ECOLOGICAL PYRAMIDS and the Transfer of Energy in
- Slides: 19
ECOLOGICAL PYRAMIDS and the Transfer of Energy in Ecosystems Which animals are at each level? What type of ecological niche do they each belong to?
Ecological Pyramids: graphs which illustrate the trophic levels in a community.
Most ecological pyramids are large at the base and narrow at the top. This is because every time that an organism is eaten by the next trophic level, some of the energy is lost as heat. Less Energy More Energy
3 TYPES OF PYRAMIDS: 1. Pyramid of Biomass 2. Pyramid of Energy 3. Pyramid of Numbers
Pyramid of Biomass: • Illustrates the amount of biomass in each trophic level – Biomass weight is determined after dehydration • Shows the amount of matter lost between trophic levels. • Measured in Kg, grams or pounds
Pyramid of Biomass
Pyramid of Biomass One problem: They can make a trophic level look like it has more energy than it really does. For example: A bird has a beak, feathers and a skeleton that would count as biomass even though it does not contribute to the overall flow of energy into the next trophic level.
Pyramid of Energy: • Shows the energy available at each trophic level. – The size of the blocks represents the proportion of productivity – Measured in Joules or Calories
Pyramid of Energy: • Most of the energy available to the community is in the 1 st trophic level. • Only 10 -20% of the energy is available to the next trophic level (≈ 90% lost)
Pyramid of Numbers: • Illustration of the number of organisms at each level
What kind of Pyramid is this? Energy, the trophic levels are measured in Kilocalories
Human Population Growth How can more people be supported on Earth when there is a limited supply of resources? It depends on what they are eating…
Human Population Growth • It requires 10 times as many crops to feed animals being bred for meat consumption as it would to feed the same amount of people on a vegetarian diet!! • The US could feed 800 million people with the grain that livestock eat. US population: 303 million
So Remember! Ecological (Trophic) Pyramids show: ØEnergy transfer and more importantly energy loss in an ecosystem. ØWhy there are more herbivores than carnivores in an ecosystem. ØWhy there are more plants than everything else combined (they support all other populations).
Symbiosis • A close and permanent association between organisms of different species • Commensalism – a relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is not affected • Example: Barnacles on a 16
Symbiosis Types • Mutualism – a relationship in which both organisms benefit from each other • Example: Birds eating pest off a rhino’s back • Parasitism – A relationship in which one organism benefits and the other is harmed • Example: Ticks on a dog 17
Symbiosis Types • Competition - a relationship where both organisms compete for the same energy source • Example: a rabbit and a deer competing for grass, plants competing for light • Predation - a relationship where one organism preys upon another • Example: a wolf hunting a 18
The End or is it just the beginning…
- Transfer of energy pyramid
- Food chains, food webs and ecological pyramids
- Energy energy transfer and general energy analysis
- Energy energy transfer and general energy analysis
- Producers science
- Who coined ecosystem
- Biozone unit 1 and 2
- Food chains food webs and energy pyramid worksheet
- Food chain and food web examples
- A disturbance that transfers energy is called
- Archery objectives
- Energy storage and transfer model test answer key
- 10 energy rule
- Mechanical wave and electromagnetic wave
- Energy transfer in transverse waves
- Practice 10-6 volumes of pyramids and cones answers
- Volume of pyramids and cones calculator
- Finding the volume of cylinders pyramids cones and spheres
- Volume of a frustum of a pyramid
- 19-3 surface area of pyramids and cones