As soon as an animal eats a plant, a food chain is formed. All animals
are heterotrophs ("other-feeders"), since they find energy by consuming
other living things.
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Food chains can have as few as one link, or as many as six. Very few food chains have more than six links. Why? The food web consists of the transfer of energy from one species to another. Most of the energy transferred is used up by the consumeronly 10% is available for the next animal. By the sixth trophic level, very little energy remains to be consumed.
The animal at the top trophic level of a food chain faces no predators, but these species often face the greatest chance of extinction, since they depend on so many other species below them on the food chain.
But food chains show only part of the story. The true complexity of these energy
transfers is shown in a food web.![]()