Transfer of biomass

The arrows in a show the transfer of from one organism to another. An example of a food chain is:

maize → locust → lizard → snake

Some of the energy from the sun transferred by maize when it is transferred to the locusts when they eat the plant. Then some of the biomass in the locust is transferred to the lizards when they are eaten and so on.

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Not all of the biomass is passed from the maize plants to the locusts. In fact, only about 10% of the biomass is transferred from each to the next. The remaining 90% is used by the organism to complete . Biomass can be lost between stages because not all of the matter eaten by an organism is digested. Some of it is excreted as waste such as solid , carbon dioxide and water in and water and in urine.

Because only around 10% of the biomass at each trophic level is passed to the next, the total amount becomes very small after only a few levels. So food chains are rarely longer than six trophic levels.

In fact, only about 1% of the energy from the Sun that reaches the plant's leaves is used by the plant during photosynthesis. This sounds small but is still enough to power almost all food chains on the planet.