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Food Chains, Scavengers & Decomposers. “they’re everywhere!”. What’s A Food Chain?. Scientists use a kind of flowchart called a food chain to show how living things are connected together. A food chain is a convenient way to show how energy moves among living things in an ecosystem.
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Food Chains, Scavengers & Decomposers “they’re everywhere!”
What’s A Food Chain? • Scientists use a kind of flowchart called a food chain to show how living things are connected together. • A food chain is a convenient way to show how energy moves among living things in an ecosystem. • Some food chains are longer than others, and more than one consumer can be part of a food chain
Scavengers & Decomposers • All living things eventually die (sad, isn’t it?) • All consumers generate waste materials from the food they eat (gross, isn’t it?) • Our planet would be covered in dead corpses and waste materials if not for a special group of consumers. • These consumers get the matter and energy they need from wastes, dead plants and dead animals • They are known as scavengers & decomposers!
Scavengers • Scavengers are consumers that don’t usually kill for their own food. • Instead, they feed off the remains of living things that are killed by other consumers. • Crows, Ravens, and housefly larva (maggots) are examples of scavengers.
Decomposers • Decomposers are consumers that break-down (decompose) animal wastes and dead plants and animals. • Fungi such as mushrooms and the mould you see growing on bread, fruits and vegetables are decomposers. • Many kinds of bacteria are also decomposers.
Decomposers Are Essential • Decomposers keep us and other living things from being buried in dead bodies, feces and urine • Their actions mean that plants always have a supply of nutrients available to them
Class Work • In partners, share a textbook. • Answer Questions #1-2 on pg.33 • Hand in your work when it is complete! • It is too noisy!