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Polar Food Webs

You are here: Home1 / Polar Explorer Adventures2 / Streams in the Dry Valleys 3 / Polar Food Webs

Polar Food Webs

Use the Food Web image of the Polar Regions below to answer the corresponding questions.

Since phytoplankton is at the base of the food web, it is important for all the other organisms. Therefore, anything that laters the growth of phytoplankton , like iron, is important to research.


Collect Your Badge!

If you have completed all the steps in this adventure… Congratulations! You have earned the Streams in the Dry Valleys – Polar Explorer Adventure badge!

Download Badge

To collect you badge, you can click on the button above to download it an add it to your virtual notebook, or print it and add it to your physical notebook. Kudos!

❮ Previous Page
Polar Explorer Adventures
  • Data to the Rescue
    • Activity 1 – Pack Your Bags
      • Polar Regions
      • Packing for a Polar Expedition
      • What would you pack?
      • Climate Change at the Poles
      • The Arctic vs. the Antarctic
      • Hear From a Scientist Who Visited Antarctica!
    • Activity 2 – Diving into Data
      • Let’s Play a Card Game
      • How Do Scientists Collect and Share Data?
      • M&M Sorter & Simulator
      • Graphing M&M Data
    • Activity 3 – Penguins Need Our Help
      • Let’s meet Dr. Megan Cimino, Penguin Scientist
      • Locating the Research Site
      • Getting Started: What penguin are you today?
      • Let’s identify our study subjects… Penguins!
      • A Closer Look at Penguins
      • Investigation 1: Penguin Habitats
    • Activity 4 – Penguins of Palmer
      • Penguin Populations Over Time at Palmer
      • Investigation 2: Penguin Populations
      • How are the penguin populations changing?
      • What have we learned so far?
    • Activity 5 – Questionland
      • Welcome to Questionland!
      • Formulate your Question with your Group
      • Check in with Dr. Megan Cimino
      • Prioritizing your Questions
    • Activity 6 – Exploring Ice
      • Exploring Ice
      • Sea Ice and Climate Change
      • Investigation 3: Trends in Sea Ice Extent Data
    • Activity 7- Communicate Science with a Data Jam
      • Introduction to Data Jam
      • Creating a Data Jam: Step 1
      • Creating a Data Jam: Step 2
      • Examples of Ratios & Proportions
      • Ratios with Penguin Data
      • Create your Data Jam!
      • Make Change in Your Community
  • Ice Moves! 
    • Ellyn Enderlin – Glaciologist
    • Glacier Flow
    • How Do Glaciers Move?
    • How is Climate Change Impacting Glaciers?
  • Glaciers in Greenland 
    • Michalea King – Glaciologist
    • Studying the Earth with Satellites
    • Track Glaciers from Space!
    • The Fate of Pine Island
    • Dr. King’s Satellite Images
    • Understanding Glacial Retreat
    • Sketching Climate Change
  • Ancient Antarctica 
    • Stacy Porter – Glaciologist
    • Calculating the Age of a Glacier
  • Fire in the Arctic 
    • Introduction to Bianca
    • What does fire have to do with the Poles?
    • Satellite Images of the Boreal Forest
    • A Closer Look at Arctic Fires
    • The Effect of Fires on the Environment in the Arctic
    • Animals Impacted by Fire at the Poles
  • People in the Arctic 
    • Introduction to Bree
    • In the field – Archeological Dig
    • Join the Archeological Dig
    • Where would YOU dig and why?
    • Compare Your Dig Site Choice
  • Streams in the Dry Valleys 
    • Introduction to Chris
    • Iron, Phytoplankton, & the Carbon Cycle
    • Polar Food Webs
  • Lakes in the Dry Valleys 
    • Introduction to Rachael
    • What are Protists?
    • How do Living Things Get Energy?
    • Five Kinds of Protists
    • Build Your Own!

Acknowledgements

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This site was developed with the support of the National Science Foundation under Grant No. PLR-1525635 and PLR-1906897. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation.
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