Plants or algae form the lowest level of the food web. At each link upward in a food web, only a small fraction of the matter consumed at the lower level is transferred upward, to produce growth and release energy in cellular respiration at the higher level. Given this inefficiency, there are generally fewer organisms at higher levels of a food web. Some matter reacts to release energy for life functions, some matter is stored in newly made structures, and much is discarded. The chemical elements that make up the molecules of organisms pass through food webs and into and out of the atmosphere and soil, and they are combined and recombined in different ways. At each link in an ecosystem, matter and energy are conserved.
Standard detail
DCI.LS2.B.9-12.4
Depth 2Parent ID: 67B91AD03F5C4C18AFBF9E8520BB9E19Standard set: Grades 9, 10, 11, 12
Original statement
Quick facts
- Statement code
- DCI.LS2.B.9-12.4
- Standard ID
- 5E2C918DA1FA4E618C76BC8128E2F3AB
- ASN identifier
- S21342712
- Subject
- Next Generation Science Standards (2013)
- Grades
- 09, 10, 11, 12
- Ancestor IDs
- 67B91AD03F5C4C18AFBF9E8520BB9E1923CD28BCAB314BE09E1B2DECA55F1642
- Source document
- Next Generation Science Standards (2013)