Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Chesapeake Bay

Chesapeake Bay is an estuary located in the west coast of the United States. It receives water from over 100,000 streams and rivers and empties in the Atlantic Ocean. It is home to around 350 species of fish, dozens of species of shellfish and crabs, 16 species of underwater grasses. Waterfowl, ospreys, and shorebirds also inhabit nearby areas.

All of these species interact in this ecosystem, and form a very complex food web (made up of many food chains). As explained previously, the food chain begins with a producer, which in this case is the phytoplankton, which is then eaten by a number of first consumers, which are then eaten by other predators.

The main purpose of the food chain is to see how energy is transferred from one organism to another. However, pyramids are ways to obtain more data. They represent graphically how energy, matter, and population are distributed in a system. Two of them are the pyramid of biomass and the pyramid of productivity.

The pyramid of biomass shows the amount of biomass at each trophic level, which is calculated by multiplying the mass of an organism times the amount of organisms. The dry weight of an individual is roughly the same as the energy it contains.

The pyramid of productivity shows the flow of energy over time. Since energy is lost as it moves from 1 trophic level to another, the upper levels are always smaller than the lower ones. Only 10% of the energy in one trophic level is passed on to the next one.

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