Adaptations
Adaptations
Adaptations
A Science A–Z Life Series
Word Count: 1,648
Adaptations
in response to changes in the environment. These changes can range
from global to microscopic, and may include changes in the climate,
the population of other species sharing the same habitat, and the
availability of essential resources for survival. Physical adaptations are
natural occurrences, not deliberate choices. Behavioral adaptations are
usually responses to environmental conditions, and are not momentary
decisions made by individuals. Some adaptations turn out to be
successful, and some do not. Only those organisms with successful
adaptations survive and pass on their genes to future generations.
Many different adaptations to a species are often successful, which
has led to incredible diversity in nature.
Key words: adapt, adaptation, animals, behavior, birds, blowhole, cell,
characteristics, climate, Darwin, drip tip, environment, evolution, extinct,
gene, generation, habitat, humans, inherited, instinct, mutation, naturalist,
organism, physical, plants, predator, rainforest, reflex, scientists, species,
survival of the fittest, survive
Photo Credits:
Front cover (top left, bottom left, bottom right), pages 3, 5 (top left, bottom right), 6, 9, 10, 13, 15,
16 (left), 17 (bottom), 19 (left), 22 (both bottom): © Jupiterimages Corporation; front cover (top right):
© iStockphoto.com/Prill Mediendesign & Fotografie; back cover, page 8 (top): © iStockphoto.com/
Håkan Karlsson; title page, page 20 (bottom): © Behavioural Ecology Research Group/
University of Oxford; page 5 (top right): © iStockphoto.com/Sam Chadwick; page 5 (bottom left):
© iStockphoto.com/James Stoddard; page 8 (bottom): image courtesy of UC Museum of Palentology/
www.ucmp.berkeley.edu; page 11 (top): © iStockphoto.com/Mikael Damkier; page 11
(bottom and inset): David Gates/© Learning A–Z; page 12: Sheryl Shetler/© Learning A–Z;
page 14 (top): © iStockphoto.com/Carl Jani; page 14 (bottom): © iStockphoto.com/Marc C. Johnson;
page 16 (right): © Stephen Dalton/Photo Researchers, Inc.; page 17 (top): © iStockphoto.com/
Mark Weiss; page 18: © iStockphoto.com/Iurii Konoval; page 19 (right): © Hemera Technologies/
Jupiterimages Corporation; page 22 (top left): © iStockphoto.com/Jelani Memory; page 22 (top right):
© iStockphoto.com/Rena Schild
Illustration Credits:
Pages 4, 20: Stephen Marchesi/© Learning A–Z; page 7: Cende Hill/© Learning A–Z
Written by Ron Fridell
Adaptations
© Learning A–Z
Written by Ron Fridell
www.sciencea-z.com
All rights reserved.
www.sciencea-z.com
Cactus spines are an adaptation to keep animals from eating
the plant.
Table of Contents
Introduction........................................................ 4
Introduction
Survival of the Fittest.......................................... 6
Afternoon sunlight shines through the .
Plant Adaptation............................................... 10 trees in a park. A small bird called a warbler
sings on a tree branch. Suddenly, he stops
Animal Physical Adaptation........................... 13
singing. He catches an insect flying by. The
Behavioral Adaptations.................................... 16 insect can’t get away, and the warbler eats his
snack. Down on the ground, a red cardinal
Human Adaptations......................................... 19 cracks open seeds with his bill. A rat-tat-tat-tat
sound rings out as a woodpecker makes a hole
Adaptations Everywhere................................. 22
in a tree. Hunting grubs, she drills through .
Glossary............................................................. 23 the bark. On a pond nearby, some ducks float
along. Their heads dip into the water. When
they come up, their bills drip with water.
3 4
These birds are all looking for a meal. But Survival of the Fittest
because their food is different, their beaks
All living things, or organisms, must adapt
have different shapes. The warbler’s beak is
to changes in their environment to survive. If
pointed like tweezers. The cardinal’s beak .
they adapt, their babies will survive. Living
is short and hard like a nutcracker. The
things that do not adapt usually die out. When
woodpecker’s beak is hard and pointy. Duck .
plants and animals adapt as a way to survive it
bills strain plants and fish out of the water.
is known as “survival of the fittest.” The first
Over many thousands of years, these birds’ person to write about this idea was Charles
beaks adapted to help them gather the food Darwin, a British naturalist. He wrote about it
they need. All plant and animal species have 150 years ago.
adaptations, or changes that help them
How do adaptations happen? Within a
survive in their habitat. How do adaptations
species, lots of individuals are born with slight
help each living thing? Let’s find out.
differences. These differences may change the
way an animal or
plant grows .
and what it can
do. Sometimes
one of those
differences can
help that living
thing adapt to .
a change in the
environment.
Each bird’s beak is adapted to its habitat and food source. Charles Darwin
5 6
If the change helps a living thing survive, that
living thing will pass on the change to the next
generation. The change becomes an adaptation.
Breathing Hole
Oldest: A Pakicetus Whale
This skull is from a very ancient whale. Its breathing hole was
Modern: A Grey Whale today further forward than a modern whale’s.
7 8
What happens to plants and animals that cannot
adapt to changes in their environments? They
become extinct, which means they die out and
none are left on Earth. Thousands of living things
died out before humans existed. We learn about
these extinct plants and animals from fossils.
Plant Adaptations
15 16
Some scientists wanted to find out if birds
know songs when they are born or if they
learn them later from their parents.
17 18
Human Adaptations
19 20
Many Words for the Same Thing Adaptations Everywhere
21 22
Glossary habitat the natural conditions and
adapt to change parts of the body environment in which a .
and behavior to match changes . plant or animal lives (p. 5)
in the environment (p. 6) inherited passed on from parent to
adaptation a specific change to a physical child (p. 15)
feature or a behavior common . instinct inherited behavior that leads
to a species which helps the . an animal to act certain ways .
species survive (p. 5) in certain situations (p. 16)
behavior a way of reacting to a certain organism a living thing (p. 6)
set of circumstances (p. 16)
reflex an automatic response (p. 16)
blowhole a hole at the top of a whale
or dolphin’s head, through . species a group of related organisms
which it breathes (p. 8) with characteristics that
distinguish it from other .
environment all of the conditions affecting groups of organisms (p. 5)
an organism in one area,
including the plants, animals, . survival of a theory explaining that the
water, soil, weather, landforms, the fittest organisms best suited to live
and air (p. 5) in a particular environment are
those most likely to survive .
extinct no longer in existence (p. 9) (p. 5)
23 24