blog post 2

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the first row at the very bottom of the trophic pyramid always has the most energy, it takes away 10% of energy from each level. so, if a dugong eats seaweed, the seaweed will take off 10% of the energy it gets, so it will go from 1000-100, if a sea snake eats a dugong, it will get 10 energy, if a seal eats a sea snake, it’ll get 1 trophic level. if a barracuda eats the seal, it’ll get 0.1 trophic energy, lemon shark will eat the barracuda and get 0.01 energy, and then the final one on the pyramid, the decomposers. the decomposers get the least amount of energy, (0.001).
This foodweb is found in the coral reef. It shows the producers, the Primary, Secondary, and tertiary consumers along with the decomposers. the population for some octopi are slowly decreasing because we eat them. As people hunt these animals, these animals will slowly not exist, making the producers population grow, which isnt necessarily a good thing. Especially when these animals are so close to coral reefs. the coral reefs are dying as we speak because of all the pollution and the algae