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Lesson 1: Make the Connection

Published: September 2005

Activity: Students work with paper cutouts to learn about the parts of a food chain, specifically herbivores, carnivores, and producers.

Grade level: 4-8
Subjects: Science, social studies
Setting: Classroom
Duration: 30-60 minutes
Key Terms: Carnivore, Food chain, Herbivore, Omnivore, Producer

Objectives
After participating in this activity, students will be able to:

  • Describe the difference between herbivores, carnivores, and producers.
  • Answer questions about the interdependence of herbivores, carnivores, and producers as members of a food chain.
  • Answer questions about how pollution affects food chains.

Summary
All living organisms depend on one another for food. By reviewing the relationships of organisms that feed on one another, students begin to see how all organisms—including humans—are linked. If students understand the relationships in a simple food chain, they will better understand the importance and sensitivity of these connections, and why changes to one part of the food chain almost always impact another.

Background
A food chain is a simplified way to show the relationship of organisms that feed on each other. It’s helpful to classify animals in a simple food chain by what they eat, or where they get their energy.

Green plants, called producers, form the basis of the aquatic food chain. They get their energy from the sun and make their own food through photosynthesis. In the Great Lakes, producers can be microscopic phytoplankton (plant plankton), algae, aquatic plants like Elodea, or plants like cattails that emerge from the water’s surface.

Herbivores, such as ducks, small fish, and many species of zooplankton (animal plankton), eat plants. Carnivores (meat eaters) eat other animals and can be small (i.e, frog) or large (i.e, lake trout). Omnivores are animals (including humans) that eat both plants and animals. Each is an important part of the food chain.

In reality, food chains overlap at many points—because animals often feed on multiple species—forming complex food webs. Food web diagrams depict all feeding interactions among species in real communities. These complex diagrams often appear as intricate spider webs connecting the species. See: Unit 1, Lesson 2

This lesson demonstrates that changes in one part of a food chain or web may affect other parts, resulting in impacts on carnivores, herbivores, and eventually on producers. An example of this might be the harmful effects of pollution.

The point that should be made is that when something disrupts a food web, humans should try to understand and minimize the disturbance. Students should also come to recognize that humans, too, are part of this complex web of life.


Graphics: D. Brenner

See: Additional background info on food chains and food webs.


Project FLOW (Fisheries Learning on the Web) was developed by Michigan Sea Grant College Program
with support from the Great Lakes Fishery Trust. © Michigan Sea Grant and the Regents of the University of Michigan.
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