19. Organisms & Their Environment Flashcards
Producers definition
organisms that produce their own organic nutrients usually using energy from sunlight, Plants are producers as they carry out photosynthesis to make glucose
herbivore definition
an animal that gets its energy by eating plants
carnivore definition
an animal that gets its energy by eating other animals
primary consumers definition
herbivores - they feed on producers (plants)
secondary consumers definition
predators that feed on primary consumers
tertiary consumers definition
predators that feed on secondary consumers
decomposers definition
bacteria and fungi that get their energy from feeding off dead and decaying organisms and undigested waste (such as faces) by secreting enzymes to break them down
What does a food chain show?
A food chain shows the transfer of energy from one organism to the next, starting with a producer
What is the source of all energy in a food chain?
The source of all energy in a food chain is light energy from the Sun
What do the arrows in a food chain show?
The arrows in a food chain show the transfer of energy from one trophic level to the next
How is energy transferred from one organism to another?
Energy is transferred from one organism to another by ingestion (eating)
What is a food web?
A food web is a network of interconnected food chains
Why are food webs more accurate than food chains?
Food webs are more realistic ways of showing connections between organisms within an ecosystem as animals rarely exist on just one type of food source
What do food webs give us more information on?
Food webs give us a lot more information about the transfer of energy in an ecosystem
What type of relationship does a food web show?
interdependence
interdependent definition
how the change in one population can affect others within the food web
What causes most of the changes in populations?
Most of the changes in populations of animals and plants happen as a result of human impact – either by overharvesting of food species or by the introduction of foreign species to a habitat
Why is human impact on environments so harmful?
Due to interdependence, these can have long-lasting knock-on effects to organisms throughout a food chain or web
What is a trophic level?
Trophic levels describe the position of an organism in a food chain, web or pyramid
Does an animal have to be at only one trophic level? Why?
NO
Animals (known as consumers) can be at different trophic levels within the same food web as they may eat both primary, secondary and / or tertiary consumers
How does energy from the sun flow to the first trophic level?
Energy flows from the sun to the first trophic level (producers) in the form of light
How do producers make use of light energy?
Producers convert light energy into chemical energy and it flows in this form from one consumer to the next
Where is all energy eventually transferred to?
Eventually all energy is transferred to the environment – energy is passed on from one level to the next with some being used and lost at each stage
Is energy flow a cyclical or non-cyclical process?
NON-CYCLICAL
Energy flow is a non-cyclical process – once the energy gets to the top of the food chain or web, it is not recycled but ‘lost’ to the environment
What is energy flow a direct contrast to?
This is in direct contrast to the chemical elements that organisms are made out of, which are repeatedly recycled
(as energy is not recycled)
What has to happen to energy for it to be transferred ?
In order for the energy to be passed on, it has to be consumed (eaten)
Why is not all of the energy from e.g plants passed onto the primary consumer?
However not all of the energy grass plants receive goes into making new cells that can be eaten
Only the energy that is made into new cells remains with the organism to be passed on
Why may an organism not receive all of the energy in a plant?
Even then, some of this energy does not get consumed – for example few organisms eat an entire organism, including roots of plants or bones of animals – but energy is still stored in these parts and so it does not get passed on
In what 4 ways can energy in a an organism be “lost”?
- making waste products eg (urine) that get removed from the organism
- as movement
- as heat (in mammals and birds that maintain a constant body temperature)
- as undigested waste (faeces) that is removed from the body and provides food for decomposers
Why are food chains rarely longer than 5 organisms long?
This inefficient loss of energy at each trophic level explains why food chains are rarely more than 5 organisms long
If, for example, an organism would prey on the top consumer, why would this not be efficient?
In order to survive, it would have to:
- eat a huge number of them every day to get the amount of energy it needed to survive (are there that many barn owls close together?)
- not expend much energy itself hunting them (is this likely?)
How much energy is:
- available to the organism at the next level
- lost as heat and in undigested materials?
- 10% of energy available to organisms at the next level to make new biomass
- 90% of energy lost as heat an in undigested materials
What type of consumer are humans? What does this mean?
Humans are omnivores, obtaining energy from both plants and animals, and this gives us a choice of what we eat
What does humans being omnivores impact?
These choices, however, have an impact on what we grow and how we use ecosystems
Looking at this food chain, why would it be better for humans to eat the wheat, rather than the cow?
wheat → cow → human
wheat → human
Given what we know about energy transfer in food chains, it is clear that if humans eat the wheat there is much more energy available to them than if they eat the cows that eat the wheat
This is because energy is lost from the cows, so there is less available to pass on to humans
Therefore, it is more energy efficient within a crop food chain for humans to be the herbivores rather than the carnivores
What do humans feed animals and why?
In reality, we often feed animals on plants that we cannot eat (eg grass) or that are too widely distributed for us to collect (eg algae in the ocean which form the food of fish we eat)
What does a pyramid of number show?
A pyramid of numbers shows how many organisms we are talking about at each level of a food chain.
What does the width of a box in a pyramid of number suggest?
The width of the box indicates the number of organisms at that trophic level