2_9 Adaptation
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2.9 ADAPTATION
Living things are everywhere. Many animals and plants live on top of the ground as we do. But some live under the ground and even in the soil. Others live in ponds, rivers and lakes. The sea is full of living things and so is the air. Organisms live even in the hottest and coldest and driest places on Earth.
The kind of place where any organism lives is called its habitat. Water is the habitat of fish and trees are the habitat of monkeys. Every organism has to be fit for its own habitat.
A fish cannot live in trees and monkeys cannot live under the water! The ways in which different organisms vary, so that they can live in different ways, in different habitats, are called adaptations. A fish is adapted to living in water. It has gills, which enable it to breathe under water, and fins for
swimming. The gills and the fins are two of its adaptations.
They help to make the fish fit for its watery way of life.
Every living organism is adapted to its own special habitat
and way of life.
Some adaptations in plants. The funny looking tree on the
right is called a baobab. Some people say it was planted
upside down! The baobab grows in parts of Africa where
rainfall is uncertain. It stores water in its huge trunk and fat
branches. This enables it to survive a long drought. We can
say that its fat shape adapts it for the climate. A baobab tree
All plants need sunlight for making their food (by photosynthesis). They are adapted to expose
their leaves to the sun in different ways.
Trees have long trunks and branches that
push their leaves high up towards the light.
The stems of vines have special roots,
suckers or tendrils. These adapt them so
they can climb over other plants to reach
the sunlight. Plants such as grasses and
creepers are adapted to catch sunlight by
spreading out and covering large areas of
ground.
Some adaptations in birds. Birds provide
some good examples of adaptation. They
are adapted for flying in several ways.
Compared to other vertebrates, their bodies
are very light. They have wings instead of
front legs, and very big chest muscles for
flapping them. These muscles are the
breast meat we enjoy when we eat roast
chicken!
The beaks of different birds are adapted for eating different kinds of food. Look at the drawings and decide what each bird eats. The eagle is a carnivore. It has a strong, hooked beak for tearing flesh. The parrot has a powerful beak for cracking nuts. The kingfisher uses its long, sharp beak to spear small animals or fish. The honeyeater drinks nectar from flowers with its long thin beak. The duck's broad beak is adapted for pulling up weeds from the bottom of ponds or streams. And the mynah bird, which eats many different kinds of food, has a medium sized, all purpose beak.
∙ 1. What do we mean by (i) habitat, (ii) adaptation?
∙ 2. How are (i) fish adapted for living in water, (ii) birds adapted for flying and feeding, (iii) monkeys adapted for living in trees? ∙ 3. Think about any different birds you know. How are their feet adapted for the different ways in which they use them?
∙ 4.Say how one plant and one animal you know are adapted to their habitats and ways of life.
Birds and their beaks
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