also called autotrophs, or
    self-feeders.
  • Examples?

6
From Producers to Consumers
  • Organisms that get their energy by eating other
    organisms are called consumers.
  • A consumer is an organism that eats other
    organisms or organic matter instead of producing
    its own nutrients or obtaining nutrients from
    inorganic sources.
  • Consumers are also called heterotrophs, or
    other-feeders.
  • Examples?

7
From Producers to Consumers
  • Most producers get their energy directly from the
    sun by absorbing it through their leaves.
  • Consumers get their energy indirectly by eating
    producers or other consumers.

8
An Exception to the Rule
  • Deep-ocean communities of worms, clams, crabs,
    mussels, and barnacles, exist in total darkness
    on the ocean floor, where photosynthesis cannot
    occur.
  • Mr. Holtien, show the clip!
  • The producers in this environment are bacteria
    that use hydrogen sulfide (H2S) or methane (CH4)
    present in the water. (Chemosynthesis)
  • Other underwater organisms eat the bacteria or
    the organisms that eat the bacteria.

9
Chemosynthesis
10
What Eats What?
  • Organisms can be classified by what they eat.
  • Types of Consumers
  • Herbivores
  • Carnivores
  • Omnivores
  • Decomposers
  • Definition and Examples of each?

11
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12
Burning the Fuel
  • An organism obtains energy from the food it eats.
  • This food must be broken down within its body.
  • The process of breaking down food to yield energy
    is called cellular respiration.

13
Burning the Fuel
  • Cellular Respiration is the process by which
    cells produce energy from carbohydrates
    atmospheric oxygen combines with glucose to form
    water and carbon dioxide.
  • Cellular respiration occurs inside the cells of
    most organisms.

14
Burning the Fuel
  • During cellular respiration, cells absorb oxygen
    and use it to release energy from food.
  • Through cellular respiration, cells use glucose
    (sugar) and oxygen to produce carbon dioxide,
    water, and energy.

15
What is the relationship between photosynthesis
and cellular respiration?
16
Does all of the energy you consume through food
get stored in your body?
  • About 10 of the food you eat is stored as
  • Cells (bone, muscle, fat, other tissue)
  • Reproductive tissues (sperm, eggs, children)
  • About 90 of the food you eat is used or lost as
  • Locomotion
  • Breathing
  • Body waste
  • Body heat

17
Energy Transfer
  • Each time an organism eats another organism, an
    energy transfer occurs.
  • This transfer of energy can be traced by studying
    food chains, food webs, and trophic levels.

18
Food Chains
  • A food chain is a sequence in which energy is
    transferred from one organism to the next as each
    organism eats another organism.

19
Food Chains
What happens to the amount of organisms at each
level as you move up the food chain?
What happens to the total amount of energy as you
move up the food chain?
20
Food Webs
  • Ecosystems, however, almost always contain more
    than one food chain.
  • A food web shows many feeding relationships that
    are possible in an ecosystem.

21
Food Webs
What is more realistic a food chain or food web?
22
Trophic Levels
  • Each step in the transfer of energy through a
    food chain or food web is known as a trophic
    level.
  • A trophic level is one of the steps in a food
    chain or food pyramid examples include
  • Producers
  • Primary consumers
  • Secondary consumers
  • Tertiary consumers

23
Trophic Levels in an Energy Pyramid
24
Which level contains the greatest amount of
individual organisms?
25
Which level contains the smallest amount of
energy?
26
Can there be unlimited trophic levels in an
ecosystem?
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