Chapter 13 Ecological Principles • MHR 443
SECTION REVIEW
- Explain why some ecosystems can support
highly complex food webs while others can support
only relatively simple ones. - Draw a chart to illustrate a food web that could
be found in a typical pond ecosystem (show at least
three distinct trophic levels). Identify the organisms
and label each trophic level. - Explain how the same species can occupy
more than one trophic level within the same food
web. Explain how this type of ecological interaction
can enhance the stability of a food web. - Describe the types of biotic and abiotic factors
that can lead to the collapse of a food web in an
ecosystem.
5. Explain why autotrophs rather than
decomposers occupy the lowest level of a food chain.
6. Could photosynthetic producers exist in the
absence of consumers in an ecosystem? Explain
your answer.
7. Describe the typical energy sources that
decomposers rely on in an aquatic ecosystem
(such as a pond or lake).
8. Describe the difference between a food chain
and a food web. Which is more realistic in its
depiction of what actually exists in nature?
9. Explain why producer organisms that live
deep below the surface of Earth’s oceans rely on
chemosynthesis rather than photosynthesis to
manufacture high-energy food molecules.
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Figure 13.16A simplified food web. There are many other species that feed with
or on the ones shown in the diagram. Which species eat organisms on more than
one trophic level?
Tertiary and
secondary
consumers
Secondary
and primary
consumers
Primary
consumers
Primary
producers
Decomposers
(bacteria, fungi,
certain animals)
wastes and
dead organisms
(plants, algae,
cyanobacteria)