In nature everything is connected! This activity will help a group or a class to think about which animal and plant species are connected by creating their own food web and will help them to realise why each and every species in a food web is important.
What you will need:
- A picture of the sun on a piece of paper or a whiteboard
- A printed Food Web Activity Sheet (available to download below) for each child
- String
How to create your food web:
- First, ask the children these questions to help get them thinking about where food comes from:
- Where do we get our energy from? Answer: the plants and animals we eat
- Where do animals get their energy from? Answer: the plants and animals they eat
- Where do plants get their energy from? Answer: the sun
- Next, ask the children to complete Food Web Activity Sheet, identifying the animals and plants in the diagram and noticing the arrows showing the connections between species.
- Ask the children to choose a marine animal or plant from the species list below and to get in character – what would the animal of plant look like? How would it behave?
- Using string, children should connect themselves to one another: what would their animal/plant eat, and who would eat them? Make sure that the food web links back to the picture of the sun.
- Once everyone is in their place in the food web, remove an animal and ask the children: what happens to the animals or plants that were connected to that animal? Children should note that the food web will collapse if a part is removed and that every species in a food web is important.
Follow-up activity: Once the children have had time to think about what will happen to the food web, they could come up with an idea of how to communicate what needs to happen to protect all species in the ocean. This could be a newspaper article, poster, tv advert or a video!
Species list
Species | What they need / eat |
Plankton | Sunlight |
Algae (seaweed) | Sunlight |
Crab | Algae |
Mussels | Algae |
Jellyfish | Plankton |
Starfish | Mussels |
Krill (small shrimps) | Plankton and algae |
Small fish | Plankton |
Squid | Crabs, krill, mussels, starfish, small fish |
Large fish | Squid, small fish |
Seabird | Small fish, crab, starfish |
Eel | Crab |
Turtle | Jellyfish |
Dolphin | Small fish, squid, turtles, plankton, krill |
Sea lions | Small fish, squid |
Sperm whale | Squid, crabs, fish |
Blue whale | Krill |
Tiger shark | Dolphins, small fish, big fish, turtles |
This activity was developed for the Royal Scottish National Orchestra
to accompany their early years animated film, Yoyo & the Little Auk.