Competition and adaptations in ecosystems
I can describe what plants and animals compete for, and consider how adaptations help organisms to survive and compete in their environment.
Competition and adaptations in ecosystems
I can describe what plants and animals compete for, and consider how adaptations help organisms to survive and compete in their environment.
Lesson details
Key learning points
- Organisms compete for resources such as food, water, space, shelter, light, mates, pollinators and seed dispersers.
- The populations of species within a community are interdependent (they rely upon and affect one another).
- Organisms have adaptations that help them survive and compete in their environment.
- Adaptations can be physiological, structural or behavioural.
- Extremophiles are adapted to live in extreme environments, e.g. high salt concentration or very high or low temperature.
Common misconception
That organisms are able to quickly adapt to the place where they live.
Referring to inheritance, explain that changes to organisms take time to evolve - responses to any environmental change is not instant. In some organisms, where reproduction is slow, responses can be too slow to avoid extinction.
Keywords
Competition - Competition is when organisms in a community or population are seeking the same limited resource (e.g. food, mates).
Adaptation - An adaptation is a feature that organisms have to help them live in a particular place.
Physiological - Physiological adaptations are body processes that help an organism to survive and reproduce.
Microorganism - A microorganism is an organism that can only be seen using a microscope.
Extremophile - Extremophiles are organisms that are able to successfully survive and reproduce in extreme environments (e.g. very hot/very cold).
Equipment
None 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).
Video
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Starter quiz
6 Questions
all of the populations that live and interact in a habitat
the place where an organism lives
the interacting living and non-living parts of the environment
how organisms rely on each other for their survival
Exit quiz
6 Questions
animals hunting at night time to avoid being eaten by predators
leaves of a cactus being modified into spines
producing venom to paralyse and/or kill prey