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Keshu

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Food webs and energy flow

1. FOOD WEBS



1.1 What a Food Web Is


A food web is a big network showing who eats whom in an ecosystem. It connects multiple food chains together so you can see how every plant and animal depends on others.

  • Shows complex connections between organisms

  • Explains how energy and nutrients move

  • Helps us understand how nature stays balanced

  • Shows how one species affects the whole system.



1.2 Basic Groups in a Food Web



1.2.1 Producers (Plants & Algae)


These legends make their own food using sunlight.

  • Grass

  • Trees

  • Algae

  • Small freshwater plants

They’re the foundation because everything else depends on them.



1.2.2 Herbivores (Plant-Eaters)


These creatures get their energy straight from plants.

  • Deer

  • Rabbits

  • Caterpillars

  • Grasshoppers

They pass the plant energy to the next level.



1.2.3 Carnivores (Meat-Eaters)


These animals eat herbivores or other carnivores.

  • Foxes

  • Frogs

  • Snakes

  • Wolves

They control population sizes and keep balance.



1.2.4 Top Predators (Apex Predators)


These are the final bosses—nothing hunts them.

  • Tigers

  • Sharks

  • Eagles

  • Lions

They maintain order at the highest level.



1.2.5 Decomposers


The cleanup crew that recycles everything back into the soil.

  • Bacteria

  • Fungi

  • Earthworms

Without them, nature would drown in waste.



1.3 Why Food Webs Matter


  • They show how all organisms depend on each other

  • Help scientists predict what happens if a species vanishes

  • Show how energy spreads through an ecosystem

  • Reveal how ecosystems stay balanced



2. ENERGY FLOW



2.1 What Energy Flow Means


Energy flow explains how energy moves from the sun → plants → animals → top predators.

It always moves in one direction and never gets recycled.



2.2 Levels of Energy Flow (Trophic Levels)



2.2.1 Level 1 — Producers


  • Capture sunlight

  • Make glucose through photosynthesis

  • Store the most energy in the whole system



2.2.2 Level 2 — Primary Consumers (Herbivores)

  • Eat plants

  • Transfer plant energy into movement & growth

  • Lose some energy as heat



2.2.3 Level 3 — Secondary Consumers (Small Carnivores)


  • Eat herbivores

  • Get less energy than herbivores got

  • Still essential for population control



2.2.4 Level 4 — Tertiary Consumers (Big Carnivores)


  • Eat other carnivores

  • Have even less energy available

  • Often fewer in number



2.2.5 Level 5 — Apex Predators


  • Highest energy level

  • Very few individuals

  • Control the entire balance of the ecosystem



2.3 The 10% Rule


Only 10% of energy gets passed from one level to the next.

  • Plants → 10% goes to herbivores

  • Herbivores → 10% goes to small carnivores

  • Small carnivores → 10% goes to big predators

That’s why:

  • More grass exists than cows

  • More cows exist than tigers

  • Top predators are rare



2.4 Why Energy Flow Is Important


  • Shows why ecosystems can’t support too many predators

  • Helps predict population sizes

  • Explains why plants are the base of all life

  • Shows how energy is lost as heat at every step.

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