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Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem

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Page 1: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem

Page 3: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Goal: Students will determine how energy travels through ecosystems by identifying the relationships between producers, consumers, and decomposers.

Recall: How is an ecosystem different from a community?

Page 4: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

What types of communities do you see in this picture? What type of ecosystem is it?

Page 5: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Remember…

• An ecosystem is the total of living parts (plants and animals) and nonliving parts (sunlight, air, water, soil) that support life in a unit of nature. We can refer to the Earth as one ecosystem or divide it into smaller units with

similar characteristics.

Page 6: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

How is the energy role determined?

• An organism’s energy role is determined by how it obtains food and how it interacts with other organisms.– Do you play an

instrument?

• Each instrument has a role in a piece of music. Similar to the instruments in a band, each organism has a role in the movement of energy through its ecosystem

Page 7: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

The living parts of an ecosystem can be divided into three categories:

Producers: Organisms that can make their own food. Ex. Plants have chlorophyll and can produce their own energy in the form ofcarbohydrates (simple sugars) through photosynthesis.

Page 8: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Consumers

Animals must consume something else, either plants or other animals, to get their energy.

There are different levels of consumers:top carnivores-eats other carnivores (ex. Wolf) carnivores -eats other animals (ex. Snakes) omnivores-eats plants and animals (ex. Humans) herbivores-eats only producers (plants) (ex. Rabbits)

Page 9: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Decomposers

Decomposers: break down biotic wastes and dead organisms and return the raw materials to the ecosystem.

“Nature’s Recyclers”

Page 10: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

In any community, energy flows from producers to consumers.

• Energy moves through the ecosystem in the form of food

• When organisms die, decomposers obtain energy when they break down the bodies of dead organisms

Page 11: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Food Chain

• A food chain is a simple way of showing how energy (food) passes from one organism to another

• Arrows between organisms indicate the direction that the energy is moving

Page 12: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Food Chains (con’t)

• Usually have 3 or 4 links• At each transfer of

energy, a portion of the energy is lost as heat due to the activities or organisms as they search for food and mates

Page 13: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Food Webs

• A food web is a series of overlapping food chains

• Organisms play more than one role in an ecosystem.

• Remember the rule about the arrows!

Page 15: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

Create a Food Web

• Label:• Producers• Primary Consumers• Secondary Consumers• Tertiary Consumers• Decomposers

• Include arrows moving in the appropriate direction following the direction that the energy is being used

Page 16: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5
Page 17: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

• Primary (first-level) consumers eat producers• Secondary (second level) consumers eat

primary consumers• Tertiary (third level) consumers eat secondary

consumers • THE FIRST ORGANISM IN THE FOOD

CHAIN/WEB IS ALWAYS A PRODUCER

Page 18: Energy Transfer Through an Ecosystem. Table of Contents DateTitlePage 2/26/13Energy Transfer in an Ecosystem 5

After you create your food web…

• Using your food web, answer the following questions:

• (a) Which organisms are producers?• (b) Which organisms are first order consumers?• (c) Which organisms are second order

consumers?• (d) Which organisms are third order

consumers?