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Food Web

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
31 views

Food Web

Uploaded by

samdhm
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Introduction

Day 2: River habitats: who lives here?

Activity 1: Weaving a Food Web 2


All living things — plants and animals — need energy to live. Spring flowers need energy to
grow and bloom. Birds need energy to move their wings for flight. People need energy for all
kinds of things, from thinking to laughing to playing soccer to sleeping.

All living things get their energy from food. Green plants use energy from the sun to make their
food. Animals get their energy by eating plants or other animals. The sun is at the beginning of
every food chain. Here's a simple food chain:

   

sun grass caterpillar snake eagle

A food web is more complex than a food chain. It is made of many interconnected food chains
within a community. Here are three food chains that together make a wetland food web:

sun > grass > grasshopper > blue jay > owl
sun > grass > rabbit > hawk
sun > clover > caterpillar > snake > hawk

In this activity, kids will be creating an active food web with a ball of yarn and their bodies!

Supplies
• Photocopy of the plant and animal cards included, and cut along dotted lines
• Ball of yarn
• Tape or safety pins to attach cards to kids' clothing
Day 2: River habitats: who lives here?

Activity 1: Weaving a Food Web


(continued from previous page)
2
Let's get started!
Photocopy the plant and animal sheets included and cut along the dotted lines. Have the kids
choose one card each and tape or pin it to the front of their shirts. (Be sure that someone
is the "sun.") Form a circle, with the sun standing at the center. Have every child introduce
themselves as the plant or animal they represent. Ask the kids:
• Who in the circle would I give my energy to? (Who might eat me?)
• Who in the circle could give me energy? (Whom could I eat?)

Explain that the ball of yarn represents energy from the sun. Ask the sun to hold onto the loose
end of yarn and toss (or walk) the ball of yarn to someone who can use that energy (a green
plant). When the kid representing the green plant has the ball of yarn, they toss the yarn to
someone next in the food chain. Keep going until the yarn reaches the animal at the top of
that food chain (a carnivore — an animal that eats other animals). You've completed one food
chain!

Return the yarn to the sun and start a new chain, and continue making food chains until every
kid is holding at least one piece of yarn. Ask the kids:
• Have we made food chains? (Yes, many!)
• What do all of our food chains together look like? (A food web)
• Who is holding the most pieces of yarn and why? (The sun, because every food chain starts
with the sun)
• What else is part of many food chains (Green plants)

More activities
Food Chain Natural Links
https://www.themailbox.com/magazines/science-idea-food-chain/natural-links

Food Chain Stacking Cups


http://rovingfiddlehead.com/kidlit/flannel-friday-food-chain-stacking-cups/
Day 2: River habitats: who lives here?

Food Web 2

Find more River Rangers activities on the Start with a Book website:
www.startwithabook.org/river-rangers-book-based-science-adventure
Food Web Card 1

Human Duck

Dandelion Fox
Food Web Card 2

Owl Bobcat

Cattail Beetle
Food Web Card 3

Mouse Sunflower

Robin
Blue Jay
Food Web Card 4

Butterfly Dragonfly

Wildflowers Coyote
Food Web Card 5

Sun Grass

Rabbit
Spider
Food Web Card 6

Snake Frog

Caterpillar Hawk

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