Pyramids of Biomass
Pyramids
- There are two forms of 'food pyramids' to be aware of
- Pyramids of number
- Pyramids of biomass
Pyramids of number
- A pyramid of numbers shows how many organisms are at each trophic level of a food chain
- The width of the box indicates the number of organisms at that trophic level
- For example, consider the following food chain
- Is it likely that there would be more voles in an area than grass plants?
- How many voles might one barn owl need to eat per day?
- If it’s more than one, is it likely that there are more barn owls in an area than voles?
- So, a pyramid of numbers for this food chain would look like this:
A pyramid of numbers
- Despite the name (and the example above), a pyramid of numbers doesn’t always have to be pyramid-shaped, for example:
Pyramids of numbers are not always pyramid-shaped
- This is because the size of the organism is also important
- One large organism, like the oak tree in the pyramid above, contains enough energy to support many smaller organisms (the insects)
- There are some rules to remember when drawing a pyramid of numbers:
- You cannot change the trophic level of the organisms - they must stay in the same order as in the food chain with producers on the bottom, followed by primary consumers, then secondary consumers, then tertiary consumers
- Generally, the larger an individual organism is, the fewer of them there are
Pyramids of biomass
- A pyramid of biomass shows how much mass the organisms at each level would have without including all the water content (their ‘dry mass’)
- Biomass is a store of energy
- Pyramids of biomass are always pyramid-shaped, regardless of what the pyramid of numbers for that food chain looks like
- This is because the mass of organisms has to decrease as you go up a food chain – if we take our first food chain as an example, it would be impossible to have 10kg of grass feeding 50kg of voles feeding 100kg of barn owls
A pyramid of biomass
- Pyramids of biomass provide a much better idea of the quantity of the plant or animal material at each level of a food chain and therefore are a better way of representing interdependence within the food chain