C Curriculum Explorer

Curriculum map

Find a topic. See what it builds on.

Search and explore the learning network in one place. Select any topic to open its complete record below—without leaving the map.

Topics
1,590
Links
3,221
Standards
3,261
Reset filters

Search updates automatically.

Loading map…
Map contentsTopics in this view Showing 80 of 1590 matching topics · narrow your search to see different results

This complete list mirrors the map and remains available for keyboard and screen-reader navigation.

Science·Ecosystems & Habitats·conceptual

Toxins Building Up in Food Chains

Explain how organisms affect and are affected by their environment, including the bioaccumulation of toxic materials (e.g. pesticides, heavy metals) through food chains

Suggested ages 12–13

Open direct link

Evidence of understanding

  • Defines bioaccumulation and explains why toxins increase in concentration higher up the food chain
  • Gives a real example of bioaccumulation (e.g. DDT in peregrine falcons, mercury in tuna)
  • Explains how organisms can change their habitat (e.g. earthworms aerating soil, beavers creating wetlands)
  • Discusses why top predators are most at risk from bioaccumulation

Assessment prompt

If Toxins Building Up in Food Chains heard that large fish like tuna can contain more mercury than small fish, could they explain why that is — even though the tuna didn’t encounter mercury directly?

Standards alignment

MS-LS2-4US · ngss-ms

MS-LS2-4

Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) Middle School

MS-LS2-5US · ngss-ms

MS-LS2-5

Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS) Middle School

KS3.Sci.Bio.Ecosystem.3GB · uk-nc-2013

Organisms and their environment

The national curriculum in England: Key stages 1 and 2 framework document · KS3