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Science Trek
The Web Show: Food Web
Clip: Special | 7m 24s | Video has closed captioning.
Find out how the tiniest forms of life and connected to the largest predators are all connected in the Science Trek Web only show. Host Joan Cartan-Hansen and her guests, Holly Holman veterinarian at Zoo Boise and Adare Evans, wildlife educator for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game will answer students’ questions.
Aired: 03/16/15
Rating: TV-G
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Major Funding Provided by the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation
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Science Trek is a place where parents, kids, and educators can watch short, educational videos on a variety of science topics. Every Monday Science Trek releases a new video that introduces children to math, science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) career potentials in a fun, informative way.
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Science Trek
Special | 28m 49s | Video has closed captioning.
The flow of the sun’s energy touches all living things on Earth. But how are plants and people connected? Why, it is through the food web. On this month’s Science Trek, host Joan Cartan-Hansen and her guests, Holly Holman, veterinarian at Zoo Boise and Adare Evans, wildlife educator for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game will answer students' questions.
Aired: 03/16/15
Rating: TV-G
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Major Funding Provided by the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation
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Science Trek is a place where parents, kids, and educators can watch short, educational videos on a variety of science topics. Every Monday Science Trek releases a new video that introduces children to math, science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) career potentials in a fun, informative way.
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Science Trek
The Web Show: Food Web
Clip: Special | 7m 24s | Video has closed captioning.
Find out how the tiniest forms of life and connected to the largest predators are all connected in the Science Trek Web only show. Host Joan Cartan-Hansen and her guests, Holly Holman veterinarian at Zoo Boise and Adare Evans, wildlife educator for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game will answer students’ questions.
Aired: 03/16/15
Rating: TV-G
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Major Funding Provided by the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation
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Teaching resources for Find standards-aligned teaching resources for Science Trek .
YouTube Channel
Science Trek is a place where parents, kids, and educators can watch short, educational videos on a variety of science topics. Every Monday Science Trek releases a new video that introduces children to math, science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) career potentials in a fun, informative way.
More Science and Nature Shows
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Science Trek
The Web Show: Food Web
Clip: Special | 7m 24s | Video has closed captioning.
Find out how the tiniest forms of life and connected to the largest predators are all connected in the Science Trek Web only show. Host Joan Cartan-Hansen and her guests, Holly Holman veterinarian at Zoo Boise and Adare Evans, wildlife educator for the Idaho Department of Fish and Game will answer students’ questions.
Aired: 03/16/15
Rating: TV-G
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Embed Video
Fixed iFrame
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Problems Playing Video? Report a Problem | Closed Captioning
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Your report has been successfully submitted. Thank you for helping us improve PBS Video.
Major Funding Provided by the Laura Moore Cunningham Foundation
More Extras
More specials.
Teaching resources for Find standards-aligned teaching resources for Science Trek .
YouTube Channel
Science Trek is a place where parents, kids, and educators can watch short, educational videos on a variety of science topics. Every Monday Science Trek releases a new video that introduces children to math, science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) career potentials in a fun, informative way.
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
Your body will use the energy from the tomato. This makes a basic food chain with two links, the tomato and you. In the wild, a basic food chain would be plants and bison. The bison is the primary consumer of the plants which are the producers of the energy which comes from photosynthesis which is powered by the sun. Whew!
Food Webs: Mountain, Jungle, Desert, Underwater. Your mission is to make sure all the animals have enough to eat for 12 days. Try each of these four games: Mountain Scramble, Jungle Jeopardy, Feed the Dingo, and Make a Mangrove. Play.
ISBN: 0778776379. Ages 4-8. Learn all about food webs and food chains. Great pictures and diagrams help to explain the interaction between various living things and their food. Easy to read text covers herbivores, carnivores and omnivores and decomposers. Read about the difference in food chains from different parts of the world.
What is the food web? Find out how all living things depend upon one another for survival.
The flow of the sun's energy touches all living things on Earth. But how are plants and people connected? Why, it is through the food web. All living thing...
What is the food chain? What is the food web? Find out how all creatures depend upon one another for survival.
Food webs can be broken down into multiple energy pyramids. Concepts should include the 10% rule of energy and biomass transfer between trophic levels and the environment. Emphasis is on describing the transfer of mass and energy beginning with producers, moving to primary and secondary consumers, and ending with decomposers.
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What is the food web? Find out how all living things depend upon one another for survival.
Explore LearningMedia Resources by Subject. This video segment from IdahoPTV's Science Trek illustrates how energy from the sun moves through the food chain. Learn about the food chain, and what are producers, consumers, and scavengers as well as where humans fit into the mix.
Your continuing support helps make Arizona PBS possible. Thank you!
- animals who hunt their food primary consumers - the first level of the food chain after producer - an herbivore or omnivore which eats plant life process - a series of actions in a system produce - to cause producers - plants are the producers in the food chain because they are the cause of passing food energy
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