The
Sun is the principal source of energy input to biological systems. The Earth
receives 2 main types of energy from the Sun: light (solar) and heat. Photosynthetic
plants and some bacteria can trap light energy and convert it into chemical
energy.
Non-cyclical nature of energy flow
Heterotrophic
organisms obtain their energy by eating plants or animals that have eaten
plants. So all organisms, directly or indirectly, get their energy from the
Sun. The energy is passed from one organism to another in a food chain but,
unlike water and elements such as carbon and nitrogen, energy
does not return in a cycle. Energy give out by organisms is lost to the environment.
Energy is lost at each level in the food chain, as in the examples below.
- Energy lost through the process of respiration (as heat)
- Energy used up for movement (to search for food, find a mate, escape from predators…).
- Warm-blood animals (birds and mammals) maintain a standard blood temperature – they lose heat to the environment.
- Warm-blood animals lose heat energy in faeces and urine.
- Some of the material in the organism being eaten is not used by the consumer, for example a locust does not eat the roots of maize, and some of the parts eaten are not digestible.
Even
plants do not make use of all the light energy available to them. This is
because some light:
- is reflected off shiny leaves
- is the wrong wavelength for chlorophyll to trap
- passes through the leaves without passing through any chloroplasts
- does not fall on the leaves.
On
average, about 90% of the energy is lost at each level in a food chain. This
means that in long food chains, very little of the energy entering the chain
through the producer is available to the top carnivore. So there tend to be
small numbers of top carnivores. The food chain below shows how energy reduces
through the chain. It is based on maize obtaining 100 units of energy.
100 units 10 units 1 unit 0.1 unit
On
shorter food chains, less energy is lost.
Try this
Figure
below shows the flow of energy through a complete food chain:
1.
a) Which
form of the Sun’s energy is trapped by the producer? [1 mark]
b) Into which energy form is the Sun’s energy converted when it is
trapped by the producer? [1 mark]
2. a)The first consumer has received 6000 units of energy. How
many units of energy (X on the figure) have been passed to the second consumer?
[1 mark]
b) How many units of
energy (Y on the figure) are lost from the third consumer to the decomposers. [1 marks]
3. a) Suggest why the proportion of the energy intake which a
producer loses to the environment (20%) is smaller than that lost to the
environment by a first consumer
(30%) [2 marks]
b) Many countries have
difficulty in producing enough food for their population. How might it help to overcome this problem if
humans were always fed as first
consumers, rather than second or third consumers? [3 marks]
Answer
1.
a) Light (or solar) energy
b) Chemical energy
2.
a) 1200 units
b) 48 units
3. a) The consumer may be warm-blooded, so some energy is lost as heat.
Consumers
usually move around to find food, a mate, or escape from predators, which uses
up energy, but producers do not move.
b)
Feeding as a first consumer involves eating plants. Less energy is lost to the
environment when feeding at this level, so food production is more efficient in
terms of energy conservation.
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