Introducing 

Prezi AI.

Your new presentation assistant.

Refine, enhance, and tailor your content, source relevant images, and edit visuals quicker than ever before.

Loading…
Transcript

Jaguar

Boa Constrictor

Deforestation

Amazon Forest Food Web

by Connor Page

This is the primary threat to most large predators or tertiary consumers in the Amazon Rainforest.

Jaguars are predators and tertiary consumers. They get 10% of their energy from eating a snake or large birds.

Fossa

A Boa Contstrictor is a secondary consumer. They strangle their prey and then swallow them whole. Snakes gets 10% of its energy from eating it's prey.

Harpy Eagle

Spider Wasp

Three-Fingered Sloth

Harpy Eagles are a secondary consumers in my food web but are Apex Predators. They get 10% energy from eating their prey.

A Fossa is a secondary or tertiary consumer and gets 10% energy from eating its prey.

A spider wasp is a secondary consumer.They paralyzes this spider with a sting so it can feed it to its babies.

Humans are tertiary consumers. In other countries bugs and spiders are eaten every day for energy.

The Sloth is a primary consumer. Sloths only eat 2.5 ounces of foood a day. It can take up to 30 days to digest the fruit.

Humans

In the Brazilian Rainforest a Capuchin Monkey eats from Termite nests in trees. These monkeys are primary consumers.

Fruit Bat

Fig Tree

Lemurs are primary consumers. 10% of their energy is from eating fungi, leaves, fruit, insects, and even tiny birds.

This spider is a secondary consumer. They get 10% of their energy from eating.

Monkeys

Lemur

Termites are decomposers. They eat wood, fungi, and some insects.

Fungi in the Amazon Rainforest is also a decomposer.

The Fruit Bat is a primary coonsumer. They also eat bugs and seeds of trees.

The fig tree is a producer. The tree gets 100% of its energy from the Sun.

Goliath Bird-Eating Spider

Fungi

Termite

Learn more about creating dynamic, engaging presentations with Prezi