A food web or food chain is just a representation of what would eat what. To make one simple list animals making a connections from the prey to the consumer.
2006-11-28 17:14:06
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answer #1
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answered by just*me 2
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a food web is basically a diagram with lots of organisms. Then you draw arrows to show which eats what and then gets eaten by what.
Some organisms don't get eaten by other organsims while some do.
For example, a grass is in the middle, the mouse eats the grass, the mouse is then eaten by an eagle.
2006-11-29 01:15:06
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answer #2
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answered by diburning 3
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in a food web on the side are usually producers (plants) closer to the inside there is herbavores then there is carnivores which eat the herbavores then i believe there is usually us cause we're at the top of the food chain
2006-11-29 09:09:25
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answer #3
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answered by Colten P 1
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Food chains and food webs and/or food networks describe the feeding relationships between species in a biotic community. In other words, they show the transfer of material and energy from one species to another within an ecosystem.
As usually put, an organism is connected to another organism for which it is a source of food energy and material by an arrow representing the direction of biomass transfer. Organisms are grouped into trophic levels—from the Greek word for nourishment, trophikos—based on how many links they are removed from the primary producers. Primary producers, or autotrophs, are species capable of producing complex organic substances (essentially "food") from an energy source and inorganic materials. These organisms are typically photosynthetic plants, bacteria or algae, but in rare cases, like those organisms forming the base of deep-sea vent food webs, can be chemotrophic. All organisms that eat the autotrophs are called heterotrophs. They get their energy by eating the producers.
Food chain
A food chain describes a single pathway that energy and nutrients may follow in an ecosystem. There is one organism per trophic level, and trophic levels are therefore easily defined. They usually start with a primary producer and end with a top predator. Here is an example of a food chain:
phytoplankton â copepod â fish â squid â seal â orca
This "chain" can be described as follows: Orca (also known as "killer whales") feed upon seals, that feed upon squid, that eat small fish, that feed on copepods, that feed on microscopic algae. In this example, algae—autotrophs by virtue of their ability to photosynthesize—are the base of the food chain. It is always the case that numbers—or at least biomass—decreases from the base of the chain to the top. In other words, the number and mass of phytoplankton cells are much greater than the number and mass of copepods being supported by the phytoplankton. Viewed another way: to support one orca requires many seals, large numbers of squid, huge numbers of fish, and so on down the chain (see energy pyramid). This is because, with each transfer, some of the energy is lost to the environment. On average, only 10% of the organism's energy is passed on to its predator.
Food chains are overly simplistic as representatives of what typically happens in nature. The food chain shows only one pathway of energy and material transfer. Most consumers feed on multiple species and are, in turn, fed upon by multiple other species. The relations of detritivores and parasites are seldom adequately characterized in such chains as well.
Food Web
A food web or food network extends food chain concept from a simple linear pathway to a complex network of interactions. The direct steps as shown in the food chain example above seldom reflect reality. This "web" makes it possible to show much bigger animals (like a whale) eating very small organisms (like plankton). Food sources of most species in an ecosystem are much more diverse, resulting in a complex web of relationships as shown in the figure on the right. In this figure, the grouping of Phytoplankton â Herbivorous zooplankton â Carnivorous zooplankton â Arctic char â Capelin on the far right is a food chain; the whole complex network is a food web/network.
2006-11-29 06:50:22
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answer #4
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answered by catzpaw 6
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u normally start with a plant, then a herbivore, followed by a carnivore or an omnivore
2006-11-29 01:20:09
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answer #5
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answered by pigley 4
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