What is a Forest?

A free interactive lesson on forests for Class 6 — from the tall canopy down to the forest floor, and the rich biodiversity of species that live in every layer. Based on NCERT Class 6 Nature's Treasures chapter. Includes a quick quiz.

Class 6 ScienceClass 6 / Grade 6Ages 8–11
Lesson
🌳 What is a Forest?
A forest is more than just trees.Trees + soil + water + animals + air = one living system

When you look at a forest, you see trees. But a forest is so much more. It's a community — millions of living things sharing the same space. The trees, the soil, the insects, the fungi, the birds, the streams — all connected, all depending on each other.

What is a forest?

A forest is a large area dominated by trees — but it is far more than just trees. It's a complex ecosystem: a community of living organisms (plants, animals, fungi, bacteria) interacting with each other and with non-living things (soil, water, air, sunlight).

Forests cover about 31% of Earth's land area. Tropical rainforests, temperate forests, boreal forests (taiga), and mangrove forests are all different types, each with their own species.

The four layers of a forest

A mature forest is structured into four distinct layers:

  1. Canopy — the top layer of tall trees (30–45 m high). Their leaf cover intercepts 70–80% of available sunlight.
  2. Understory — shorter trees (10–20 m) adapted to grow in the shade of the canopy.
  3. Shrub layer — bushes, young trees, and tall ferns growing below 3 m.
  4. Forest floor — the ground level, covered in fallen leaves, dead wood, fungi, mosses, and insects. Little sunlight reaches here.

Biodiversity — the richness of life

Biodiversity refers to the variety of life in an area. Tropical rainforests are the most biodiverse ecosystems on Earth — the Amazon alone contains about 10% of all species on the planet.

Every species plays a role. Trees produce oxygen and food. Insects pollinate flowers. Birds spread seeds. Fungi decompose dead matter and recycle nutrients. Predators control prey populations. Remove one species and the ripple effects can collapse an entire food web.

Frequently asked questions

What are the four layers of a forest?

Canopy (tallest trees), understory (shorter shade-tolerant trees), shrub layer (bushes and small plants), and forest floor (ground level, decomposers, fungi, leaf litter).

What is biodiversity?

Biodiversity is the variety of living species — plants, animals, fungi, and microorganisms — in a given area. High biodiversity makes ecosystems more stable and resilient.

What do fungi do in a forest?

Fungi are decomposers — they break down dead plant and animal matter and return nutrients to the soil. Without fungi, dead wood and leaves would pile up and the soil would become nutrient-poor.

Why is the forest floor darker than the canopy?

Because the canopy intercepts most sunlight. Only about 2–5% of sunlight reaches the forest floor. Plants there are specially adapted to photosynthesise in very low light.

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