Can an ecological pyramid be turned upside down?

If the reproduction rate of the prey population is high, then even with a low biomass, such a population can be a sufficient food source for predators with a higher biomass, but a low reproduction rate. For this reason, pyramids of abundance or biomass can be inverted, i.e. low trophic levels can have less density and biomass than higher ones.
For instance:
1) Many insects can live and feed on one tree.
2) An inverted biomass pyramid is characteristic of marine ecosystems, where the primary producers (phytoplankton algae) divide very quickly, and their consumers (zooplankton crustaceans) are much larger, but reproduce much slower. Marine vertebrates have an even greater mass and a long reproduction cycle.



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