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Key
Points
This
section will give you the main information you should
know to teach the activity.
- Consumers
are organisms that must eat other organisms to receive
the food energy and nutrients they need to survive.
All members of the Animal kingdom are considered consumers.
- Herbivores
are consumers that eat plants. Carnivores are consumers
that eat other animals. Omnivores are consumers that
eat both plants and animals.
- Producers
are organisms that can make their own food energy. All
plants are producers. They are the original source of
food energy for consumers and without them, consumers
could not survive.
- A
food chain shows how food energy is passed from one
organism to another. Because energy is used and lost
as it passes between the organisms in a food chain,
their is a limited number of organisms in a food chain.
It always starts with a producer, then it moves to a
herbivore (a consumer) and then to a carnivore (a consumer)
and sometimes to a second carnivore (a consumer).
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Detailed
Information
Detailed Information gives more in-depth background
to increase your own knowledge, in case you want to expand
upon the activity or you are asked detailed questions
by students.
All
organisms need energy and nutrients to survive. Plants
are able to gather water, air, nutrients and sunlight
with their leaves and their roots to make the food energy
they need to survive. Plants, and organisms like them,
are known as producers. Because of their self-sufficiency,
it is conceivable for a natural world to exist in which
there were only producers. But many organisms do not
make their own food and have developed adaptations that
allow them to get the things they need by consuming
other organisms. These eating organisms are known as
consumers. All the animals on the earth, including
humans, are considered consumers.
Consumers
need space, shelter, water, air, energy and nutrients
to survive. Space provides the consumer room to live
and shelter provides it protection. Water is necessary
for animals because it is the most abundant molecule
that makes up their bodies. It is part of all
of the body fluids and is a solvent for the chemical
compounds in the body. Oxygen allows an organism to
release the energy stored in food compounds. Energy
is necessary to give the body the fuel it needs to perform
its life functions, such as growth, maintenance and
reproduction. Nutrients are necessary to make the chemical
compounds that make up the structural components of
the body as well as to synthesize enzymes, which help
to perform life processes. In consumers, water can be
acquired by drinking, and oxygen by respiration, but
both nutrients and energy can only be acquired by eating
other organisms.
Some
consumers eat only plants, some consumers eat only animals
and some consumers eat both. Consumers that eat only
plants are known as herbivores. Herbivores feed
on the leaves, flowers, roots and fruits of plants.
Examples are deer, rabbits and grasshoppers. Consumers
that eat only animals are known as carnivores.
Examples are sharks, alligators and foxes. Most carnivores
feed primarily on herbivores, while some will eat other
carnivores. Animals that eat both plants and animals
are known as omnivores. Examples are raccoons,
songbirds and humans.
Because
of the different ways they acquire food energy, consumers
have very different adaptations than plants. One of
them is locomotion. It is hard to catch something to
eat if you are standing in one place, though some animals
have figured out ways to do that. The ability to move
around, to find plants or to capture prey, is an adaptation
that the self-sufficient plants have not needed to develop.
Animals, though, have developed locomotion, and along
with this the nervous and muscular system that allows
this to happen. Through locomotion, animals can find
the food they need to survive.
Once
a herbivore finds a plant it wishes to consume, it does
not need adaptations to keep the plant still while it
is feeding. With carnivores, this is not the case. Carnivores
have developed many different adaptations to help them
to hold and/or kill their prey. The sticky, extendable
tongue of a frog, the sharp teeth of a shark, the venomous
fangs of a rattlesnake, the sucker-covered arms of an
octopus, the talons and beak of an eagle and the tool-making
and tool-using capacity of humans are all adaptations
that allow these carnivores to keep prey still while
they are feeding.
A
blade of grass or the flesh of a wildebeest will not
do a consumer much good if it can not be broken down
into usable chemical compounds. Because of this, consumers
have developed many adaptations for breaking down food
into smaller parts. Teeth are an example of this. The
sharp teeth of carnivores are not actually adapted for
chewing. They are adapted for holding the prey until
it can be swallowed whole, or for tearing the animal
into smaller chunks that can then be swallowed. Other
animals, such as birds have beaks for holding and tearing.
Crustaceans have shredding devices in their mouths.
Mammals are the only animals capable of true chewing.
Though canine and incisor teeth are adapted for holding
and tearing, the molars are adapted for crushing and
grinding, and other animals do not have these. To allow
them to eat both plants and animals, omnivores have
adaptations that allow them to hold, tear and to grind
food.
Herbivores
have to have special adaptations to help them to tear
through the tough cellulose cell walls of plants. The
molars of mammal herbivores are developed for this purpose.
They have enamel ridges that allow them to more effectively
grind plant matter. Their molars are also usually wide
and corrugated. Invertebrate herbivores have scraping
mouthparts or grinding mandibles that perform the same
function as a mammal's molars. Plant material would
not be able to be digested without these adaptations,
because the enzymes in animals' digestive systems cannot
break down the tough cellulose cell walls of plant cells.
By tearing through the cell walls with teeth or mandibles,
this allows the consumer's digestive enzymes to break
apart the cell contents. Because they do not have the
correct adaptations, carnivores cannot digest enough
plant matter to live on and they depend on eating other
animals to get what they need.
After
mechanically breaking down food with teeth or other
adaptations, consumers have digestive systems that allow
them to chemically break down food. The digestive tracts
of consumers contain enzymes, which are biological
catalysts that can break down food into absorbable parts.
Proteins are broken down into amino acids, carbohydrates
are broken down into simple sugars and fats are broken
down into fatty acids and glycerol. These simpler compounds
can then be absorbed in the blood stream and carried
to all of the cells in the body for use.
Because
consumers are dependent on producers for survival, there
will always be more producers in a community than consumers.
If consumers outnumbered the producers in a community,
the herbivores would quickly eat up all the producers
and then starve because there would be no more food
available to them. Once the herbivores were gone, the
carnivores would soon die.
Consumers also have to outnumber producers because energy
is always lost in the transfer from one organism to
another. Only a small amount of the food energy made
by the producer is passed to the consumer who eats it.
For this reason the consumer will need to eat more than
one producer to get the food energy it needs. If that
consumer is eaten, only a small amount of its food energy
passes on to the carnivore that ate it. This is why
food chains are often drawn as food pyramids, showing
that energy and number of organisms are always highest
at the bottom of the food chain, and always lowest at
the top.
Food
chains help illustrate the interdependence of all living
things. Consumers could not survive if it were not for
the existence of producers. Carnivores could not exist
if it were not for the existence of herbivores. Consumers
depend on other organisms because they can not get what
they need to survive without them.