You are on page 1of 5

APES Food For Thought Trophic Levels

Plants make food during photosynthesis; they are called primary producers or autotrophs. Animals eat the food. They are known as consumers or heterotrophs. 1. What does the suffix troph mean? Suffix troph means nourish. 2. What do you think a trophic level is? A trophic level is each of several hierarchical levels in an ecosystem, comprising organisms that share the same function in the food chain and the same nutritional relationship to the primary sources of energy. 3. How about food chains, food webs? Compare and contrast those terms you learned in biology. A food chain is a hierarchical series of organisms each dependent on the next as a source of food. Food webs are the series of processes by which food is grown or produced, sold, and eventually consumed. 4. Quickly sketch a food chain using organisms that might be found on our school grounds.

a. What do you have to do to turn it into a food web? Do so. I would have to add the other animals In the ecosystem to make it a food web. 5. Look at the following diagrams called Energy Pyramids.

a. What do they all have in common? All the energy pyramids start with the primary producers and end with the Tertiary consumers. b. How are they different from one another? They are different because they are all different ecosystems. 6. Why are there are more organisms at the base and less organisms as you travel up the pyramid? There are more organisms at the base and fewer organisms when traveling up the pyramid it is only a food chain not a food web. a. Any idea what an energy pyramid shows? An energy pyramid is a graphical representation designed to show the biomass or biomass productivity at each trophic level in a given ecosystem. 7. Two of the pyramids have numbers. Do you see a pattern in the numbers? Yes, I do see a pattern in the numbers. a. What might the numbers mean? I think the numbers mean the amount of energy each level gets from the previous level. Read the following description from Earth Force http://www.earthforce.org/content/article/detail/1284 Energy pyramids, otherwise known as trophic level diagrams, are used to represent the flow of energy through an ecosystem. An organisms trophic level indicates the organisms position in the sequence of energy transfers. There are two apparent trends represented in an energy pyramid. First, there are enormous numbers and masses of individual animals or plants at the bottom and the numbers decrease as you reach the top. Secondly, the sizes and energy needs of the individual organisms generally increase as you reach higher levels. The bottom, or base, of an energy pyramid is a position always held by the producers and represents (by far) the largest percentage of biomass for the food web. The need for such a large biomass of producers is to support the energy needs for all the organisms at higher trophic levels. In the illustration above, the osprey is positioned at the highest trophic level. Therefore, for the energy transformations represented by the pyramid, the osprey is the organism with the greatest energy needs and relies on all of the transactions from producers to consumers to have enough energy left over to fill its own energy needs. It should be acknowledged that ecosystems are very complex and any food chain, food web or energy pyramid simply illustrates the general idea. It would be practically impossible to illustrate all the possible ways that animals interact and all the possible ways that energy moves throughout an ecosystem. Next, now that youve thought about food chains, energy pyramids and so on, lets do some problem solving. As you do these, think about the benefits and drawbacks of

eating at lower trophic levels. First, for some background, read about soybeans from the

http://www.iasoybeans.com/index.html Small Bean, Big Dreams Small bean, big dreams is a fitting motto for the versatile soybean plant. Known as the Cadillac of protein sources, soybeans nourish the people and animals of the world. Soybeans also help us reduce reliance on petroleum through hundreds of renewable product innovations that enhance our everyday lives. All this from a bean so small that it takes around 150,000 soybeans to fill one bushel. Good things do come in small packages! Soybeans have a rich history from their creation in China 5,000 years ago. In our country, they started from humble beginnings, serving as ballast for Chinese ships coming to America. Making their U.S. agricultural debut in 1829 for soy sauce, inventors like George Washington Carver and Henry Ford embraced soybeans for plastics, printing inks and a range of industrial uses. Dreams Become Reality Between 1945 and 1985 the annual soybean harvest increased eleven-fold. Today, America grows around three billion bushels of soybeans and accounts for more than one-third of the world's soybean crop. It represents a $16 billion crop that strengthens our countrys balance of trade while providing a domino effect of job growth and prosperity. The dreams of our early architects of innovation are reality today. For example, soybeans can be grown in space. Their compact nutrition and flavor variety is key to our astronauts. This small bean continues to dream and achieve enabling soy to change our world. At 55 grams of protein per day, one acre of soybeans can meet a persons dietary protein needs for 8,400 days Okay now for the problem... Its 2017. Youre the owner of a soybean farm. You also raise guinea hens for food and insect control. The hens will eat grasshoppers and other insect pests, including ticks. This is good. Biological control of your pests will save you money on chemical pesticides. The hens also act as watchdogs squawking a lot when intruders approach. You allow the hens to free range during the day in your fields and but at night, you provide roosts for them to keep them safe. Use the following for your calculations. Show all work with units! You can live on 1 hen/day for a year 1 hen eats 25 grasshoppers/day (25 gh/day) 1000 gh have a mass of 1 kg 1 gh requires about 30g soy/yr 1 human requires about 600 gh/day Dry soybeans have provide about 3.3 cal/g

1. Calculate the number of gh a hen needs to eat per year. 365*25= 9125 gh/year 2. How many gh are needed for a years supply of hens for you, the farmer? 1 hen/day for farmer, 25 gh for hen/day, 365 hen/year, 365*25=9125 gh/year. 3. What is the total mass in kg, of the gh needed to feed all the hens for one year? 1000 gh= 1 kg; 10,000 gh=10 kg of gh/year 4. How many kg of soybeans are needed to feed all the gh for one year? 9125 gh/year*30g soy/gh year= 273750kg 5. Sources tell us that Native American Indians ate gh. So you can too! These early Americans could collect about 90 kg of gh per hour, when they were abundant. How many people could the gh feed, compared to the one person that the hen fed? (Perhaps you could dip the gh in chocolate.) 1000gh*90kg= 90,000gh/year; 1 person=600 gh/day, feed 150 people 6. You need to consume 3000 calories/day. If you ate only soybeans how many grams of soybeans would you have to eat per day for calories alone? Soybeans give 3.3 cal/g; 3000/3.3= 909.09 per day 7. Cows produce about 19 kg protein/acre/year and soy produces 200 kg of protein/acre/year. a. Which is more efficient to eat? Why? Soy would be more efficient to eat because it produces more kg of protein/acre/year b. Have you ever eaten a soy burger (veggie burger)? Why or why not? No I have not eaten a soy/veggie burger because I didn't think they would taste very good. 8. In theory, the earth could support many more people if we ate at a lower trophic level. a. List 2 benefits of doing this. Healthier food at lower trophic levels, less hunger in the world. b. List 2 drawbacks of eating lower on the food chain. Less of the organisms in the lower trophic levels and more of the organisms of the higher trophic levels. c. What are some benefits of being a vegetarian? There is more energy at the bottom of the trophic level, so you're gaining more energy. You will be eating healthier food. d. What are some drawbacks? Limits to what you can eat, so you lack certain nutrients that only meat has. 9. And then there are fish to eat! Large predatory fish usually are found at the 3rd or 4th trophic level of an energy pyramid. What does this mean in terms of energy loss? You lose 72.9% of the energy from the lowest level of a trophic pyramid. (90%*90%*90%) 10. Large predatory animals can also be problematic to eat because of bioaccumulation and biomagnification of toxins such as lead or mercury in their

habitats. What do those two big words mean and why should this be considered when discussing food chains and trophic levels? Bioaccumulation-The accumulation of a substance in a living organism. Biomagnification- Increase of a substance that occurs in food chain. These should be considered, because the food that we eat could have accumulated a dangerous toxin. This toxin could increase in the food chain, and when us humans eat it, we will also have the toxin in our body. 11. Do you think about the food you eat? Why or why not? I do sometimes think about what I eat. The other times I don't because I'm just concerned about eating something and not being hungry.

You might also like