Ecological Efficiency (10% Law)

Ecological Efficiency (10% Law)

Ecological Efficiency refers to the efficiency with which energy is transferred from one trophic level to the next. It is a measure of the fraction of energy that is converted into biomass at a higher trophic level compared to the energy available at the lower level. In most ecosystems, this efficiency is remarkably low.

Lindeman’s 10% Law

The 10% Law was proposed by Raymond Lindeman in 1942. It serves as a foundational principle for understanding energy dynamics in the biosphere.

  • The Principle: During the transfer of organic food energy from one trophic level to the next higher level, only about 10% of the energy is stored as new biomass (flesh).
  • The Loss: The remaining 90% of energy is lost to the environment, primarily through:
    • Metabolic Respiration: Energy used for movement, growth, and reproduction.
    • Heat Loss: Dissipation as a byproduct of chemical reactions (Second Law of Thermodynamics).
    • Incomplete Digestion: Energy excreted as waste (feces).
    • Natural Death: Energy contained in parts of organisms not eaten by the consumer (e.g., bones, roots).

Mathematical Representation

The efficiency can be calculated using the following formula:

Ecological Efficiency = Energy at Trophic Level (n)/Energy at Trophic Level (n-1) × 100

Trophic Levels and Energy Availability

Because of the drastic reduction in energy at each step, the number of trophic levels in an ecosystem is naturally restricted.

Trophic LevelCategoryEnergy Available (Example)
First (T1)Primary Producers$10,000 \text{ kcal}</td> </tr> <tr> <td><b>Second (T2)</b></td> <td>Primary Consumers (Herbivores)</td> <td>%%IASDOLLARAMOUNT1%%,000 kcal
Third (T3)Secondary Consumers (Carnivores)100 kcal
Fourth (T4)Tertiary Consumers (Top Carnivores)10 kcal

Key Implications for UPSC Prelims

  • Limitation of Food Chains: Energy depletion is the reason why most food chains do not exceed 4 or 5 levels. Beyond this, the energy is insufficient to support a breeding population of a higher predator.
  • Biomass Distribution: This law explains why the total biomass of producers is significantly higher than the biomass of top carnivores (forming the Upright Pyramid of Biomass in terrestrial systems).
  • Apex Predator Vulnerability: Species at the top of the food chain (e.g., Tigers, Eagles) require massive territories to hunt because the energy “per unit area” reaching their level is very low.
  • Vegetarianism and Efficiency: From an ecological perspective, shorter food chains are more efficient. If humans eat grain directly (T1 T2), more energy is available compared to eating livestock that consumed the grain (T1 T2 T3).

Related Concepts: Assimilation and Production Efficiency

For a deeper technical understanding, ecological efficiency is the product of two other efficiencies:

  1. Assimilation Efficiency: The percentage of ingested food that is actually absorbed by the gut and not excreted. (Higher in carnivores than herbivores).
  2. Net Production Efficiency: The percentage of assimilated energy that is used for growth and reproduction rather than respiration. (Higher in cold-blooded animals like fish than in warm-blooded mammals).

Fact Check: Exceptions to the 10% Rule

While 10% is the global average, actual efficiency can vary:

  • In highly productive aquatic systems, it may be slightly higher (up to 15-20%).
  • In harsh environments like deserts, it may be much lower.
  • Net Photosynthetic Efficiency: Plants are even less efficient at the start; they convert only about 1% of total incident solar radiation into GPP.
Last Modified: April 18, 2026

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