Selective breeding and human food security
I can explain what is meant by selective breeding and why it is important for human food security.
Selective breeding and human food security
I can explain what is meant by selective breeding and why it is important for human food security.
These resources will be removed by end of Summer Term 2025.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- Some plants and animals have features that are useful to us (e.g. they can provide food and materials, or do work).
- Selective breeding by humans causes particular features to become more (or less) common in the species.
- After many generations, the resulting domesticated species can be quite different to their wild ancestors.
- Examples of the selective breeding of a farm animal and a crop from their wild ancestors.
- The dependence of humans on domesticated animals and crops for food security.
Keywords
Selective breeding - The process in which humans choose individuals with desirable traits and mate them in order to make offspring with these desirable traits.
Crop - Plants grown on a large scale for food or profit.
Domesticated - An animal that has been tamed and is kept as a pet or on a farm.
Farm animal - Animals that are kept on farms for food or work.
Food security - A measure of the quantity and quality of food available to support households or whole communities.
Common misconception
Students often forget that selective breeding is a process that happens over many generations.
This lesson includes examples of how to describe the process of selective breeding.
Equipment
None required.
Content guidance
- Depiction or discussion of sexual content
Supervision
Adult supervision required
Licence
This content is © Oak National Academy Limited (2024), licensed on Open Government Licence version 3.0 except where otherwise stated. See Oak's terms & conditions (Collection 2).
Lesson video
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Starter quiz
6 Questions
All the fossils ever found.
A species which has no living individuals remaining anywhere.
Changes in the characteristics of a species over many generations.
An ancestor species shared by several other species.
A species with characteristics between an ancestor and a later species