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Saturday, December 27, 2014

How Do Herbivores-- Moose, Gorilla- Get So Big? National Geographic


A photo of a moose
Moose, like this one in Alaska's Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, are adept at converting plants directly into energy.
PHOTOGRAPH BY JOEL SARTORE, NATIONAL GEOGRAPHCI CREATIVE
Liz Langley
PUBLISHED NOVEMBER 19, 2014
Carnivores may be at the top of the food chain, but herbivores are often the bigger guns (or guts) on the ladder. What makes them so big?
For Weird Animal Question of the Week, I took the author's prerogative to ask how plant-eaters grow so massive on what seems—to the omnivorous human, at least—like light fare.
It's a complex business, but in a nutshell, herbivores eat a lot and are lower down on the food chain, where there is more energy available.

Take the moose, the largest of the deer species, which lives in northern regions of North America, Europe, and Asia. Its name in Algonquin, a native language of eastern North America, means "twig eater"—not exactly a majestic moniker for a mammal that can weigh in at up to 1,800 pounds (820 kilograms). (Get more super moose facts from the National Geographic Channel.)

But it does reflect moose's "absolutely phenomenal ability" to get the most out of the foods they eat, Vince Crichton, a retired wildlife biologist at Manitoba Conservation and Water Stewardship in Canada, said via email.

Food Chain Dynamics
Matthew Lewis, senior program officer for African species conservation at WWF, says it all comes down to "trophic levels," or where an animal sits in the food chain. The higher up you go, the more energy is lost to things like respiration and metabolism.

Plants are primary producers, which means they convert sunlight into energy. Herbivores, such as elephants, are primary consumers, converting plants they eat into energy.
At the top of the food chain are the predators, which eat herbivores and convert them into energy. But, Lewis noted, there's a 10 percent loss of energy at each stage removed from plants.

So "if you're living as a carnivore, you have to consume ten times as much to get the same amount of energy you would from eating at the primary level," Lewis explained.

A carnivore the size of an African elephant, for instance, would have to spend all its time hunting and eating animals its own size just to make up for that energy loss.

And after a while there wouldn't be much for it to hunt.

"If you look at the Serengeti, you may see millions of wildebeest, and you may see only a few hundred lions at most," Lewis said.




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