A very good question, and a very important one! It is links in a food web from producer organisms to predators. Every organism needs something to live on, so best thing rather than making it techy is to give a good example.
Grass grows, the first ‘trophic level’ on the food chain and the primary producer, then grass gets eaten by a grasshopper, a ‘primary consumer’ and herbivore. Then the grasshopper is eaten by a mouse, a carnivore and another consumer, who is then eaten by a snake, who is then eaten by an eagle. The food chain continues until you reach the top predator, which no-one easts, and a food chain can be long or short. That was a long one!
A shorter one would be; grass -> antelope -> lion. No-one eats the lion! As grass is eaten by lots of animals this would expand into a food web. It gets larger around the middle and then gets smaller as you approach the top predator.
Yeah Chris explained it well with the Lion-Antelope-Grass example. Humans are also the perfect example- we are at the top of our food chain, we eat animals like cows and chickens, and they eat grass and insects.
Now that Chris and Sarah have described them I’ll mention that there is actually a really cool way to study food chains called stable isotope analysis. This is where we take a small sample of a plant or animal and see what the ratio of ‘heavy’ vs ‘normal’ atoms of carbon (13C/12 C) and nitrogen (15N/14N) are. We call atoms ‘heavy’ in nature because they have a higher atomic mass (weight is measured in Daltons). They are rarer than the ‘normal’ atoms but stay in tissue of an animal longer so if you look at a plant it will have the lowest ratio, an herbivore would have higher ratios, and a carnivore would have the highest! We also use this type of analysis to look at past climate records in plants and animals with a different atom, oxygen (18O/16O). Its a very cool way to study biology using physics and chemistry!
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