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Encyclopedia > Food web
Figure 1. Example food web
Figure 1. Example food web

A food chain or more correctly, a food web, is a succession of organisms in an ecosystem that serves as continuation of food energy. An organism "lower" in food chain is a source of food energy (is consumed) for another organism on a "higher" level.


Example of a "food chain":


algae --> protists --> squid --> seal --> orca


In contemporary research the term food web rather than food chain is usually used. This is a more accurate description when looking at the more complex nature of food chains, that is most animals feed on more than one source. The relationship between organisms is underlined.


The line Phytoplankton --> Herbivorous Zooplankton --> Carnivorous Zooplankton --> Arctic Char --> Chapelin at the right hand side of Fig. 1 is a food chain.


See also: trophic level


  Results from FactBites:
 
Food chain - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (489 words)
Food chains and food webs or food networks describe the feeding relationships between species in a biotic community.
As usually diagrammed, an organism is connected to another organism for which it is a source of food energy and material by an arrow representing the direction of biomass transfer.
Food sources of most species in an ecosystem are much more diverse, resulting in a complex web of relationships as shown in the figure on the right.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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