Concept: A food chain shows how energy is transferred from one living organism to another through feeding. It starts with a producer (usually a plant) and follows a sequence of consumers.
The basic structure is: Producer \(\rightarrow\) Primary Consumer \(\rightarrow\) Secondary Consumer \(\rightarrow\) Tertiary Consumer, etc.
Step 1: Understanding the components of a food chain
Producers: Organisms that produce their own food, usually through photosynthesis (e.g., plants, algae). They form the base of the food chain.
Primary Consumers (Herbivores): Organisms that eat producers (e.g., goat eating grass).
Secondary Consumers (Carnivores or Omnivores): Organisms that eat primary consumers (e.g., lion eating a goat).
Tertiary Consumers (Carnivores or Omnivores): Organisms that eat secondary consumers.
Decomposers: Organisms (like bacteria and fungi) that break down dead organic matter, returning nutrients to the ecosystem. (Not explicitly part of the linear feeding sequence).
The arrows in a food chain indicate the direction of energy flow (e.g., Grass \(\rightarrow\) Goat means energy flows from grass to goat).
Step 2: Analyzing the options to see if they represent a valid food chain
(1) Grass, goat, humans:
Grass (Producer: makes its own food)
Goat (Primary Consumer: eats grass - herbivore)
Humans (Secondary Consumer: can eat goat - omnivore/carnivore in this context)
This represents a valid food chain: Grass \(\rightarrow\) Goat \(\rightarrow\) Human.
(2) Insects, frog, pigs:
Insects (Could be primary consumers if they eat plants, or other roles).
Frog (Secondary Consumer: eats insects - carnivore).
Pigs (Omnivore: could eat frogs, but also plants, etc. The link here isn't as direct or typical as a simple chain).
If insects eat plants (not shown), then Plants \(\rightarrow\) Insects \(\rightarrow\) Frog. Do pigs commonly prey on frogs as a primary food source in a simple chain? Less typical.
(3) Planktons, lobster, whales:
Planktons (Phytoplankton are producers; Zooplankton are primary consumers that eat phytoplankton).
Lobster (Typically a bottom-feeder, omnivore/detritivore; may eat small organisms, but a direct plankton \(\rightarrow\) lobster step in a simple chain isn't always primary).
Whales (Some whales, like baleen whales, eat plankton (krill, which are zooplankton). Other whales, like toothed whales, eat fish or squid).
A chain like Phytoplankton \(\rightarrow\) Zooplankton (e.g., krill) \(\rightarrow\) Baleen Whale is valid. Plankton \(\rightarrow\) Lobster \(\rightarrow\) (Something that eats lobster, then whale? or Whale eats lobster?) is less direct for a simple chain.
(4) Protozoans, fish, tiger:
Protozoans (Can be consumers of bacteria/algae, or decomposers).
Fish (Some small fish might eat protozoans; larger fish eat smaller fish).
Tiger (Terrestrial apex predator; eats large herbivores like deer, boar. Does not eat fish as a primary food source).
This is not a valid or typical food chain. Tigers are not aquatic predators of fish.
Step 3: Identifying the clearest and most direct food chain
Option (1) "Grass, goat, humans" presents a very clear and straightforward terrestrial food chain representing the flow of energy from a producer (grass) to a primary consumer (goat) and then to a secondary consumer (humans).