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Food Chains and Food Webs

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Food Chains and Food Webs. Food Chain. A food chain is a sequence of organisms, each of which uses the next, lower member of the sequence as a food source Arrows go in the direction of energy flow. Food Chain. Food Chain. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Food Chains  and  Food Webs
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Food Chain• A food chain is a sequence of organisms, each

of which uses the next, lower member of the sequence as a food source

• Arrows go in the direction of energy flow

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Food Chain

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• In a food chain each organism obtains energy from the one at the level below

• Plants are called producers because they create their own food through photosynthesis

Food Chain

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• Animals are consumers because they CANNOT create their own food, they must eat plants or other animals to get the energy that they need

Food Chain

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• Bacteria and fungi that consume the bodies of dead organisms and other organic wastes are called decomposers

Food Chain

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Primary Producers of NJ Marshes

http://www.nicerweb.com/doc/class/pix/PRAIRIE/2005_07_18/Typha_angustifolia.jpg

Cattails

Marsh

Mallo

w

http://www.ncdot.org/doh/Operations/dp_chief_eng/roadside/wildflowerbook/graphics/images/page14a.jpg

http://www.ontariowildflower.com/images/blueflag2.jpg

Blu

e Flag

Iris

http://wisplants.uwsp.edu/scripts/detail.asp?SpCode=THEPALvPUB

Marsh

Fern

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Three Types of Consumers

• Herbivores: animals that eat only plants

• Carnivores: animals that eat only other animals

• Omnivores: animals that eat animals and plants

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Other Ways to Classify Consumers

1. Primary Consumers: Herbivores2. Secondary Consumers: Carnivores that eat

herbivores3. Tertiary Consumers: Carnivores that eat

other carnivores4. Quaternary Consumers: Carnivores that eat

carnivores that eat other carnivores

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Primary Consumers in Marshes

Muskrat (eats mostly Cattails)

http://www.advancedwildlifecontrolllc.com/images/muskrat.jpg

http://wdfw.wa.gov/wlm/living/graphics/muskrat1.jpg

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Primary Consumers in Marshes

• Wood Duck eats seeds like those of the Swamp Marsh Mallow and Blue Flag Iris

http://dsf.chesco.org/ccparks/lib/ccparks/wood_duck_pair.jpg

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Primary Consumers in Marshes

• Glassy-winged Toothpick Grasshopper – eats leaves of plants like cattail and pickerelweed

http://bugguide.net/node/view/41662

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Secondary Consumers

• Black Rat Snake eats eggs of animals like wood duck

http://www.bio.davidson.edu/projects/tate/Terms.htm

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Secondary Consumers

• Swamp Sparrow eats seeds but also insects like the toothpick grasshopper

http://www.jeaniron.ca/2007/SwampSparrow6645.jpg

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Tertiary Consumers• Eat other animals in marsh including snake

and sparrow

www.audubon.org www.montereybay.com

Osprey

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Omnivore• Racoon eats seeds, fruits, insects, worms, fish,

and frogs… and pretty much anything else they can get their paws on!

http://abouttitusville.com/BobPaty/Animals/images/Racoon.jpg

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A food web is an interlocking pattern of food chains

Food Web

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•Organisms that can make their own food

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• Organisms that cannot make their own food

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Biological Magnification

• The increasing concentration of a pollutant in organisms at higher trophic levels in a food web

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Biomass• The total amount of organic matter

present at a trophic level• Decreases as you move up trophic levels

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Ecological Pyramid

• A diagram that shows the amounts in different trophic levels

• 3 types of pyramids– Biomass– Numbers– energy

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Biomass Pyramid

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Energy Pyramid

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Numbers pyramid

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10% Rule

• Only 10% of the energy from one trophic level is passed on the to the next trophic level