Land Habitats
Habitats & Adaptation: Land Habitats
Land Habitats
Land Habitats Basics
What you'll learn
- Define habitat with an example.
- Name major land habitats and their animals.
- Relate an animal's features to its land habitat.
- Understand why protecting habitats matters.
Key concepts
Level 1 - Getting started
A habitat is the natural home of a plant or animal, giving it food, water, and shelter.
Level 2 - Building the idea
A forest has many trees and is home to tigers, deer, and monkeys. A desert is hot and dry with little water, home to camels and cactus plants.
Level 3 - Going deeper
A grassland is open land covered with grass, home to lions and zebras. A mountain habitat is cold and rocky, home to snow leopards and yaks.
Level 4 - Indian context
Camels survive for days without water in the desert. Indian tigers live in forests like the Sundarbans and Ranthambore. Farmland is a habitat created by humans to grow crops. Protecting forests and grasslands saves the homes of many wild animals.
Worked example
Match habitat to animal
Step 1 - List habitats: forest, desert, grassland, mountain.
Step 2 - Recall a matching animal for each.
Step 3 - Match forest-tiger, desert-camel, grassland-lion, mountain-snow leopard.
Step 4 - Write the four matches.
Answer: Forest-tiger, desert-camel, grassland-lion, mountain-snow leopard.
Why a camel suits the desert
Step 1 - Recall desert conditions: hot, dry, little water.
Step 2 - Recall camel's hump stores fat for energy.
Step 3 - Recall camel can go many days without drinking water.
Step 4 - State why the camel survives well in the desert.
Answer: The camel's body features let it survive heat and long periods without water.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Why it happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Habitat is thought to mean only 'forest' | Forest examples are most common | Habitat can be any place — desert, grassland, mountain, or water too |
| All land habitats are seen as the same | Only 'land' is noticed, not conditions | Desert, forest, grassland, and mountain each have different conditions and animals |
| Farmland is not considered a habitat | Human-made places seem different | Farmland is a habitat created by humans for growing crops |
| Habitats are thought to need no protection | Effect of habitat loss is unseen | Cutting forests and grasslands destroys homes of wild animals |
Quick check
- What is a habitat?
- Name one animal found in a grassland.
- Why can camels survive in the desert?
- Give one example of a mountain habitat animal.
- Stretch: Choose one Indian land habitat and list three animals and two plants found there.
Revision tip: Each land habitat — forest, desert, grassland, mountain — has different conditions matched by the features of the animals living there.
Open the Practice tab for graded questions on Land Habitats Basics.
Key Takeaways (TL;DR)
- What you'll learn
- Key concepts
- Worked example
- Common mistakes
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