Energy Flow and the 10 Percent Rule (2024)

Living things require energy to grow, breathe, and reproduce. This energy must be available within an ecosystem, or a community that consists of all the living and nonliving things in an area, including soil, plants, and animals.

The sun is the first source of energy for almost every

ecosystem

. Plants and other living things, or organisms, convert the sun's energy, or solar energy, into biomass, which is the energy that is part of

organisms

. As

organisms

eat other

organisms

, the

biomass

, or energy, moves all the way up the food chain.A

food chain

is a path that energy takes through a certain

ecosystem

.

Producers and Consumers

Each

organism

in an

ecosystem

is part of many

food chains

. Together, these

food chains

make a food web. Within this

ecosystem

structure,

organisms

are grouped into categories calledtrophic levels.

The first

trophic level

includes

organisms

called primary producers. They make their own food, and plants and algae are a few examples.

Primary

producers

use a process called photosynthesis to create nutrientsfrom sunlight,carbon dioxide, and water. This process is how plants convert

solar energy

into

biomass

.

The second

trophic level

includes

organisms

called primary consumers. They can't produce their own food and therefore rely on eating other

organisms

to get energy.An example might be a cow (a

primary

consumer

) eatinggrass (a

producer

">

primary

producer

).

Primary

consumers

include herbivores and omnivores.

Herbivores

are

organisms

that only eat plants, and

omnivores

are

organisms

that eat both plants and animals.

This third

trophic level

includes secondary consumers. They eat

primary

consumers

. They can either

omnivores

or carnivores, which are animals that only eat other animals. An example might be a snake that eats an insect.

The fourth

trophic level

contains tertiary consumers. These

organisms

are

carnivores

or

omnivores

that eat

secondary

consumers

. An example might be an owl that eats a mouse.

Trophic levels

are best seen in a model of a

food chain

. In reality,

primary

producers

would be eaten by many different

organisms

, not just grasshoppers.

Tertiary

consumers

like the hawk would need to hunt many

organisms

to survive. Most

ecosystems

are more complex and would be better represented by an interlinked series of

food chains

called a

food web

.

Moving Energy from One Level to the Next

Only so much biomass, or energy, can move from one trophic level to the next.Energy is lost at each step along the food chain.

An energy pyramid is a good way to show energy loss between trophic levels. Each step of the pyramid represents a different trophic level. The primary producers are at the bottom level, and the tertiary consumers are at the top level.

The size of each level in the pyramid represents the rate of energy flow, or how much energy passes through each trophic level. The steps decrease in size as you travel up the pyramid because energy is lost at every level in the food chain. Eventually, the step can't get any smaller, because there is no energy left to support another trophic level.

Only a small amount, or 10 percent, of energy moves from one trophic level to the next. This is known as the 10 percent rule. It limits the number of trophic levels an ecosystem can support.For example, when a primary consumer eats a primary producer, the consumer only gets 10 percent of the producer's energy. So, if an insect eats a plant, it only gets 10 percent of the energy from the plant. The next consumer would only receive 10 percent of the energy from the insect.This continues all the way up the food chain.

Energy Flow and the 10 Percent Rule (2024)
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