GradeGrove
Grades 3–5
Easy
Official

Science: Ecosystems & Food Chains: Easy Practice

Free elementary science practice on ecosystems and food chains. Students review producers, consumers, decomposers, and how energy moves through living communities. Build confidence with foundational questions. Review key vocabulary and core skills before moving to harder sets.

For teachers

Assign after a habitat observation activity or before a unit test on interdependence and energy flow.

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Study guide

# Easy Level Guide Build confidence with foundational questions. Review key vocabulary and core skills before moving to harder sets. # What Is an Ecosystem? An ecosystem includes all living things in an area plus the nonliving parts they interact with, such as water, soil, and sunlight. Forests, ponds, and deserts are different ecosystems. Organisms depend on each other and on their environment to survive. # Producers, Consumers, and Decomposers Producers make their own food through photosynthesis. Plants and algae are producers. Consumers eat other organisms for energy. Herbivores eat plants; carnivores eat animals. Decomposers break down dead matter and return nutrients to the soil. # Food Chains and Food Webs A food chain shows one path of energy from the sun to a top consumer. Arrows point in the direction energy flows. A food web shows many connected chains in an ecosystem. Removing one species can affect others in the web. # Balance and Change Ecosystems can be disrupted by drought, pollution, or loss of habitat. Conservation efforts protect biodiversity. Students should describe relationships using scientific vocabulary and explain what happens when a link in a chain is removed.

FAQ

Does this align with NGSS life science standards?
Yes. Content maps to elementary standards on interdependent relationships in ecosystems.
Are food webs included?
Yes. Questions cover both simple food chains and the more complex idea of food webs.