Taxonomy of a food web
A simplified food web illustrating a three trophic food
chain (producers-herbivores-carnivores) linked to decomposers. The
movement of mineral nutrients is cyclic, whereas the movement of energy is
unidirectional and noncyclic. Trophic species are encircled as nodes and arrows
depict the links.
Food webs are the road-maps through
Darwin's famous 'entangled bank' and have a long history in ecology. Like maps
of unfamiliar ground, food webs appear bewilderingly complex. They were often
published to make just that point. Yet recent studies have shown that food webs
from a wide range of terrestrial, freshwater, and marine communities share a
remarkable list of pattern.
Links in food webs map the feeding connections (who eats
whom) in an ecological community.
Food cycle is the antiquated term that is synonymous with food web. Ecologists can broadly
lump all life forms into one of two trophic layers, the autotrophs and the heterotrophs. Autotrophs produce more biomass energy, either chemically without the suns energy or by
capturing the suns energy in photosynthesis, than they use during metabolic respiration.
Heterotrophs consume rather than produce biomass energy as they metabolize,
grow, and add to levels of secondary production.
A food web depicts a collection of polyphagous heterotrophic consumers that network and cycle the flow of energy
and nutrients from a productive base of self feeding autotrophs.
The base or basal species in a food web are those species
without prey and can include autotrophs or saprophytic detritivores (i.e., the community of decomposers in soil,
biofilms, and periphyton). Feeding connections in the web are
called trophic links. The number of trophic links per consumer is a measure of
food web connectance. Food chains are nested within the trophic links
of food webs. Food chains are linear (noncyclic) feeding pathways that trace monophagous consumers from a base species up to
the top consumer, which is usually a larger predatory
carnivore.
Linkages connnect to nodes in a food web, which are
aggregates of biological taxa called trophic species. Trophic species are functional
groups that have the same predators and prey in a food web. Common examples of
an aggregated node in a food web might include parasites, microbes.
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