The Valdez Marine Food Web

This film explores the marine food web in Valdez, Alaska, showing how all sea life—from the tiniest plankton to the largest fish—depends on each other to survive. Scientists and researchers explain how plankton serves as the foundation of the ocean food chain, feeding shrimp, small fish like herring, and eventually larger predators like salmon and cod.

The film highlights how different fish and animals migrate and change their diets based on the season, much like humans craving certain foods at different times of the year. It also explains how an imbalance in the food web—such as a decrease in herring or changes in water temperature—can affect the health of the entire ecosystem.

Through engaging visuals and expert insights, this film helps viewers understand how each species plays an important role in keeping the ocean healthy and why protecting marine life is essential for Alaska’s waters.

Classroom Guide

Workshop Info

See Stories led film workshops with youth in six Prince William sound communities in 2016 (Cordova, Whittier, Nanwalek, Tatitlek, Valdez, and Chenega Bay) with generous funding and support from the Prince William Sound Science Center (PWSSC). The PWSSC wanted to support youth to create films on their communities' profound and changing relationship to the ocean 25 years after the Exxon Valdez Oil Spill (EVOS). The films created during these workshops focus primarily on vibrant cultural and personal connections to water, and some of them explore the tragedy of EVOS and the long-standing impacts that ripple through to the present moment.

More videos from this workshop:

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Land Acknowledgement

This video was filmed on Alutiiq (Sugpiaq) Land. Learn more about land acknowledgements at native-land.ca.