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Ecosystems – transferring energy – WJECFood chains

Food chains and webs show the transfer of energy between trophic levels. They can be represented as pyramids of number and biomass and the efficiency of these transfers can be calculated.

Part of Biology (Single Science)Cells, organ systems and ecosystems

Food chains

A shows the flow of energy and materials from one organism to the next in a . It begins with a .

Producers are green plants which photosynthesise. They use light energy from the sun to convert carbon dioxide from the air and water from the soil into glucose and oxygen. The glucose made can be eaten by other organisms so that they can use it for which releases the energy stored in the glucose. This energy can then be used for their life processes.

In this example of a food chain, grass seeds are eaten by voles, and voles are eaten by barn owls.

A 'grass seeds-vole-barn owl' food chain

The arrows between each organism in the chain always point in the direction of energy flow from the food to the feeder.

The position occupied by an organism in a food chain is known as its . In the example above:

  1. the producer (grass seed) occupies the first trophic level
  2. the (vole) is in the second trophic level
  3. the (barn owl) is in the third trophic level

Food chains are rarely longer than four trophic levels as energy is used up or lost at each level.

OrganismHow it gets its energy
ProducerUsing light energy to produce food by photosynthesis
Primary consumerEating producers, most are herbivores
HerbivoreEating only plants
Secondary consumerEating primary consumers, most are carnivores
CarnivoreEating only other animals
Tertiary consumerEating secondary consumers
OmnivoreConsumers which eat both animals and plants, so can occupy more than one trophic level in a food chain
DecomposerFeeding on dead and decaying organisms, and on the undigested parts of plant and animal matter in faeces
OrganismProducer
How it gets its energyUsing light energy to produce food by photosynthesis
OrganismPrimary consumer
How it gets its energyEating producers, most are herbivores
OrganismHerbivore
How it gets its energyEating only plants
OrganismSecondary consumer
How it gets its energyEating primary consumers, most are carnivores
OrganismCarnivore
How it gets its energyEating only other animals
OrganismTertiary consumer
How it gets its energyEating secondary consumers
OrganismOmnivore
How it gets its energyConsumers which eat both animals and plants, so can occupy more than one trophic level in a food chain
OrganismDecomposer
How it gets its energyFeeding on dead and decaying organisms, and on the undigested parts of plant and animal matter in faeces

Question

A vole gets its energy from eating grass, but also eats insects. This makes it both a primary and secondary consumer. Which term from the table above could be used to describe the vole?