Trophic Levels in Ecosystem: Himalayan College
Trophic Levels in Ecosystem: Himalayan College
By
Heat
Decomposers Producers
(bacteria, fungus) (plants)
Consumers
(herbivores,
Heat carnivores) Heat
Biotic Components of
Detritivores vs Decomposers Ecosystems
Energy Flow and Matter Cycling in Ecosystems
Ecosystem has several interrelated mechanisms that affect human
life.
These are the water cycle, the carbon cycle, the oxygen cycle, the
nitrogen cycle and the energy cycle.
Every ecosystem is controlled by these cycles, in each ecosystem its
abiotic and biotic features are distinct from each other.
Functions of the ecosystem are in some way related to the growth
and regeneration of its plant and animal species. These linked
processes can be depicted as the various bio-geo chemical cycles.
These processes depend on energy from sunlight. Energy in natural
systems is transferred by heat, in form of energy.
It flows between two bodies as a result of their difference in
temperature, or by work, which is transfer of energy that does not
depend upon a temperature difference, as governed by the laws of
thermodynamics.
First Trophic Second Trophic Third Trophic Fourth Trophic
Level Level Level Level
Solar
energy
Heat Heat
Heat
Detritvores
(decomposers and detritus feeders)
2. Food Web: The word ‘web’ means network. Food web can be defined as ‘a
network of interconnected food chains so as to form a number of feeding
relationships amongst different organism of a biotic community.
A food chain cannot stand isolated in an ecosystem. The same food resource may
be a part of more than one chain. This is possible when the resource is at the lower
tropic level.
A food web comprises all the food chains in a single ecosystem. It is essential to
know that each living thing in an ecosystem is a part of multiple food chains.
A single food chain is the single possible path that energy and nutrients may
make while passing through the ecosystem. All the interconnected and
overlapping food chains in an ecosystem make up a food web.
Food Web
Food webs are significant tools in understanding that plants are the foundation
of all ecosystem and food chains, sustaining life by providing nourishment and
oxygen needed for survival and reproduction. The food web provides stability to
the ecosystem.
The tertiary consumers are eaten by quaternary consumers. For example, a
hawk that eats owls. Each food chain ends with a top predator and animal with no
natural enemies (such as an alligator, hawk, or polar bear).
Food chains/webs show how matter and energy move from one organism to
another through an ecosystem
Each trophic level contains a certain amount of biomass (dry weight of all
organic matter).
Chemical energy stored in biomass is transferred from one trophic level to the
next.
With each trophic level transfer, some usable energy is degraded and lost to
the environment as low quality heat .
Thus, only a small portion of what is eaten and digested is actually converted
into an organisms’ bodily material or biomass.
Ecological Efficiency: The % of usable energy transferred as biomass from
one trophic level to the next (ranges from 5-20% in most ecosystems, use 10%
as a rule of thumb). Thus, the more trophic levels or steps in a food chain, the
greater the cumulative loss of useable energy…
Pyramids of energy, biomass, and numbers
Pyramidal representation of trophic levels of different organisms
based on their ecological position (producer to final consumer) is
called as an ecological pyramid.
Pyramid consists of a number of horizontal bars depicting specific
trophic levels. The length of each bar represents the total number of
individuals or biomass or energy at each trophic level in an
ecosystem.
Producer forms the base of the pyramid.
Top carnivore forms the tip.
Other consumer trophic levels are in between.
The ecological pyramids are of three categories.
1. Pyramid of numbers,
2. Pyramid of biomass, and
3. Pyramid of energy or productivity.
Pyramid of Numbers
Collects all organisms occupying each trophic level separately and measuring
their dry weight.
Overcomes the size difference problem because all kinds of organisms at a
trophic level are weighed.
Each trophic level has a certain mass of living material at a particular time
called the standing crop.
Standing crop is measured as the mass of living organisms (biomass) or the
number in a unit area.
Pyramid of Biomass – upright
The pyramid has large base of primary producers with a smaller trophic level
perched on top.
Biomass of producers (autotrophs) is at the maximum.
Biomass of next trophic level i.e. primary consumers is less than the producers.
Biomass of next higher trophic level i.e. secondary consumers is less than the
primary consumers.
Top, high trophic level has very less amount of biomass.
Pyramid of Biomass – Inverted
In many aquatic ecosystems, the pyramid of biomass may assume an inverted
form. (In contrast, a pyramid of numbers for the aquatic ecosystem is upright).
This is because the producers are tiny phytoplankton that grows and reproduces
rapidly.
Pyramid of biomass has a small base, with the consumer biomass at any instant
exceeding the producer biomass and the pyramid assumes an inverted shape.
Pyramid of energy compare the functional roles of the trophic levels in an
ecosystem.
Energy pyramid represents the amount of energy at each trophic level and loss
of energy at each transfer to another trophic level. Hence the pyramid is always
upward, with a large energy base at the bottom.
Sun 1000 Calories Light Forest Ecosystem:
Energy
Most of the energy is not absorbed; some is reflected to space; From the energy
absorbed only a small portion is utilized by green plants, out of which the plant
uses up some for respiration such as 100 calories are stored as energy-rich
materials.
Deer eats plants containing 100 calories energy. Deer use some of it for its
metabolism and stores only 10 calories as food energy.
A lion that eats the deer gets an even smaller amount of energy. Thus, usable
energy decreases from sunlight to producer to herbivore to carnivore. Therefore,
the energy pyramid will always be upright.