Chapter 20 Trophic Structure

Automenis Io,

The Io Moth

Harned Hall 301

(615) 963 - 5782

Email me

Sections

Ecosystems

Include the abiotic factors affecting the community living in a definable environment

Some ecosystem-level processes

Ecosystem measurements

Biomass

Energy flow

Nutrient flow

Trophic Structure

Food Chain

Simply a diagram of who eats whom in an ecosystem

Trophic level

Trophic link - the relationship between a pair of species indicating that one eats the other (from the idea of the food chain)

Trophic Pyramids

When one assigns species to a trophic level, one can:

This produces a pyramid of numbers

Food Webs

Connectance (see Lecture 17 on Diversity and Stability)

Generalizations about food webs

There is no agreement about how connectance and linkage density change with an increase in the number of species

Objections to the generalizations

Guilds

Groups of species that feed on the same resource and do so all in a similar fashion

One plant may be attacked by:

Keystone Species

Some species alter the environment in such a way, either by their mere presence or by their activity, that other species can find niches in the environment only if they are there

A keystone species is not the same as a dominant species

Terms

Ecosystems, Biomass, Standing crop, Energy flow, Nutrient flow, Turnover , Trophic Structure, Food Chain, Trophic level, Producer, autotrophs, Consumer, heterotrophs, Primary consumer, Herbivores, Secondary consumer, Carnivores, Omnivores, Tertiary consumers, Decomposers, Transformers, link, Webs, Connectance, Linkage density, Food Chain Length, Guilds, Sap-sucking guild, Leaf-mining guild, Stem-boring guild, Leaf-chewing guild, Grazing guild, Trophic Pyramids, inverted pyramid, Keystone species, Dominant species, ecosystem engineer

Last updated on September 26, 2006