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Online Module 2 Assignment-Trophic Levels and You
Online Module 2 Assignment-Trophic Levels and You
Objective
2. Students will demonstrate how nature is connected and dependent on each other.
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Introduction
All of the energy that you use to perform daily tasks like exercising, thinking, and staying warm comes from the food that
you eat. All of the energy in your food comes from the sun. First, plants convert light energy from the sun into chemical
energy through photosynthesis. When animals eat the plants they use the process of cellular respiration to transform this
chemical energy into a form their bodies can use. Animals can also get energy from eating other animals, although much
of the original energy from the sun has already been used up by the animal which is eaten. In this activity you will
determine where you get your food and it turn your energy.
Procedure
1. Create a list of food consumed during one day (breakfast, lunch, dinner, snacks & beverages).
2. Label each item as from a producer, a primary consumer (e.g., cow), or secondary or higher consumer (e.g., fish).
* If the food item contains both producers and consumers, note both and guess approximately how much of
each it contains.
3. Determine the approximate percentage of food obtained from producers and the approximate percentage of food
obtained from consumers.
Data
Conclusions
How much support do you receive from the first trophic level?
In which trophic level do you belong? (consider more than this day)
If you ate more producers, how would this change the percentage of the biomass pyramid necessary to support your
survival?
If you ate more food from secondary consumers, how would this change the percentage of the biomass pyramid necessary
to support your survival?