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Define an autotroph.
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All Flashcards in Topic 3.9
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3.9.112 cards
Define an autotroph.
An organism that **makes its own organic molecules** from inorganic substances (e.g. CO₂), using an external energy source. 'Auto' = self.
Define a heterotroph.
An organism that **cannot make its own organic molecules** and must take in ready-made organic food from other organisms. 'Hetero' = other.
What carbon source do all autotrophs use?
**Inorganic carbon dioxide (CO₂)** — they fix it into organic molecules.
How do photoautotrophs get their energy?
From **light** (photosynthesis). Examples: plants, algae, cyanobacteria.
How do chemoautotrophs get their energy?
By **oxidising simple inorganic substances** (chemosynthesis). Examples: deep-sea vent bacteria.
How do photoautotrophs and chemoautotrophs differ?
Only in their **energy source** (light vs oxidising inorganic substances); both fix **CO₂** for carbon.
What is holozoic nutrition?
Heterotrophic nutrition where food is **ingested** and **digested internally** — the way animals feed.
What is a saprotroph?
A heterotroph that feeds on **dead or decaying** matter by releasing enzymes onto it and absorbing the products — **external digestion** (many fungi/bacteria).
What is a mixotroph?
An organism that uses **both** autotrophic and heterotrophic nutrition — it can make its own food and feed on others (e.g. Euglena).
Which organisms are the producers in an ecosystem?
**Autotrophs** — they produce organic molecules that feed the heterotrophs.
What two things define a mode of nutrition?
The **energy source** and the **carbon source** of the organism.
Where does a saprotroph digest its food?
**Outside** its body (external digestion) — then it absorbs the digested products.
3.9.213 cards
What is a food chain?
A diagram showing a **single path of energy** through an ecosystem, drawn as organisms joined by **arrows**.
What is a food web?
**Several food chains linked together**, showing the many feeding relationships in an ecosystem more realistically.
What is a trophic level?
An organism's **feeding position** in a food chain (e.g. producer, primary consumer, secondary consumer).
Which way does a food-chain arrow point, and what does it show?
From the organism **being eaten** to the organism that **eats it** — the direction **energy flows** ('is eaten by').
What are the four trophic levels in order?
**Producer** (1) → **primary consumer** (2) → **secondary consumer** (3) → **tertiary consumer** (4).
What is a producer?
An organism that makes its own food by **photosynthesis** (an autotroph); it is always the **first** trophic level.
What is a primary consumer?
A **herbivore** — an organism that eats **producers** (the second trophic level).
What is a secondary consumer?
A **carnivore** that eats **primary consumers** (the third trophic level).
What is a tertiary consumer?
A **carnivore** that eats **secondary consumers** (the fourth trophic level).
How do you read an organism's trophic level from a chain?
**Count the arrows from the producer** up to it: 1 producer, 2 primary, 3 secondary, 4 tertiary consumer.
Can one organism occupy more than one trophic level?
**Yes** — in a food web an organism that feeds at different levels (e.g. eats both a herbivore and a carnivore) occupies two levels at once.
How do you find an organism's energy source in a food web?
**Trace its arrows backwards** until you reach a **producer**, which originally captured the energy from **sunlight**.
Where does the energy in almost every food chain originally come from?
**Sunlight** — captured by producers during **photosynthesis**.
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About what percentage of energy passes to the next trophic level?
About **10%** — the other ~90% is lost at each level.
In what three main ways is energy lost between trophic levels?
As **heat from respiration**, in **faeces (undigested waste)**, and in **uneaten or dead material**.
What is the single biggest energy loss between trophic levels?
**Heat from respiration** — it leaves the ecosystem and cannot be passed on as food.
Define energy transfer efficiency.
The **percentage** of energy at one trophic level that is passed on to the next — usually about **10%**.
What is a pyramid of energy?
A diagram in which each bar shows the **energy** at one trophic level; the bars **get smaller** up the levels because energy is lost at each step.
Why do the bars of a pyramid of energy shrink going up?
Because each level holds **less energy** than the one below — only ~10% is passed on each step.
Is energy in an ecosystem recycled?
**No** — energy flows **one way** (sunlight → producers → consumers) and is steadily **lost as heat**; only nutrients are recycled.
Why do food chains rarely exceed four or five links?
After several transfers **too little energy remains** to support another trophic level.
Where does energy enter most ecosystems?
As **sunlight**, trapped by producers through **photosynthesis**.
Which part of an organism's energy CAN be passed to the next level?
Only the energy built into its **biomass (body)** — and only the part that is actually **eaten**.
Why is beef less energy-efficient to produce than chicken or plants?
Energy is lost at each trophic level, so the **extra transfer** (and cattle's poorer feed conversion) wastes more energy.
Why are top predators rare in an ecosystem?
There is **very little energy** left at the top trophic level, so it can only support **a small number** of them.
3.9.412 cards
What is a persistent (non-biodegradable) pollutant?
A pollutant that is **not broken down** by enzymes or decomposers, so it stays in the environment and in organisms for a long time (e.g. DDT, mercury).
Define bioaccumulation.
The **build-up of a pollutant inside a single organism** over time, because it is taken in faster than it can be broken down or excreted.
Define biomagnification.
The **increase in a pollutant's concentration from one trophic level to the next**, so that it is highest in the top predator.
Which two properties let a pollutant biomagnify?
It is **persistent (non-biodegradable)** and **not excreted** — so it is stored (often in fat) and passed on.
Why is a persistent pollutant highest in the top predator?
Each consumer eats **many** contaminated prey and **stores all** their pollutant, so the concentration **multiplies at each trophic level**.
In what direction does a persistent toxin change up a food chain?
It **increases** up the chain — the opposite of energy, which decreases.
Why does the pollutant rise up the chain while energy falls?
The pollutant is **stored and passed on** (not used up or lost), whereas energy is lost as heat at each level.
Give an example of a pollutant that biomagnifies.
**DDT** (a pesticide) or **methyl mercury** — both are persistent and stored, not excreted.
What environmental effect did DDT have on birds of prey?
It biomagnified to high levels and caused **thin eggshells**, reducing breeding success and causing **population decline**.
Where in the body are many biomagnifying pollutants stored?
In **fat (fatty tissue)**, because they are often **fat-soluble** — so they are not excreted.
What is the difference in SCALE between bioaccumulation and biomagnification?
Bioaccumulation is **within one organism**; biomagnification is **between trophic levels** (up the chain).
Why does naming 'biomagnification' alone lose marks on an 'explain' question?
It names the process but does not give the **cause-and-effect** — you must say it is stored and that each consumer eats many prey, so it multiplies up the chain.
3.9.514 cards
What is the carbon cycle?
The continuous **recycling of carbon** between the atmosphere, living organisms, the oceans and rocks — carbon is never made or destroyed.
Which single process REMOVES CO₂ from the air?
**Photosynthesis** — producers fix CO₂ into organic carbon (glucose).
Which three processes ADD CO₂ back to the air?
**Respiration, decomposition and combustion.**
How does carbon move from producers to animals?
By **feeding** — organic carbon passes along the **food chain**.
Which organisms carry out respiration?
**All living things** — producers, consumers and decomposers — releasing CO₂.
What happens to carbon during decomposition?
Decomposers (bacteria, fungi) break down dead matter and **respire**, releasing the stored carbon as **CO₂**.
What is combustion in the carbon cycle?
The **burning** of wood and fossil fuels, which releases their stored carbon as **CO₂**.
How do aquatic autotrophs obtain their carbon?
From **dissolved CO₂ and hydrogencarbonate (HCO₃⁻) ions** in the water around them.
How do land plants obtain their carbon?
As **CO₂ gas** taken directly from the air.
What is a carbon sink? Give examples.
A store that **takes carbon out of the air** — e.g. forests, peat bogs, limestone, fossil fuels, the deep ocean.
What is a carbon source? Give examples.
Something that **releases CO₂ into the air** — respiration, decomposition and combustion.
What conditions lock carbon away in peat?
**Waterlogged, anaerobic (low-oxygen) and acidic** conditions slow decomposition, so carbon-rich material builds up.
Why might atmospheric CO₂ rise?
When **combustion of fossil fuels** (a source) adds CO₂ **faster than photosynthesis** (the sink) can remove it.
On a carbon-cycle diagram, which arrow removes CO₂?
The **photosynthesis** arrow — running from CO₂ in the air into living things.
3.9.612 cards
What is a decomposer?
An organism that feeds on **dead organic matter** and breaks it down, **releasing nutrients** back to the environment.
Name the two kinds of decomposer.
**Detritivores** and **saprotrophs**.
What is a saprotroph, and how does it feed?
A decomposer (mostly **bacteria and fungi**) that **secretes enzymes onto** dead matter and **absorbs** the soluble products — it digests **externally**.
What is a detritivore, and how does it feed?
An **animal** (e.g. earthworm, woodlouse) that **ingests** pieces of dead matter and digests them **internally**, in a gut.
Give the key difference between a detritivore and a saprotroph.
**Where digestion happens**: a detritivore digests **internally** (it ingests); a saprotroph digests **externally** (it secretes enzymes and absorbs).
What do detritivores and saprotrophs have in common?
Both are **decomposers** — they feed on **dead organic matter** and **recycle nutrients** back to the environment.
What is the role of decomposers in an ecosystem? (2 marks)
They **break down dead organic matter** AND **release/recycle inorganic nutrients** to the soil for producers to reuse.
What is nutrient cycling?
The repeated movement of nutrients (carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus) **between living organisms and the environment**, so the same atoms are **reused**.
Why are decomposers essential to an ecosystem?
They **unlock the nutrients** trapped in dead matter; without them, nutrients would stay locked away and **producers would run out of raw materials**.
On a nutrient-cycle diagram, what do the BOXES and ARROWS represent?
**Boxes = stores** of nutrients (soil, litter, biomass); **arrows = transfers** of nutrients between the stores.
Name two processes that REDUCE the soil nutrient store.
**Uptake by plant roots** and **leaching** (nutrients washed out by water); also runoff/erosion.
Why is the litter-to-soil nutrient flow large in a tropical rainforest?
It is **warm and wet**, so **decomposers are very active** and break litter down **quickly**, releasing nutrients fast.
Topic 3.9 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Transfers of energy and matter
Biology exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
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