producers has the highest number and they are called autotrophs because they make their own food then the consumers are next which are called heterotrophs because they depend on other organism for food and the decomposers are on the top of the pyramid of numbers
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The highest key on a flute is C.
Madonna is the highest earning female singer.
slash was is and will always be the highest paid guitarist
The highest woman's voice is called soprano.
Producers->plants Consumers->herbivores Secondary Consumers->carnivore that feeds on herbivores Tertiary Consumers->feed on carnivores Sun=energy source for producers decomposers are the greatest in amount of biomass, serving as the foundation of the biomass pyramid. Ordered by increasing biomass from lowest to highest by a total energy conversion being an average of 10% total energy conversion in each succeeding biomass classification. to understand this, pretend the decomposers have a biomass of 100,000, each level of biomass above decomposers, is divided by 10 to show approximate (obviously not nearly infallible) biomass value. Decomposers X 100,000 (mushrooms, decomposing bacteria etc.) producers X 10,000 consumers X 1,000 secondary consumers X 100 tertiary consumers X 10 there ya have it.. just rambled, hopefully this helped!
- The organisms have to fit into the energy pyramid- The largest number of organism in any ecosystem needs to be the producers- The smallest number of organism need to be the highest level of consumers in that ecosystem
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Producers generally have the highest biomass.Producers are photosynthetic organisms in most environments, such as plants and phytoplankton; they support the bottom of the food web and trophic levels.
The consumer at the top of the energy pyramid is the tertiary consumer. This organism feeds on secondary consumers, which in turn feed on primary consumers at the lower levels of the pyramid. Tertiary consumers are often at the highest trophic level in a food chain or web.
They are heterotrophs, meaning they are unable to create their own food. They consume the organic matter of secondary consumers(eg. bird) who feed on primary consumers (eg. ants) who feed on producers (eg. plants).
Photosynthesis provides food for the producers, which are then eaten by first-order consumers, which may be eaten by second-order consumers, and so on, which are then eaten by crocodiles, which are probably the highest-order consumer in the food web, unless humans are involved. Without photosynthesis to convert light energy into chemical energy in food molecules, there would be no producers or consumers, and no crocodiles (or humans).
The trophic level that typically contains the greatest biomass in most ecosystems is the primary producers, also known as autotrophs. These organisms, such as plants and algae, convert sunlight into energy through photosynthesis, forming the base of the food chain. As energy is transferred up the trophic levels, biomass decreases due to energy loss through respiration and heat production. Therefore, primary producers have the highest biomass as they support the entire ecosystem's energy flow.
On an ecological pyramid or in a food chain, typically, the highest trophic levels have the least amount of energy from the sun available for the next highest level. In a typical food chain, this would be the tertiary consumer level.
In a health ecosystem, organisms at the bottom of the food chain, such as plants and plankton, are likely to have the highest population because they form the base of the ecosystem and support higher trophic levels. Organisms at the top of the food chain, such as predators or apex predators, would have the lowest population as they typically have fewer individuals due to their position in the food web.
Quaternary consumers are organisms that occupy the highest trophic level in a food chain or web. They are carnivores that feed on tertiary consumers, which in turn feed on secondary consumers, which consume primary consumers. Quaternary consumers play a crucial role in regulating ecosystem dynamics.
The plants get 10 percent energy from the sun. The highest concentration of energy is in producers [for example plants or algae]. Then the primary consumer eats only plants but retain only ten percent of their energy. Secondary consumers eat the primary consumers and get ten percent from the primary consumers. Secondary consumers can also eat plants. Then the final level is the tertiary consumers who are typically carnivores and eat secondary consumers. They retain 10 percent from the secondary consumers. So with each level less energy is achieved.