The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 154, No. 14, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 14, 2007 Page: 10 of 10
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Page 4B ★ ICIic Bastrop Sldocmscr Saturday, April 14,2007 Q
A Newspaper Activity Page for Young People
.com
This Week: food Chains]
) 2007 by Vicki Whiting, Editor Jeff Schinkel, Graphics Vol 23 No.
MAKE A FOOD CHAIN
Not a chain made
out of food!
Food chains
describe which
plants or animals
eat or are eaten
by other animals.
Below is a food
chain you can make
to learn how sea
plants and animals
need the
creatures lower on
the food chain in
order to survive.
1. Cut out each strip
of the "chain."
2. Make a loop with
strip A, plant
plankton. Join
the ends with
tape, staples
or glue.
r
Thread strip B, animal plankton through
strip A. Join the ends of strip B to make a
second loop in the chain. „
This shows that
tiny animal
plankton need
plant plankton in
order to live.
4. Thread strip C
through strip B.
This shows that
small sea animals
eat plankton. Join
the ends to make
a loop.
5. Thread strip D through strip
C. This shows that large sea
animals eat smaller sea
animals.
6. Thread strip E through strip
D. This shows that people
eat larger fish such as bass,
halibut and salmon.
@©
See the Differences in the Sea?
Look at the two undersea pictures. Can you
find 10 or more differences?
Standards Link: investigation: Find similarities and differences in
common objects.
A-Maze-ing Sun p5®tll7
Without the sun, most ocean animals would
not exist.
Plant plankton need
the sunshine to make
their food. Without
the sun, all plant
plankton would die.
^ind your
Way to
funer°fthe
SUn maze.
Standards Link: Life Science: Understand the relationships among
organisms and their physical environment.
Look at the food chain.
What would happen
to all of the other
animals in the food
chain if plant
plankton disappeared?
See, Sea
and C
Homonyms are
words that sound
the same but are
spelled differently
and have different
meanings. Go on
a fishing trip
through today's
newspaper. How
many homonyms
can you hook?
Standards Link: Vocabuary:
Understand level-appropriate
reading vocabulary.
The Kid Scoop Puzzler
Help Sharkey find the puzzle pieces to complete each equation.
2
Standards Link: Number
Sense: Solve problems
involving numeric equations.
pouMen<lllme Word Search
PLANKTON
OCEAN
CHAINS
SURVIVE
SHARKEY
HOMONYMS
SALMON
PLANT
SECOND
BASS
HAPPEN
EXIST
THREAD
LOOP
SUN
Find the words in the puzzle,
then in this week's Kid Scoop
stories and activities.
Y
N
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P
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A
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N
A
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A
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B
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A
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Standards Link: Letter sequencing. Recognized identical
words. Skim and scan reading. Recall spelling patterns.
Eg!
www.kidscoop.com
Who eats what?
Clip a newspaper picture of an animal. (It can
be a human being.) Then clip a picture of
something that the animal eats. Then clip a
picture of something that the animal's food
eats. Keep going as long as you can.
Standards Link: Life Science: Understand relationships between
organisms and their physical environment.
Kid Scoop Together
TRY THIS JIT HOME
Green Groups
Look through the newspaper for
words and pictures that fit each
category in the spaces below.
Paste the words and pictures
onto each strip. Cut out both
strips and paste the two strips
on another sheet of paper side
by side. Which strip was easier
to fill? Why?
Things That Save
Natural Resaurces
Things That Can Be
Recycled
Standards Link: Earth Science: Know that all
organisms (including humans) cause changes
in their environment, and these changes can
be beneficial or detrimental; Know ways inwhich
humans can alter the equilibrium of ecosystems.
© Y^\<dScoot> ®
VOCABULARY
I BUILDERS
This week's word:
PLANKTON
The noun plankton
means a mixture of tiny plants
and animals floating in
fresh or salt water.
Some sea life live on
nutrients found in plankton.
Try to use the word plankton
in a sentence today when
talking with your friends
and family members.
&
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eiSBd ojeiuo} ijl!M :U3MSNV
Perfect
Snack
What is your idea
of the perfect after
school snack? Write
about this snack and
why others should
give it a try.
A
I
4-
4-
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McAuley, Davis. The Bastrop Advertiser (Bastrop, Tex.), Vol. 154, No. 14, Ed. 1 Saturday, April 14, 2007, newspaper, April 14, 2007; Bastrop, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth252364/m1/10/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bastrop Public Library.