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In ecology, a food chain is a series of organisms that eat one another so that energy and nutrients flow from one to the next.
A food chain is a linear sequence of organisms where each member is consumed by the next higher member. It represents the flow of energy and nutrients through an ecosystem. In simpler terms, it shows who eats whom in a specific ecosystem or habitat. For example, in a terrestrial food chain, grass is eaten by a grasshopper, which is then eaten by a frog, which might be eaten by a snake, and so on. Each link in the chain represents a transfer of energy and matter from one organism to another.