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The Food Chain Pictures resource can be used in a variety of ways with your class. These images are great to use as flashcards or for display purposes. The resource includes 21 A4 size pages, each with a beautiful illustration of different consumers, predators and producers.
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Key points. All organisms in an ecosystem depend on each other. Food chains show the flow of energy from one organism to another. Food chains show the feeding relationships between...
Tiny bell-shaped or tubular flowers, in shades of pink, purple, red or white, smother these usually compact shrubs at various times of year, depending on the cultivar. The fine, needle-like, evergreen foliage provides yet more colour, in various shades of green or yellow, often tinged with copper.
A food chain always starts with a producer. A producer is an organism that makes its own food. Most food chains start with a green plant, because plants make their own food by...
The food chain game is a fun sorting activity for your future scientists to play independently or in groups. The resource includes a selection of photos of different animals and plants for them to carefully cut out and then arrange in different ways to get as many different combinations as they can.
Key learning points. Animals need food from plants and other animals to stay alive. A food chain is used to show the order in which living things depend on each other for food. A food chain begins with a plant.
Food chains and webs show the transfer of energy between trophic levels. They can be represented as pyramids of number and biomass and the efficiency of these transfers can be calculated.