Animal Adaptations & Food Chains
Virginia Science SOL 3.4, 3.5
SOL 3.4 –Behavioral and physical adaptations allow animals to respond to life needs.
SOL 3.5 – Interdependent feeding relationships of plants and animals exist in aquatic and terrestrial food chains.
Note to Parents: If your child knows the material on this study guide, he or she will do well on the test for this unit. Please help your child prepare.
Key Words and Definitions:
Hibernation: Going into a deep winter sleep
Migration: Traveling long distances as the seasons change
Instinctive behaviors: Those that happen naturally and do not have to be learned
Learned behaviors: Those obtained by interacting with the environment and are taught
Camouflage: Use of color in a surrounding to blend in
Mimicry: Looking or sounding like another living organism
Producers: Are capable of making their own food
Consumers: Animals that eat living organisms
Decomposers: Organisms that break down dead plants and animals
Herbivore: An animal that eats only plants
Carnivore: An animal that eats only other animals
Omnivore: An animal that eats both plants and animals
Predator: A carnivore that kills and eats other animals
Prey: The animals that are hunted by other animals
Physical Adaptations / Behavioral AdaptationsPhysical adaptations are body structures that allow an animal to find and consume food, defend itself, and reproduce its species.
- camouflage
- mimicry
- chemical defenses (venom, ink, sprays)
- special body coverings and parts (claws, beaks, feet, armor plates, skulls, teeth)
Strong beak for gathering food
Webbed feet for swimming
Quills for defense / Instinctive Behaviors
- gathering and storing food
- finding shelter
- defending oneself
- raising young
- hibernating
- migrating
Geese migrate to warmer weather
Learned Behaviors
- hunting
- commands/tricks (horses, dogs)
- reading (humans)
Food Chain: Living things interact and depend upon each other for the food they need.
Carnivore consumer: Depends on the mouse to survive
Omnivore consumer: Depends on the grasshopper to survive
Herbivore consumer: Depends on the plant to survive
Producer: All food chains begin with a green plant
The mushroom is a decomposer that breaks down dead plants and animals into
small pieces. The nutrients are put back into the soil so that living things can grow
and continue the food chain.
In this relationship the fox is the predator and the rabbit is the prey.
Life cycles:
Plant: seed, plant begins to grow, adult plant, plant flowers, fruit grows,
Butterfly: egg, larva, pupa, adult
Frog, tadpole, tadpole with legs, young frog with tail (froglet), adult frog