19.2.7

Transfer Efficiency

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Transfer of Biomass

Energy is wasted at each trophic level in a food chain, meaning less biomass and energy is passed on to the next organism in the food chain.

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Producers

  • Producers only manage to trap approximately 1% of light energy from the sun.
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General rule for transfer efficiency

  • A general rule for transfer efficiency between all trophic levels is that 10% of energy from a given trophic level will be available to the next trophic level.
    • This progressive loss of energy usually means that there are fewer individuals at higher trophic levels - and usually fewer than five trophic levels in a food chain.
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Example

  • Livestock eating plants, and humans then eating this livestock, is an example of inefficient energy transfer compared to humans simply eating the plants.
  • This is because there is an additional trophic level where energy is lost.

Jump to other topics

1Classification of Living Organisms

2Organisation of the Organism

3Movement Into & Out of Cells

4Biological Molecules

5Enzymes

6Plant Nutrition

7Human Nutrition

8Transport in Plants

9Transport in Animals

10Diseases & Immunity

11Gas Exchange in Humans

12Respiration

13Excretion in Humans

14Coordination & Response

15Drugs

16Reproduction

17Inheritance

18Variation & Selection

19Organisms & Their Environment

20Human Influence on Ecosystems

21Biotechnology & Genetic Modification

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