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Ecological Pyramids




🌿 Chapter 01 · Topic 03 · Ecological Pyramids

Ecological Pyramids β€” Numbers, Biomass & Energy

Graphical representation of trophic structure; upright and inverted pyramids; Lindeman’s 10% Law of energy transfer.

What are Ecological Pyramids?

An ecological pyramid is a graphical representation of the trophic structure and function of an ecosystem. It shows the relationship between producers and consumers at different trophic levels in terms of numbers, biomass, or energy.

  • Concept introduced by Charles Elton (1927) β€” also called Eltonian Pyramids
  • Producers always form the base; top carnivores form the apex
  • Three types: Pyramid of Numbers, Pyramid of Biomass, Pyramid of Energy
Shapes: Upright (base wider than apex), Inverted (apex wider than base), Spindle-shaped (middle wider than both ends)

Pyramid of Numbers

Represents the number of individual organisms at each trophic level.

ShapeEcosystemReason
UprightGrassland ecosystemMillions of grass plants β†’ thousands of insects β†’ hundreds of frogs β†’ few snakes β†’ one eagle
InvertedTree ecosystem (single tree)One tree supports thousands of insects β†’ many birds β†’ few top predators
Spindle-shapedParasitic food chainOne host β†’ many parasites β†’ more hyperparasites (e.g., one dog β†’ many fleas β†’ many bacteria)
Limitation: Does not account for the size of organisms. A single large tree and a single small herb are both counted as “1” β€” making this the least accurate pyramid.

Pyramid of Biomass

Represents the total dry weight (biomass) of organisms at each trophic level, measured in g/mΒ² or kg/mΒ².

ShapeEcosystemReason
UprightTerrestrial ecosystem (forest, grassland)Large biomass of plants β†’ less biomass of herbivores β†’ even less of carnivores
InvertedAquatic/Pond ecosystemSmall biomass of phytoplankton (short-lived, rapid turnover) supports large biomass of zooplankton and fish
Why inverted in aquatic? Phytoplankton reproduce very rapidly (high turnover rate), so at any given moment their standing biomass is less than the consumers they support. The total production over time is still high.

Pyramid of Energy

Represents the amount of energy at each trophic level, measured in kcal/mΒ²/year or J/mΒ²/year.

  • Always upright β€” energy always decreases from lower to higher trophic levels
  • Never inverted β€” energy cannot be created; it is always lost as heat at each level
  • Most accurate and most useful representation of ecosystem function
  • Based on Lindeman’s 10% Law (1942)
Why always upright? Due to the Second Law of Thermodynamics β€” energy is lost as heat at every trophic level. Energy can never flow upward in greater amounts than it enters from below.

Lindeman’s 10% Law

Proposed by Raymond Lindeman (1942) based on his study of Cedar Bog Lake, Minnesota.

Only 10% of energy at one trophic level is transferred to the next trophic level. The remaining 90% is lost as heat through respiration, movement, and metabolic activities.

Example calculation:

  • T1 (Producers) = 10,000 kcal
  • T2 (Primary consumers) = 1,000 kcal (10% of 10,000)
  • T3 (Secondary consumers) = 100 kcal (10% of 1,000)
  • T4 (Tertiary consumers) = 10 kcal (10% of 100)
Implication: Eating lower in the food chain is more energy-efficient. A vegetarian diet uses 10x less energy than a meat-based diet β€” important for understanding food security and sustainability.

Comparison of All Three Pyramids

FeaturePyramid of NumbersPyramid of BiomassPyramid of Energy
MeasuresNumber of organismsDry weight of organismsEnergy content
UnitNumber/mΒ²g/mΒ² or kg/mΒ²kcal/mΒ²/yr
Can be inverted?Yes (tree, parasitic)Yes (aquatic)Never
AccuracyLeast accurateMore accurateMost accurate
Upright exampleGrasslandTerrestrial/forestAll ecosystems
Inverted exampleTree ecosystemAquatic/pondNone
LimitationIgnores organism sizeIgnores energy contentDifficult to measure

Revision Checklist

βœ… Ecological pyramids introduced by Charles Elton (1927)
βœ… Three types: Numbers, Biomass, Energy
βœ… Pyramid of Numbers β€” upright in grassland; inverted in tree ecosystem; spindle in parasitic
βœ… Pyramid of Biomass β€” upright in terrestrial; inverted in aquatic (pond)
βœ… Pyramid of Energy β€” ALWAYS upright; NEVER inverted
βœ… Pyramid of Energy = most accurate representation
βœ… Pyramid of Numbers = least accurate (ignores organism size)
βœ… Lindeman’s 10% Law (1942) β€” only 10% energy transferred per trophic level
βœ… 90% energy lost as heat at each trophic level
βœ… Aquatic biomass pyramid inverted due to rapid phytoplankton turnover
βœ… Energy pyramid always upright due to Second Law of Thermodynamics