Learning Objectives
Let Us Begin!

All living things need food to survive. But have you ever thought about who eats whom in nature?

Grass grows using sunlight. A deer eats the grass. A tiger eats the deer. This chain of "who eats whom" is called a food chain. It shows how energy moves from one living thing to the next.

Grass --> Deer --> Tiger

Every food chain begins with a plant (the producer) and ends with a top animal (the top consumer).

Producers -- Plants That Make Food

Producers are living things that make their own food. Green plants use sunlight, water, and air to make food through a process called photosynthesis.

Plants are always the first link in a food chain because they produce food for others.

Examples of producers: grass, algae (tiny green plants in water), neem tree, mango tree, rice plant, wheat plant.

Think about it: Without plants, no animal would have food. That is why plants are so important.

Consumers -- Animals That Eat

Consumers are living things that cannot make their own food. They eat plants or other animals.

There are three types of consumers:

TypeWhat They EatIndian Examples
Herbivore (plant-eater)Only plantsDeer, cow, elephant, rabbit, parrot
Carnivore (meat-eater)Only other animalsTiger, lion, eagle, snake, crocodile
Omnivore (eats both)Plants and animalsBear, crow, monkey, human

In a food chain, the animal that eats the plant is called the primary consumer (first consumer). The animal that eats the primary consumer is called the secondary consumer (second consumer).

Simple Food Chains

Let us look at some food chains found in India:

Indian Forest Food Chain

Grass --> Deer --> Tiger

Grass (producer) is eaten by the deer (herbivore / primary consumer). The deer is eaten by the tiger (carnivore / secondary consumer).

Indian Pond Food Chain

Algae --> Small Fish --> Crane

Algae (producer) is eaten by small fish (primary consumer). The small fish is eaten by the crane (secondary consumer).

Garden Food Chain

Leaves --> Caterpillar --> Frog --> Snake --> Eagle

This is a longer food chain with more links. The eagle is the top consumer.

The arrow (-->) in a food chain means "is eaten by". Energy flows in the direction of the arrow.

Key Words
WordMeaning
Food ChainA chain that shows who eats whom; how energy passes from one living thing to another.
ProducerA living thing (plant) that makes its own food using sunlight.
ConsumerA living thing (animal) that eats plants or other animals for food.
HerbivoreAn animal that eats only plants.
CarnivoreAn animal that eats only other animals.
OmnivoreAn animal that eats both plants and animals.
Food WebMany food chains connected together in a habitat.
What Is a Food Web?

In nature, animals do not eat only one type of food. A deer eats grass, leaves, and fruits. A tiger eats deer, wild boar, and fish. So many food chains overlap and connect with each other.

When many food chains in a habitat are linked together, they form a food web. A food web gives a more complete picture of "who eats whom" in a place.

Example -- A Simple Food Web in an Indian Forest

Grass --> Deer --> Tiger

Grass --> Rabbit --> Snake --> Eagle

Leaves --> Deer --> Leopard

Here, the deer appears in two chains. The grass feeds both the deer and the rabbit. These chains are connected -- forming a food web.

What Happens If One Link Is Removed?

Every link in a food chain is important. If one link is removed, it affects all the other living things.

Example: In the chain Grass --> Deer --> Tiger, if all the deer disappear:

- The tigers will not have enough food and their numbers will decrease.

- The grass will grow too much because no deer are eating it.

This is why we must protect all animals and plants. Cutting down forests or hunting animals can break food chains and harm nature.

Think about it: What would happen to frogs and snakes if all the insects in a pond disappeared?

Key Points to Remember
Practice Questions

A. Fill in the Blanks

  1. A food chain always begins with a .
  2. Animals that eat only plants are called .
  3. The arrow in a food chain means .
  4. Many food chains linked together form a .
  5. Plants make their own food using .

B. Multiple Choice Questions

  1. Which of these is a producer?
    (a) Tiger(b) Deer(c) Grass(d) Frog
  2. In the food chain Grass --> Rabbit --> Snake, the rabbit is a:
    (a) Producer(b) Primary consumer(c) Secondary consumer
  3. A bear eats both plants and fish. It is an:
    (a) Herbivore(b) Carnivore(c) Omnivore
  4. What happens if all the frogs in a pond disappear?
    (a) Insects will increase(b) Snakes will get more food(c) Plants will die

C. Complete the Food Chains

  1. Grass --> --> Tiger
  2. Algae --> Small Fish -->
  3. --> Caterpillar --> Frog --> Snake
  4. Grass --> Grasshopper --> --> Eagle

D. Answer in One or Two Sentences

  1. What is a food chain?
  2. Why are plants called producers?
  3. What is the difference between a food chain and a food web?
Fun Activity -- Build Your Own Food Chain

Think of a habitat (forest, pond, garden, or farm). Write the name of the habitat and create your own food chain with at least 3 links. Draw arrows between them.

Habitat:

Now label each living thing as Producer, Herbivore, or Carnivore: