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that maintain the organisms’ life processes. The autotrophic segment of the ecosystem is commonly
referred to as the producer level.
Trophic levels
Together, the autotrophs and
heterotrophs form various
trophic (feeding) levels
in the
ecosystem: the producer level (which is made up of autotrophs), the primary consumer level (which
is composed of those organisms that feed on producers), the secondary consumer level (which is
composed of those organisms that feed on primary consumers), and so on. The movement of organic
matter and energy from the producer level through various consumer levels makes up a food chain.
For example, a typical food chain in a grassland might be grass (producer) → mouse (primary
consumer) → snake (secondary consumer) → hawk (tertiary consumer). Actually, in many cases the
food chains of the ecosystem’s
biological community overlap
and interconnect,
forming what
ecologists call a food web. The final link in all
food chains is made up of
decomposers
, those
heterotrophs (such as scavenging birds and mammals, insects, fungi, and bacteria) that break down
dead organisms and organic wastes into smaller and smaller components, which can later be used by
producers as nutrients. A food chain in which the primary
consumer
feeds on living plants is called
a grazing pathway, and a food chain in which the primary consumer feeds on dead plant matter is
known as a
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