You, Chickens, and a Desert Island: An Energy Pyramid Problem

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You have found yourself stranded on a deserted island with limited food resources - a solar still, five chickens, and a crate of breakfast cereal. By analyzing the available calories and food chain dynamics, you must decide on the most efficient strategy to maximize your own survival chances. Options include sharing cereal with chickens, eating eggs and chickens, eating chickens and cereal, or letting the chickens go. By considering calorie calculations and energy transfer efficiency, you need to choose the plan that optimizes your calorie intake for long-term survival.


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  1. You, Chickens, and a Desert Island An energy pyramid problem

  2. The original question: You ve been stranded on a deserted island with no food except what washed ashore with you. You find a solar still for making fresh water, one cage containing five live chickens, and a large packing crate full of breakfast cereal. You do some quick calculations and realize there are enough calories in the cereal to keep you OR the chickens alive for 20 days. According to what we have learned about food chains and energy pyramids, which of the following plans will maximize the calories available to you, allowing you to survive the longest in hopes of rescue? There is only ONE correct answer. Yes, really. Feed all of the cereal to the chickens, then eat them. Feed all of the cereal to the chickens and eat their eggs. Kill the chickens and eat them, then eat the cereal. Share the cereal with the chickens. Eat their eggs, then eat the chickens when the cereal runs out. Set the chickens free to fly home, and eat the cereal.

  3. Your responses

  4. Rationales for share cereal, eat eggs, eat chickens and feed chickens, eat eggs Sharing cereal feeds chickens, which lay eggs, which you can eat no energy loss model of the food chain. Sharing cereal increases the amount of energy/nutrients that you get energy accumulation model of the food chain. Eggs/chickens have more calories than cereal perceptions about energy content of foods. Eggs/chicken meat have more nutrition than cereal perceptions about nutrient value of foods. Chickens are producers alternative perceptions about ecosystem production.

  5. Rationales for eat chickens, eat cereal. Feeding cereal to the chickens means only 10% of the energy in the cereal is passed on to you energy loss model of the food chain.

  6. Do the math! Use the worksheet provided and calculate the number of calories that each of the five strategies would yield. When calculating number of calories from eggs: Chickens will use up about 90% of the calories they receive. About 10% is turned into chicken and egg. As a very generous estimate, figure that about half of the cereal calorie input will become egg calorie output, so multiply the calories put into the chickens by 0.05.

  7. Now which strategy will maximize your calories for the longest survival? A. Share cereal with chickens, eat eggs, then chickens. B. Eat chickens, eat cereal. C. Share cereal with chickens, eat the eggs. D. Let chickens go, eat cereal. 25% 25% 25% 25% A. B. C. D.

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