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Energy Flow in Ecosystems. Chapter 23-1. An organism’s energy role in an ecosystem may be that of a producer, consumer, or decomposer. Producer. An organism that makes its own food through the process of photosynthesis Includes plants, algae, and some microorganisms
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Energy Flow in Ecosystems Chapter 23-1
An organism’s energy role in an ecosystem may be that of a producer, consumer, or decomposer
Producer • An organism that makes its own food through the process of photosynthesis • Includes plants, algae, and some microorganisms • The source of all food in an ecosystem
Consumer • Cannot make their own food, depend on producers for food • Classified by what they eat • Herbivores-plant eaters • Carnivores-meat eaters • Omnivores-eats plants and animals
Scavenger-a carnivore that feeds on the bodies of dead organisms • Decomposer • Organisms that break down waste and dead organisms • Return raw materials to the environment • ex. Fungi & bacteria
Food Chain • A series of events in which one organism eats another and obtains energy • First organism is always a producer • The second organism, called a first level consumer, eats the producer
The next consumer, called a second level consumer, eats the first level consumer • One possible path of energy through an ecosystem
Food Web • Consists of many overlapping food chains in an ecosystem
Energy Pyramid • Shows the amount of energy that moves from one feeding level to another in a food web • The most energy is available at the producer level • At each level, there is less available energy than at the level below • Only about 10% is transferred to the next higher level