A food web is like a big, busy playground where animals and plants all play together by eating each other.
Imagine you're in a park. Some kids run around, some sit on swings, and others chase balls. Now think of the food web as that same park, but instead of kids playing games, animals and plants are eating and being eaten.
How It Works
In a food web, there are different groups:
- Producers are like the ones who start the game. They make their own food using sunlight, like plants.
- Consumers are the players. Some eat producers (like deer), some eat other consumers (like wolves).
- Decomposers are the cleanup crew, like worms and fungi, they turn old food into new food for others.
A Real Example
Think of a forest: trees make food, rabbits eat grass, foxes catch rabbits, and when they all die, bugs and fungi clean up after them. It’s one big food web, everyone depends on each other to stay happy and healthy!
Examples
- A food web is like a group of friends sharing snacks, where each person passes the snack to someone else.
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See also
- What are consumers?
- How Does Environment Explained: Types and Ecosystems on Earth Work?
- How Does Coral Reefs 101 | National Geographic Work?
- How Do Corals Build Reefs? | California Academy of Sciences?
- How Does Natural Vs Human Environments Work?