Ecosystem Guide

Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains Section


 


Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on Ecosystem
Email:
First Name:



Main Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains sponsors


 

Latest Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains Link Added

INSERT YOUR OWN BANNER HERE

Submit your link on Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains!



 

Welcome to Ecosystem Guide

 

Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

The Grassland Ecosystem

from:


The grassland ecosystem covers the flora, fauna and ground conditions with in the parameters of a grassland. From the climatic conditions to the members and relationships in the food chain, the grassland ecosystem is dependant on the major resources available. In the grassland ecosystem the proportion of flora, including the varieties of trees, grasses, fungi and flowers will effect the way in which fauna exist.

The fauna in a grassland ecosystem will include the minute and the massive. The grassland ecosystem offers shelter and living conditions to insects, birds, arachnids and mammals, from the tiny bush mouse to the largest mammal, lizard or predator.
In the grassland ecosystem the smallest creatures and plants are still important to the structure of the environment. From the smallest gnat to the largest predator, the relationship between the food chain is vital to the balance of the ecosystem. In the way that grass feeds cattle so too do smaller creatures become food for larger. Even the plants of the grassland will become fodder for larger herbivores or small creatures. The grassland ecosystem is balanced by the resources available. The number of trees, fungi, grass or flowers will be, maintained by the number of animals or insects using them for their lifestyle or food sources. If the number of predators in the grassland ecosystem should alter, then the food chain would be unbalanced right down to the fundamental level. Even a slight alteration in the grassland ecosystem, due to floods or drought or human intervention, can lead to the destruction of the grassland ecosystem itself.

The grassland ecosystem is reliant on the balance being maintained, between growth and decay. While rotting grass, carcasses and mulch can offer sustenance to some creatures, the death of a plant is still part of the grassland ecosystem. The mulch provides the ideal place for germination of other seeds. All this is part of the balance of the grassland ecosystem.

The grassland ecosystem includes the life cycle of the larger animals too. Their living, reproducing, hunting and dying all effect the way the grassland ecosystem achieves balance. Any variation to the numbers of creatures within the grassland ecosystem could change the fragile balance drastically. To few predators could mean an over production of smaller herbivores. This would lead to a loss of plant life within the grassland ecosystem. Once the balance is lost, it can be impossible to regain.

The delicate balance of the grassland ecosystem is vital to the health and vitality of the grassland itself. From climate conditions, water quality and quantity, to human intervention, or exploitation, the grassland ecosystem is prone to influences that can alter it forever.



Other Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains related Articles

Coral Reef Ecosystem
What Is An Ecosystem
Terrestrial Ecosystem
Ecosystem
Food Web In The Ocean Ecosystem

Do you want to contribute to our site : submit your articles HERE


Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains Specific links

Ocean Ecosystem Food Chains News

Pacific Ocean 'Garbage Patch' Increasing At Alarming Rate

Brett Smith for RedOrbit.com Plastic trash has been accumulating in the Pacific Ocean at an alarming rate and its effects are reverberating throughout the ecosystem, according to a new study by researchers at Scripps Institution of Oceanography at UC San Diego . The study, published in the May 9 online issue of the journal Biology Letters , found that plastic trash in the "Great Pacific Garbage ...

Read more...


We're Going to Run Out of Fish

The World Wildlife Fund released a new report on biodiversity and human interaction with the planet, but there's one map in particular, highlighted by The Washington Post, that shows just how much damage we're doing. The map below, taken from the report, demonstrates how much fish we're pulling out of the ocean today compared to the middle of the previous century.

Read more...


Can beer save America?

The grand unifying theory of the American consumer has been that we are, first and foremost, low price fetishists. There’s ample evidence supporting this view: From Wal-Mart’s prominence to the fast food industry’s ongoing success, vast swaths of the economy are indeed built on the premise that buyers will prioritize discounts and quantity over premium prices and quality. But ever so quietly, we ...

Read more...


Is it ethical to drive stick?

Ever since I first watched my dad drive his chocolate brown Datsun 280 ZX back in the early 1980s, I've been inculcated to believe that driving -- true driving -- can only be performed with a stick shift. From that childhood experience, I came to see the manual transmission as a birthright passed down from my grandfather, to my father, and eventually to me via a series of tense, stall-filled ...

Read more...


Profiles in Resilience: DSC Dredge

By Seyi Fayanju by Shawn Stokes   While doing research for a Duke University study on jobs in Gulf Coast restoration, I met an affable entrepreneur named Robert “Bob” Wetta. He is the president of DSC Dredge , a small business founded by his father in the early 1990s. DSC Dredge manufactures portable hydraulic dredges for use in mining, navigation, and environmental restoration. The family-owned ...

Read more...