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  2. Consumer (food chain) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer_(food_chain)

    An example is the koala, because it feeds only on eucalyptus leaves. Primary consumers that feed on many kinds of plants are called generalists. Secondary consumers are small/medium-sized carnivores that prey on herbivorous animals. Omnivores, which feed on both plants and animals, can be considered as being both primary and secondary consumers.

  3. Consumer–resource interactions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumerresource...

    Consumerresource interactions are the core motif of ecological food chains or food webs, [1] and are an umbrella term for a variety of more specialized types of biological species interactions including prey-predator (see predation), host-parasite (see parasitism), plant-herbivore and victim-exploiter systems. These kinds of interactions ...

  4. Food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_web

    The food web is a simplified illustration of the various methods of feeding that link an ecosystem into a unified system of exchange. There are different kinds of consumerresource interactions that can be roughly divided into herbivory, carnivory, scavenging, and parasitism.

  5. Marine food web - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marine_food_web

    As primary consumers, zooplankton are the crucial link between the primary producers (mainly phytoplankton) and the rest of the marine food web (secondary consumers); [191] the ocean's primary producers are mostly tiny phytoplankton which have r-strategist traits of growing and reproducing rapidly, so a small mass can have a fast rate of ...

  6. Consumer-resource model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consumer-resource_model

    In an ecosystem with many species and resources, the behavior of consumer-resource models can be analyzed using tools from statistical physics, particularly mean-field theory and the cavity method. [18] [19] [20] In the large ecosystem limit, there is an explosion of the number of parameters.

  7. Energy flow (ecology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_flow_(ecology)

    Secondary production is the use of energy stored in plants converted by consumers to their own biomass. Different ecosystems have different levels of consumers, all end with one top consumer. Most energy is stored in organic matter of plants, and as the consumers eat these plants they take up this energy.

  8. River ecosystem - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/River_ecosystem

    The secondary consumers in a river ecosystem are the predators of the primary consumers. This includes mainly insectivorous fish. [37] Consumption by invertebrate insects and macro-invertebrates is another step of energy flow up the food chain.

  9. Trophic cascade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trophic_cascade

    Trophic cascades are powerful indirect interactions that can control entire ecosystems, occurring when a trophic level in a food web is suppressed. For example, a top-down cascade will occur if predators are effective enough in predation to reduce the abundance, or alter the behavior of their prey, thereby releasing the next lower trophic level from predation (or herbivory if the intermediate ...