How Animals Adapt

A free interactive lesson on how animals adapt to their habitats — how camels survive scorching deserts, fish breathe underwater, and penguins thrive in freezing Antarctica. Based on NCERT Class 6 Science Diversity in the Living World. Includes a quick quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🐫 How Animals Adapt
Animals are built for their homes.🐫CamelDesert🐟FishWater🐧PenguinArctic🦅EagleMountainsAdaptation = fit between animal and habitat.

A camel thrives in the scorching desert. A fish breathes underwater. A penguin survives in freezing Antarctica. They couldn't swap places — each animal is perfectly built for exactly where it lives. That match between body and habitat is called adaptation.

What is adaptation?

An adaptation is a physical feature or behaviour that helps an animal survive in its particular habitat. Adaptations develop over thousands of generations through natural selection — animals with better-suited features survive and pass those features to their offspring.

Every part of an animal's body is adapted for where it lives. Change the habitat and the adaptation becomes a disadvantage — a camel in Antarctica, or a penguin in the Sahara, would not survive.

Camel — desert survivor

The camel is adapted for extreme desert heat and scarcity:

  • Hump — stores fat, not water. The fat is broken down for energy when food is scarce.
  • Long eyelashes — keep blowing sand out of the eyes.
  • Closeable nostrils — seal tight in sandstorms.
  • Wide, flat feet — act like snowshoes to stop the camel sinking in sand.
  • Concentrated urine — the camel conserves water by producing very little waste.

Fish — built for water

Fish are perfectly adapted to life underwater:

  • Streamlined body — the torpedo shape minimises drag, allowing effortless movement.
  • Gills — extract dissolved oxygen from water. Fish can't breathe atmospheric air.
  • Fins — control direction, balance, and speed.
  • Scales — waterproof armour that protects the skin.
  • Lateral line — a sensory organ that detects vibrations in the water.

Penguin — arctic survivor

Penguins have adapted to survive Antarctic temperatures of −60°C:

  • Thick layer of blubber — insulates against the cold.
  • Dense, oily feathers — trap warm air close to the body and repel water.
  • Flippers — short, strong, perfect for swimming at high speed.
  • Counter-current circulation — blood vessels in the flippers exchange heat to prevent heat loss.
  • Huddling behaviour — in blizzards, thousands of penguins huddle together for warmth, taking turns at the warm centre.

Frequently asked questions

What does a camel's hump store?

Fat — not water. The hump is a fatty energy reserve. When food is scarce, the camel metabolises this fat. A full hump is firm; a depleted hump flops to the side.

How do fish breathe underwater?

Fish breathe through gills. Water enters through the mouth, flows over the gill filaments, and exits through the gill covers. The gill filaments absorb dissolved oxygen and release carbon dioxide.

Why do penguins huddle together?

To conserve warmth. The huddle generates heat like a giant radiator. Penguins rotate positions so each bird spends time in the warm centre and the cold outside.

What is the difference between adaptation and habitat?

A habitat is the environment where an animal lives — desert, ocean, rainforest. An adaptation is a feature of the animal's body or behaviour that helps it survive in that habitat.

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