Variation, classification and adaptation
Variation
- All living things vary in the way they look or behave.
- Living things that belong to the same species are all slightly different.
- Living things that belong to different species are so different that they cannot reproduce together.
- Inheritance, the environment or a combination of both may cause these differences.
Classification
- Living things are divided into kingdoms.
- There are six main kingdoms – virus, bacterium, protist, fungus, plant and animal.
Characteristics
- We vary partly because of the random way our characteristics are inherited.
- The environment can affect most of our characteristics.
- It is usually a combination of genetics and environment that determines how we look and behave.
- Some characteristics are not affected by the environment.
Ecology
- Plants and animals interact with their environment to create habitats.
- Ecology is the study of these interactions.
- The world is divided into a number of large regions called biomes.
- Each biome is characterised by a particular climate.
Biomes
- Tundra biomevery cold
- Coniferous forest biomecold
- Temperate forest biomevaried but cool
- Grassland biomedry
- Savannah biomedry
- Desert biomevery dry
- Tropical rainforest biomehot and wet
Habitats
- The place where a plant or animal lives is its habitat.
- Some habitats are very small and are called microhabitats.
- A habitat has to supply all the needs of the animals and plants that live in it.
- The animals and plants that share a habitat are locked together in an interdependent community. They form a food web which is dependent on the energy from the sun.
Adaptation
- In a community, the animal or plant best adapted to its surroundings will survive.
- Predators have adapted to survive by being strong, agile and fast. They have good vision and often a camouflaged body. They may also hunt in packs, have a variety of prey, and frequently hunt the young, sick and old.
- Prey have also adapted: the best adapted escape and breed. Prey may be able to run, swim or fly fast. They often stay in large groups. They may have a horrible taste. They may have warning colours or camouflage.
Competition
- Populations cannot keep growing out of control.
- Animals have to compete for space, food and water in their struggle to survive.
- Only those fitted to the opportunities and limitations of their environment will survive – survival of the fittest.
- Plants compete for space, light, water and nutrients.
- If a living organism can adapt to its environment then it will survive and breed.
Limiting factors
- Amount of food and water available
- Predators or grazing
- Disease
- Climate, temperature, floods, droughts, storms
- Competition for space, mates, light, food and water
- Human activity such as pollution or destruction of habitat.