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Food Chains / Webs

Food Chains / Webs. What’s to Eat?. Producers: produce their own food Plants that carry out photosynthesis Trees, vines, shrubs, ferns, mosses,. Producers. Consumers. Organisms (animals) that obtain energy from eating other organisms

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Food Chains / Webs

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  1. Food Chains / Webs

  2. What’s to Eat? • Producers: produce their own food • Plants that carry out photosynthesis • Trees, vines, shrubs, ferns, mosses,

  3. Producers

  4. Consumers • Organisms (animals) that obtain energy from eating other organisms • Must eat producers (plants) or other consumers (animals) • Squirrels, owls, deer, coyotes, humans

  5. Consumers

  6. Decomposers • Feed on the wastes of living organisms and on dead, decaying, plants and animals • Release nutrients from the animals waste and decaying matter and return the nutrients to the soil. • Fungi, bacteria, worms

  7. Decomposers

  8. Specific Consumers • Herbivores: plant eating – squirrel, deer, mice, rabbits • Carnivore: meat eating – wolves, tigers, • Omnivore: plant and meat eating – many birds, humans, box turtle,

  9. Predator – Prey Relationship • Predator: hunts other animals for food • Prey: hunted and eaten by other animals • Predator and prey population increase and decrease according to hunting • Lynx / Hare Population

  10. Hare and Lynx Relationship

  11. Close Relationships • Symbiosis: long term close relationship between • plants and microscopic organisms • Animals and plants • Animals and other animals

  12. Parasitism: one organism lives in or on, feeds upon, and harms another organism • Fleas, ticks, leeches

  13. Commensalism: one species benefits, while the other specie seems unaffected • Example: crab spider and flower

  14. Mutualism: all species benefit from the relationship • Example: bees & flowers

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