A food
web is a diagram. It shows all the main organisms in an ecosystem.
Links between organisms show feeding relationships. Organisms are
connected on the basis of who eats whom (see figure below).
Each
link between organisms indicates a transfer of nutrients and energy.
When an organism is eaten, its matter is digested and metabolized
by the other organism. Some matter that gets eaten is not digested.
It goes in and comes back out as feces. Thus, most molecules of
an organism that is eaten become new molecules in the feeding organism.
It's true when people say, "You are what you eat!"
When
you string together several feeding links you create a pathway.
Notice how many complex food pathways there are in a food web. When
a pathway makes a complete loop, the molecules have been recycled.
Ecosystems
are perfect examples of recycling factories. Nothing goes to waste
in an ecosystem! Even feces eventually "come back to life."
When animals leave feces, the nutrients in the feces fertilize the
soil. Plants use these nutrients to live and grow. (Feces are full
of nutrients! They are, after all, composed of undigested food and
bacteria.)
There
is something very unusual about the food web of an estuary.
Spartina, an emergent cordgrass, is the basis of the food
web. This is not unusual-plants, which are the Producers in an ecosystem,
make up the basis of food webs (see Ecological
Processes). What is very unusual is that most of the
Spartina is consumed after it has died! Bacteria and fungi
(Decomposers) feed on the dead Spartina. They break it down
into smaller bits known as detritus. This detritus, along with phytoplankton,
becomes the most abundant source of food in the estuary. These food
particles drift in the water throughout the estuary. Thus, in an
estuary most food pathways begin with Producers being eaten by Decomposers.
Almost all other ecosystems have food pathways that begin with Producers
being eaten by Herbivores (animals that eat only live plants).
Many
organisms feed on the soupy water of this aquatic habitat. Some
animals are "filter feeders." They use special body parts
to filter food particles out of the water and eat them. Oysters,
mussels and clams are examples. Some animals, like snails and shrimp,
creep along the bottom of the estuary and underwater plants. They
graze on detritus and algae settled out of the water. Small fish,
such as Mullet, also dine on these food items.
Other
animals eat the organisms that eat detritus and algae. Raccoons
pry open oysters, mussels and clams. Large fish eat smaller fish.
Herons and sandpipers catch fish. They also hunt for shrimp, worms
and aquatic insects in the mud. Some can even open the shells of
oysters.
Some
animals eat live plants. Grasshoppers and other insects feed on
live Spartina. Ducks graze on floating plants. Carnivorous
animals eat these herbivorous animals. Spiders, sparrows, and mice
feed on plant-eating insects. Hawks hunt mice, sparrows, and ducks.
Can
you trace some food pathways? Try to find a pathway where the nutrients
and energy of an organism go through a complete cycle.
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