Ecology: Food Chains and Food Webs

🦠 Biology 📋 SS1 📅 First Term ⏱ ~20 min 📝 5 quiz questions

Ecology Basics

Ecology is the study of how living organisms interact with each other and with their environment.

Key Terms

  • Population: all organisms of the same species in an area
  • Community: all populations living together in an area
  • Ecosystem: a community plus its abiotic (non-living) environment
  • Habitat: the specific environment where an organism lives
  • Niche: an organism's role in its ecosystem

Food Chains

A food chain shows the flow of energy from one organism to another through feeding relationships.

Example: Grass → Grasshopper → Lizard → Eagle

  • Producers: plants (make their own food via photosynthesis)
  • Primary consumers: herbivores (eat plants)
  • Secondary consumers: carnivores (eat herbivores)
  • Tertiary consumers: top predators
  • Decomposers: bacteria and fungi (break down dead matter)

Food Web

A food web shows multiple interconnected food chains in an ecosystem. It is a more realistic picture because most organisms eat more than one type of food.

Energy Transfer

Only about 10% of energy passes from one trophic level to the next. The rest is lost as heat. This is why food chains rarely have more than 4–5 links.

💡 When a species is removed from a food web, it can cause a domino effect on other species — called a trophic cascade.

📝 Quiz — Test Your Understanding

Answer all 5 questions, then click Submit to see your result.

Question 1 of 5
Which organisms are called producers in a food chain?
Producers (green plants) make their own food using sunlight through photosynthesis — they are the base of all food chains.
Question 2 of 5
Approximately what percentage of energy is transferred from one trophic level to the next?
On average, only 10% of the energy at one trophic level is passed to the next. The other 90% is lost as heat, movement, and waste.
Question 3 of 5
What is the main difference between a food chain and a food web?
A food web consists of many overlapping food chains, showing the complex feeding relationships in an ecosystem.
Question 4 of 5
Decomposers in an ecosystem are important because they:
Decomposers (bacteria and fungi) break down dead organic matter, returning nutrients to the soil for producers to use again.
Question 5 of 5
In the food chain: Grass → Rabbit → Fox → Lion, which organism is the tertiary consumer?
Lion is the tertiary consumer (3rd level consumer). Rabbit = primary, Fox = secondary, Lion = tertiary.
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