Lesson 1 Feeding-Relationships
Lesson 1 Feeding-Relationships
Lesson 1 Feeding-Relationships
Starter:
1. Identify an adaptation of a plant that
lives in a desert condition
2. Identify and explain an adaptation of
an animal that lives in arctic conditions
3. What does a food chain tell us? Can
you give an example of a food chain?
Light from the Sun falls continuously to
the Earth. It is the source of energy for
most communities of living organisms.
Photosynthesis
Carbon dioxide + water Glucose + oxygen
https://www.youtube.com/wat
ch?v=bvqN9H3QtTQ
Self-assessment:
1. A food chain shows the sequence of organisms within a
habitat that are dependent on each other for a source of
food
2. The arrows in a food chain represents the energy flow
through the chain
3. Autotrophs are organisms which are able to make their own
food, e.g. plants making glucose by photosynthesis
4. A carnivore is an organism that eats other animals whereas
herbivores eat only plants.
5. An omnivore is an organism which eats both plants and
animals.
6. An insectivore is an organism which feeds on insects,
worms and other invertebrates
7. A decomposer breaks down dead plants and animals and
waste and return nutrients back to the soil.
8. Two examples of decomposers are bacteria and fungi
A food chain shows which organisms eat
other organisms
Grass Rabbit Fox
Description
Example
Description
Example
Populations
Great white Hammerhead
shark shark
Green sea
turtle
Clownfish
Regal
tang
Phytoplankton
Task 2: Using the ocean food web, answer the questions below.
Remember to write out the question and answer in full sentences:
1. Sharks eat clown fish, what will happen to the number of clown fish if
the sharks become vegetarian?
2. What effect will this have on the number of other organisms within the food
chain?
3. What will happen to the Regal tang fish if a disease wipes out the small
invertebrates?
2. If the number of prey increased this could eventually lead to an increase in the
number of predators as there is a larger food source available to support a
larger population. However, if the number of prey decreased there might not
be enough food to support the predator population and their numbers may
start to decline.
3. Disease will lead to a decline in the population of any species that is affected
by the disease, this will have a knock on effect to organisms within the food
chain.
4. There are a range of factors which can affect population numbers: disease,
human effects on habitat and feeding relationships (e.g. hunting, poaching,
habitat destruction, changes in climatic conditions), availability of resources in
the environment.
Jack Rabbits and
Coyotes
Jack
Coyote Rabbit