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GCSE/Combined Science/WJEC

B6.1Ecosystems: levels of organisation, biotic/abiotic factors, food chains and pyramids

Notes

Ecosystems

Levels of organisation

  • Individual — one organism.
  • Population — all members of one species in a given area.
  • Community — all populations of all species in a given area.
  • Ecosystem — community + abiotic environment, interacting.

Biotic and abiotic factors

  • Biotic (living): predators, prey, competitors, pathogens, food availability.
  • Abiotic (non-living): temperature, light intensity, water/moisture, pH, oxygen / carbon dioxide concentration, mineral content.

A change in any factor can shift the size of populations.

Food chains and food webs

Arrows in a food chain point in the direction of energy flow (from prey to predator).

Example: Grass to Rabbit to Fox.

  • Producer — autotroph that fixes light energy (e.g. grass).
  • Primary consumer — eats the producer (herbivore).
  • Secondary / tertiary consumer — predators higher up.
  • Decomposers — bacteria and fungi that break down dead material and recycle minerals.

Pyramids of biomass

A pyramid of biomass shows the dry mass of organisms at each trophic level. Biomass decreases moving up because:

  • Not all organisms at one level are eaten.
  • Not all parts are digested (faeces).
  • Energy is lost as heat from respiration and movement.

Roughly only ~10% of biomass is transferred to the next trophic level.

WJEC exam tip

When asked to describe the effect of removing a species from a food web, trace the consequences: predator population falls (lost food), prey population rises (no longer eaten), and effects propagate to species linked by other arrows. Always mention BOTH directions of impact.

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Practice questions

Try each before peeking at the worked solution.

  1. Question 14 marks

    Identify trophic levels

    WJEC Unit 1 Biology — Foundation tier

    A food chain in a meadow is: clover to caterpillar to robin to sparrowhawk.

    (a) Name the producer in this food chain. (1 mark)
    (b) Name the secondary consumer. (1 mark)
    (c) State two abiotic factors that could affect the growth of clover. (2 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-wjec-combined-science-leaves

  2. Question 24 marks

    Effect of removing a predator

    WJEC Unit 1 Biology — Higher tier

    A new disease causes the fox population in a woodland ecosystem to fall sharply. The food chain present is: grass to rabbit to fox.

    Predict and explain the short-term effect on the rabbit and grass populations. (4 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-wjec-combined-science-leaves

  3. Question 34 marks

    Pyramid of biomass and energy loss

    WJEC Unit 1 Biology — Higher tier

    A pyramid of biomass shows: producers 5000 g/m², primary consumers 500 g/m², secondary consumers 50 g/m².

    (a) Calculate the percentage of biomass transferred from producers to primary consumers. (2 marks)
    (b) State two reasons why biomass is lost between trophic levels. (2 marks)

    Ask AI about this

    AI-generated · claude-opus-4-7 · v3-wjec-combined-science-leaves

Flashcards

B6.1 — Ecosystems: levels of organisation, biotic/abiotic factors, food chains and pyramids

7-card SR deck for WJEC GCSE Combined Science (Double Award) — Leaves Batch 1 topic B6.1

7 cards · spaced repetition (SM-2)