Biology, asked by wahedasra1644, 10 months ago

what is biomass? describe the pyramid of biomass in terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem​

Answers

Answered by dreamrob
3

BIOMASS:

Biomass is a waste or organic material obtained from plants and animals used for energy production.

Biomass includes dead trees, livestock, paper, manure, and kitchen waste.

Pyramid of biomass in the terrestrial and aquatic ecosystem:

• Biomass pyramids show their relative amount of biomass in each of the trophic levels of an ecosystem.

• Terrestrial ecosystems contain more biomass in plants like trees, grass.

• Aquatic biomass pyramids show little bit different that is tend to be inverted due to the dynamics of the consumers and producers.

• The aquatic biomass pyramid sequence should be like this

Tertiary Consumers

|

Secondary consumers

|

Primary Consumers

|

Producers

• The terrestrial biomass pyramid sequence should be like this

Top Carnivores

|

Primary Carnivores

|

Herbivores

|

Producers

The top-level has a very less amount of biomass.

Answered by shailendrachoubay456
1

Ecosystem​

Explanation:

  • Biomass is plant or creature material utilized for vitality creation, or in different modern procedures as crude substance for a scope of items.
  • It tends to be deliberately developed vitality yields, wood or timberland buildups, squander from nourishment crops, agriculture, nourishment preparing, animal cultivating, or human waste from sewage plants.  
  • Biomass pyramids show the general measure of biomass in every one of the trophic degrees of a biological system.
  • Biomass is just the mass of living things in a specific trophic level.
  • Earthbound environments ordinarily have substantially more biomass in plants, for example, trees and grass, and less biomass as you climb in trophic level.  
  • Pyramid biological system displaying can likewise be utilized to show vitality move through the trophic levels pyramids of vitality are constantly upstanding since vitality diminishes at each trophic level.  
  • Earthly biological systems for the most part have substantially more biomass in plants, for example, trees and grass, and less biomass as you climb in trophic level. This makes an exemplary pyramid shape in the earthbound biomass pyramid
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