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Energy Flow Through Ecosystems• Food contains nutrients and energy needed

for survival.

Matter and EnergyMatter and Energy

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• When one organism is food for anotherorganism, some of the energy in the first organism (the food) is transferred to the second organism (the eater).

Energy Flow Through Ecosystems• Producers are organisms that take in and use

energy from the Sun or some other source to produce food.

• Consumers are organisms that take in energy when they feed on producers or other consumers.

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• When organisms die, other organisms called decomposers take in energy as they break down the remains of organisms.

Food Chains

• A food chain is a model, a simple way of showing how energy, in the form of food, passes from one organism to another.

• When drawing a food chain, arrows between organisms indicate the direction of energy transfer.

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Food Chains

• Food chains usually have only three or four links. This is because the available energy decreases from one link to the next link.

• In a food chain, the amount of energy left for the last link is only a small portion of the energy in the first link.

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Food Webs

• A food web is a series of overlapping food chains that exist in an ecosystem.

• A food web provides a more complete model of the way energy moves through an ecosystem.

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Food Webs

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Ecological Pyramids

• Most of the energy in the biosphere comes from the Sun.

• Producers take in and transform only a small part of the energy that reaches Earth’s surface.

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Ecological Pyramids

• An ecological pyramid models the number of organisms at each level of a food chain.

• The bottom of an ecological pyramid represents the producers of an ecosystem.

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• The rest of the levels represent successive consumers.

Energy Pyramid

• An energy pyramid compares the energy available at each level of the food chain in an ecosystem.

• A pyramid of energy usually has three or four levels.

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• Only about ten percent of the energy at each level of the pyramid is available to the next level.

The Cycles of Matter

• The law of conservation of mass states that matter on Earth is never lost or gained. It is used over and over again.

• The carbon atoms in your body might have been on Earth since the planet formed billions of years ago. They have been recycled billions of times.

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Water Cycle• The water cycle involves the process of

evaporation, condensation, and precipitation.

• Heat from the Sun causes water on Earth’s surface to evaporate, or change from a liquid to a gas, and rise into the atmosphere as water vapor.

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Water Cycle• Eventually, the water vapor changes back

into tiny droplets of water.

• It condenses, or changes from a gas to a liquid.

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• When the droplets become large and heavy enough, they fall back to Earth as rain or other precipitation.

Other Cycles in Nature

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• The movement of carbon through Earth’sbiosphere is called the carbon cycle.

Other Cycles in Nature• The nitrogen cycle begins with the transfer

of nitrogen from the atmosphere to producers then to consumers.

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• The nitrogen then moves back to the atmosphere or directly into producers again.

• Phosphorus, sulfur, and other elements needed by living organisms also are used and returned to the environment.

33Section CheckSection Check

Question 1

Most of the energy in the biosphere comes from _______.

A. Earth B. lava  C. the Sun D. water

33Section CheckSection Check

Answer

The correct answer is C. The Sun directly or indirectly provides the energy for all organisms.

33Section CheckSection Check

Question 2

Which describes grass?

A. carnivore B. consumer C. decomposer D. producer

33Section CheckSection Check

Answer

The answer is D. Grass takes in energy from the Sun for photosynthesis which produces carbohydrates that provide energy for the consumers that feed on the grass.

33Section CheckSection Check

Question 3

Which correctly correlates with the numbered illustration of the water cycle?

33Section CheckSection Check

A. Precipitation, Evaporation and CondensationB. Condensation, Evaporation and Precipitation

33Section CheckSection Check

C. Evaporation, Condensation and PrecipitationD. Evaporation, Precipitation and Condensation

33Section CheckSection Check

Answer

The answer is C. During the water cycle, water from Earth’s surface evaporates into the atmosphere, condenses to form clouds then falls back to Earth in the form of precipitation.

Chapter 18 Review 1 of 2

• Water droplets form when water vapor cools off.• In the carbon cycle, carbon follows various

paths.• Carnivores eat consumers.• Nitrogen is used by both plants and animals.• A food web is a more complete model of feeding

relationships, as compared to a food chain.

Chapter 18 Review 2 of 2

• As you move from level to level in an energy pyramid, energy decreases.

• Nitrogen cycle: begins with transfer of nitrogen from atmosphere to producers.

• Energy is recycled.

• Food web: overlapping food chains.

• Air: mixture of gases, such as oxygen, nitrogen, and carbon dioxide.