KiwiBee resource library
Middle School Ecosystems Worksheets
Study food webs, energy flow, populations and environmental change with free middle school ecosystems worksheets.

Identify resource competition
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify biodiversity
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify biotic and abiotic factors
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify food webs
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify population changes
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify populations
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Compare observations of biodiversity and describe the pattern you notice
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Compare observations of biotic and abiotic factors and describe the pattern you notice
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Compare observations of populations and describe the pattern you notice
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Compare observations of resource competition and describe the pattern you notice
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Identify biotic and abiotic factors
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Identify human impacts
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Identify population changes
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify ecosystem changes
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify human impacts
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Classify resource competition
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Compare observations of food webs and describe the pattern you notice
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Compare observations of human impacts and describe the pattern you notice
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Compare observations of population changes and describe the pattern you notice
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Identify biodiversity
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Identify ecosystem changes
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Identify food webs
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14

Identify populations
Worksheets
hard
Ages 11–14
Teaching guidance
- Use a local or familiar ecosystem as the anchor. Ask students to trace energy and matter through specific organisms before generalising to producers, consumers and decomposers.
- When analysing a change, require a cause-and-effect chain supported by the food web or habitat evidence. This prevents vague claims that every population simply rises or falls together.