Classifying Living Things

A free interactive lesson on the classification of living things — from kingdoms down to the five vertebrate groups: fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. Based on NCERT Class 6 Science Diversity in the Living World. Includes quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🌍 Classifying Living Things
Millions of living things — how do we sort them?🌳Plants🐯Animals🍄Fungi🦠MicrobesClassification = sorting life into groups by shared features.

Scientists have identified more than eight million species of living things on Earth. To study them without going mad, they sort them into groups based on shared features — this is called classification. The broadest groups are called kingdoms: plants, animals, fungi, and microbes.

Why do scientists classify living things?

There are over 8 million known species on Earth. Without a system to organise them, studying life would be impossible. Classification — or taxonomy — groups organisms by shared features, making it easier to study, name, and understand relationships between living things.

The Swedish scientist Carl Linnaeus created the modern classification system in the 1700s. He grouped all life into a hierarchy: Kingdom → Phylum → Class → Order → Family → Genus → Species.

Plants vs. Animals — the biggest split

The most fundamental division separates plants from animals:

  • Plants make their own food via photosynthesis. Animals cannot — they must eat other organisms.
  • Plants are mostly fixed in the ground. Animals move to find food and mates.
  • Plant cells have a cell wall. Animal cells do not.
  • Plants have chloroplasts and chlorophyll. Animals do not.

Vertebrates — animals with a backbone

Animals are divided into vertebrates (have a backbone) and invertebrates (no backbone). About 97% of all animal species are invertebrates — insects, worms, crabs, snails. Vertebrates include five groups:

  • Fish — live in water, breathe with gills, cold-blooded, scaly
  • Amphibians — live on land and in water (frogs, salamanders), moist skin, cold-blooded
  • Reptiles — dry scaly skin, cold-blooded, mostly land (lizards, snakes, crocodiles)
  • Birds — feathers, wings, warm-blooded, lay hard-shelled eggs
  • Mammals — fur/hair, warm-blooded, feed young on milk (includes humans)

Frequently asked questions

What is classification in science?

Classification is the process of grouping living things based on shared characteristics. It helps scientists study and communicate about organisms efficiently.

What is the difference between vertebrates and invertebrates?

Vertebrates have a backbone (spine). Invertebrates do not. Most animals are invertebrates — insects, worms, crabs, snails, octopuses. Vertebrates include fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals.

What makes mammals special?

Mammals are warm-blooded, have hair or fur, give birth to live young (mostly), and feed their babies on milk produced by the mother. Humans, dolphins, bats, and elephants are all mammals.

What is the difference between cold-blooded and warm-blooded animals?

Cold-blooded animals (fish, amphibians, reptiles) cannot regulate their own body temperature — they rely on their environment to warm or cool them. Warm-blooded animals (birds, mammals) maintain a constant internal temperature regardless of outside conditions.

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