Food chain models typically predict that communities are controlled by predators at the top and plants (
autotrophs or producers) at the bottom. s) model trophic levels in a food chain and/or biomass productivity. Thus, the foundation of the food chain typically consists of
primary producers. Primary producers, or
autotrophs, utilize energy derived from either sunlight or inorganic chemical compounds to create complex organic compounds, such as starch, for energy. Because the sun's light is necessary for
photosynthesis, most life could not exist if the sun disappeared. Even so, it has recently been discovered that there are some forms of life,
chemotrophs, that appear to gain all their metabolic energy from
chemosynthesis driven by
hydrothermal vents, thus showing that some life may not require
solar energy to thrive.
Chemosynthetic bacteria and
archaea use
hydrogen sulfide and
methane from hydrothermal vents and cold seeps as an energy source (just as plants use sunlight) to produce carbohydrates; they form the base of the food chain in regions with little to no sunlight. Regardless of where the energy is obtained, a species that produces its own energy lies at the base of the food chain model, and is a critically important part of an ecosystem. Higher
trophic levels cannot produce their own energy and so must consume producers or other life that itself consumes producers. In the higher trophic levels lies consumers (
secondary consumers,
tertiary consumers, etc.).
Consumers are organisms that eat other organisms. All organisms in a food chain, except the first organism, are consumers. Secondary consumers eat and obtain energy from primary consumers, tertiary consumers eat and obtain energy from secondary consumers, etc. At the highest trophic level is typically an
apex predator, a consumer with no natural
predators in the food chain model. When any trophic level dies,
detritivores and decomposers consume their organic material for energy and expel nutrients into the environment in their waste. Decomposers and detritivores break down the organic compounds into simple nutrients that are returned to the soil. These are the simple nutrients that plants require to create organic compounds. It is estimated that there are more than 100,000 different decomposers in existence. Models of trophic levels also often model energy transfer between trophic levels. Primary consumers get energy from the producer and pass it to the secondary and tertiary consumers. == Studies ==