Answer.
The reason why there aren't many predators is because of the food chain energy flow.
When one organism eats another it only takes about 1/10 of it's energy. Therefore in general as it only gets 1/10 there should only be 1 predator for every 10 prey.
There is also competition. If a lion and tiger only eat this one animal and the tiger always gets it the Lion will die off.
There are many predators. Everything that lives is preyed upon by another living thing.
There can't be too many predators for each type of prey because a species could end up be wiped out. The food chain keeps a natural balance that would work if humans stopped destroying their habitats.
Predators are generally less abundant than their prey because the prey is lower on the food chain in most situations. This causes the prey to multiply much more rapidly. The end result is that you will see more prey than you will predators in most scenarios.
This is because energy is transferred from trophic level to higher trophic levels. The energy transferred from level to level decreases a lot as energy is used up for respiration, loss as heat, loss during excretion. So the energy passed on to the next level only can support a smaller number than the previous trophic level.
Here is a simplified explanation:
If a grazer needs 10 pounds of vegetation to produce 1 pound of body mass...and a predator needs 10 pounds of meat to produce 1 pound of body mass it takes 100 pounds of grass to produce 1 pound of mass in a predator.
Because it might eat almost everything.
Almost, not all.
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The population would explode, becoming overabundant. Eventually, all the food would become exhausted and the fish would starve. That's why it's important to have a balanced amount of predators and prey. Of course, there should always be less predators than prey. The problem arises when there are less big predator fish than there should be.
There always has to be more prey than predator. If there is less prey, it will get eaten by the predator and then the predator will starve. If there are not enough predators, the prey may overpopulize.
In some environments, the vast majority of the biomass of an ecosystem is in upper level predators! (Coral reefs come to mind)Right, um... The larger predators tend to be more ordered than large numbers of prey. They organize a bunch of little things into one ordered body. As the universe must descend towards disorder, there would typically be more (disorganized) prey than (organized) predators.
In a stable ecosystem (like a rain forest), there will usually be fewer predators/meat eaters than prey/plant eaters, because the higher up you are on the food chain, the fewer of you there will be; If there were fewer prey animals than predators, they would all be eaten quickly, and the predators would starve and the ecosystem would break down. But if there are more prey animals than predators, the prey animals will live long enough to reproduce and keep the population stable, the predators will still have food and the ecosystem will stabilize.
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Yes. They're a prey animal, which makes them more than inclined to have predators.
Other than occasionally eating small insects, monkeys are not predators and have no prey.
they have less surface area and lose less heat Larger predators have slower metabolism and burn less fat during activity so they need less fuel
well,predators will eventually kill whatever prey they can catch whether old,sick or weak, but more often than not this will be the more weaker and feeble ones because they are easier to catch with less resistance.
well,predators will eventually kill whatever prey they can catch whether old,sick or weak, but more often than not this will be the more weaker and feeble ones because they are easier to catch with less resistance.
The predator doesn't have to be bigger, but it must be adadpted to kill its larger prey
Savannas have grass that attracts herbivores that are the prey of predators.