Food Web Game
Food Web Game
Food Web Game
Subject: Biology/Ecology
Grades: 6-12
Standards: See end of lesson plan.
Time: 10 minutes (can last as long as you want depending on how much you develop the activity)
Materials: Yarn, index cards, hole puncher, marker
Lesson objective: The student will understand the interrelatedness of food webs and see how populations
affect other populations.
Content:
1. Write the names of various plants and animals (a variety of types) on index cards. You can use the list
below, construct your own, or have participants select their own organism. Be sure to include the sun,
plants, plant eaters, and flesh eaters in the array.
sun, grasshopper, robin, grass, berry brush, hawk, quail, dandelion, mouse, worm, rabbit, cow,
flea, meadowlark, owl, wheat, tick, fox, weeds, coyote, mushrooms, microscopic bacteria
2. Punch holes in each card and give each participant a card and a piece of string to hang the card
around his/her neck.
3. Have individuals identify energy (or food) sources. As each one is identified, pass a ball of yarn
between the two people. For example: One student is a cow, and one is the grass. The cow will take
the ball of yarn, hold onto one end of the string and pass the rest of the ball to the grass. The grass will
hold onto the yarn and pass the rest of the ball to what it eats, in this case, the sun. Be sure that the
sun is connected to all the plants. Once the string gets to the sun, cut it off, and start again in another
place.
4. Continue building the web, making the relationships as complex as time and numbers of participants
allow. Define terms such as herbivore, carnivore, insectivore, decomposer, etc and include them in your
web. [Note that insectivores are specialized carnivores.] Students can be in as many chains as you
have time for; they do not have to be in all of the chains.
5. Discuss the nature and complexity of the food web that is formed. Note that it is not as complete or
complex as most natural food webs, but that it illustrates how living things are dependent upon one
another. Biologists feel that more complex food webs are more stable than simple ones.
6. After discussing the food web, the leader could ask what would happen if a species were removed from
the web. Have a student pull on the strings they hold; anyone who feels a tug is directly affected by that
organism. Those organisms affected directly could then pull on their strings and more organisms are
affected. Have different students pull on their strings. When the sun pulls on its string, everyone
should be affected. Have some organisms drop their string (become extinct) and see who is affected.
Have students tell you if certain populations will grow or decline. The teacher can represent nature and
cause any type of problem to occur; for example, a wildfire could occur, but some birds were able to fly
away and some types of trees reseed well after a fire. The teacher defines what happens and who is
affected; the students then reveal what would happen. New species could also move into the area at
any time disrupting the web.
7. Discuss what would happen if all of the predators were removed. Some species might exhaust their
food supply and starve, but others will continue to reproduce only until the food supply becomes limiting
or their interactions limit population size.
8. If desired, discuss the simplified food webs that produce most foods used by people. Remind the
participants that such food webs are inherently unstable and require large amounts of management
(raising/slaughtering cows, chickens, etc) to avoid problems.
Closure: Review everything with students telling them that this is the way a food web works. They can throw
away their yarn pieces. Students could complete the Food Web Worksheet from the teacher resource page.
Assessment: The activity could be assessed by participation, or students could complete a worksheet like the
Food Web Worksheet from the teacher resources page.
This activity was adapted from the 4-H Shooting Sports Program.
Standards: