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  1. 3rd Grade Science
  2. Survival and Traits

3RD GRADE SCIENCE • BIOLOGICAL EVOLUTION: UNITY AND DIVERSITY

Survival and Traits

Why do some animals survive better than others in the same environment? Let's use evidence to find out!

SECTION 1

The Phenomenon

🔍 ANCHORING PHENOMENON

But then the camera shows a different area nearby. Here, an ancient volcano left behind dark, black rocks covering the ground. In this area, scientists found something surprising: most of the pocket mice have dark fur instead of light fur! Both groups are the same species of mouse, but they look very different.

The scientists also noticed that when a light-colored mouse wanders onto the dark rocks, owls catch it much more easily. And when a dark mouse wanders onto the light sand, the same thing happens — it gets caught quickly.

Sandy DesertLight mouse ✓ hiddenDark mouse ✗ spotted!Dark Lava RockDark mouse ✓ hiddenLight mouse ✗ spotted!🦉 Owl (predator)Which mice are easier for the owl to catch?
Diagram showing light-colored mice on sandy ground and dark-colored mice on dark rocky ground, with an owl watching from above
💭 THINKING QUESTIONS
  • Why do you think most mice on the sand have light fur, while most mice on the dark rocks have dark fur?
  • What happens to mice whose fur color does NOT match the ground they live on?
  • How could fur color help a mouse survive longer?
SECTION 2

What Scientists Know

Animals of the same kind — the same species — are not all exactly alike. They have variations in their traits. A trait is a feature or characteristic of a living thing, like fur color, body size, beak shape, or leg length. These differences between individuals are called variations.

Some of these trait variations give certain animals an advantage in their environment. An advantage means that the trait helps the animal survive — it can find food more easily, escape predators better, or stay healthy. Animals with helpful traits are more likely to survive, grow up, and have babies. This idea is a core part of how life on Earth changes over time.

1

Variation in Traits

Animals of the same species are not identical. Some pocket mice have lighter fur, some have darker fur. Some rabbits have longer ears, some have shorter ones. These differences are natural and happen in every population of animals.
2

Environment Matters

The environment is everything around an animal — the climate, the food, the predators, and the ground or habitat where it lives. The same trait can be helpful in one environment but unhelpful in another. Dark fur helps on dark rocks but hurts on light sand.
3

Survival Advantage

When a trait helps an animal survive in its environment, we say the animal has a survival advantage. Animals with a survival advantage are more likely to live long enough to have offspring (babies) that may also have that helpful trait.
4

Evidence Tells the Story

Scientists do not just guess which traits are helpful. They collect evidence — data from observations, counts, and measurements — to explain why some animals survive better than others. Evidence is what makes a scientific explanation trustworthy.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
SECTION 3

Let's Investigate

The "Bird and Beans" Fair Test

🔬 INVESTIGATION SPOTLIGHT

The question: Does an animal's color affect how easily a predator can find it?

What you need:

  • 20 dark-colored beans (black or dark red)
  • 20 light-colored beans (white or light tan)
  • A sheet of dark paper (black or dark brown)
  • A sheet of light paper (white or tan)
  • A timer (15 seconds per round)
  • A partner to play the "bird" (predator)

The procedure:

1. Scatter all 40 beans on the dark paper. Set the timer for 15 seconds. The "bird" picks up as many beans as possible, one at a time, in 15 seconds. Record how many light beans and how many dark beans were picked up.

2. Repeat the same test on the light paper. Record the results.

3. Do each test 3 times (multiple trials) to make the results more reliable.

What you should observe: On the dark paper, the bird catches more light beans because they stand out. On the light paper, the bird catches more dark beans because those stand out. The beans that blend in are harder to find — just like mice whose fur matches their environment!

Investigation Results: Beans Caught in 15 Seconds (Average of 3 Trials)Beans Caught048121620On Dark Paper14Light beans5Dark beansOn Light Paper4Light beans15Dark beans(stands out!)(blends in)(blends in)(stands out!)
Bar chart showing investigation results: more mismatched beans are caught by the predator in both environments
SECTION 4

What We Discovered

The investigation data shows a clear pattern. When a bean's color does not match the background, the "bird" catches it more easily. When it does match, the bean is harder to find and more likely to survive.

This is exactly what happens with the pocket mice in the desert. On the light sand, light-furred mice blend in and are harder for owls to see. On the dark lava rocks, dark-furred mice blend in. The mice whose fur color matches their environment have a survival advantage — they are less likely to be eaten by predators.

Over time, this means that in each area, the mice with the matching fur color survive longer and have more babies. Those babies often inherit the same fur color. After many generations, most mice on the sand are light-colored, and most mice on the dark rocks are dark-colored. The evidence from the investigation helps us explain this real-world observation.

EnvironmentHelpful TraitWhy It HelpsResult
Light sandy desertLight tan furBlends in with sand — hard for owls to spotMore light mice survive and have babies
Dark lava rock fieldDark brown/black furBlends in with dark rocks — hard for owls to spotMore dark mice survive and have babies
Light sandy desertDark fur (disadvantage)Stands out on light sand — easy for owls to seeFewer dark mice survive on sand
Dark lava rock fieldLight fur (disadvantage)Stands out on dark rocks — easy for owls to seeFewer light mice survive on dark rocks
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
SECTION 5

Patterns and Connections

Scientists look for cause and effect relationships to understand the world. A cause is something that makes something else happen. An effect is what happens as a result. In our lesson, we can see cause and effect clearly:

Cause: A mouse's fur color matches (or doesn't match) its environment. → Effect: The mouse is harder (or easier) for predators to find. → Effect: The mouse is more (or less) likely to survive.

This pattern of cause and effect isn't just about mice! It shows up all across science. Let's look at a few more examples.

ExampleCause (Trait + Environment)Effect (Survival Difference)
Pocket miceFur color matches the ground colorCamouflaged mice avoid predators and survive longer
Cactus in the desertThick stems store water in a dry environmentCacti with thicker stems survive droughts better
Arctic foxesWhite fur in a snowy environmentWhite foxes hide from prey and predators better
Woodpecker beaksStrong, pointy beak for trees full of insectsWoodpeckers with stronger beaks get more food

In every example, the same pattern appears: a trait (cause) interacts with the environment, which affects survival (effect). Scientists design investigations and look for this cause-and-effect pattern to build explanations about the living world.

✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
SECTION 6

Real-World Connections

Understanding how traits affect survival is not just interesting — it helps people solve real problems in the world!

Conservation scientists use evidence about traits and survival to protect endangered animals. For example, when a forest is cut down, animals that depend on trees for hiding might lose their survival advantage. Scientists study which traits help animals survive in changed environments so they can plan the best ways to protect wildlife.

Farmers and plant scientists study which traits help crops survive in different environments. In dry areas, they grow plants with traits that help them hold water, like deep roots or waxy leaves. In cold areas, they choose plants that can handle frost. By understanding how traits connect to environments, they help grow food for people all over the world.

Engineers who design robots sometimes look at animals for ideas! A robot that needs to move through sand might be designed with wide, flat feet — just like a lizard that lives in the desert. This is called biomimicry — designing technology based on what works in nature.

Traits + Environment= Survival🌿 ProtectingWildlife🌾 GrowingBetter Crops🤖 DesigningTechnology
Flowchart showing how understanding traits and survival connects to conservation, farming, and engineering
SECTION 7

Key Vocabulary

📖 KEY VOCABULARY
  • Trait — A feature or characteristic of a living thing, such as fur color, beak shape, body size, or leaf shape.
  • Variation — The differences in traits among individuals of the same species. For example, some mice have light fur and some have dark fur.
  • Environment — Everything around a living thing, including the climate, land, water, food sources, and other organisms.
  • Survival advantage — When a trait helps an animal or plant live longer and have more offspring in its environment.
  • Evidence — Data from observations, measurements, and investigations that scientists use to support their explanations.
  • Predator — An animal that hunts and eats other animals.
  • Camouflage — A trait that helps an animal blend in with its surroundings so it is harder to see.
  • Cause and effect — A relationship where one event (the cause) makes another event (the effect) happen.
SECTION 8

Practice: Test Your Understanding

PROBLEM 1 — FOUNDATIONAL
A group of lizards lives on sandy desert ground. Some lizards are tan-colored and some are dark brown. Hawks hunt the lizards by spotting them from above. Which lizards are more likely to survive and why?
PROBLEM 2 — INTERMEDIATE
Scientists observed two types of squirrels in a forest. Squirrels with bushy tails could balance better on thin branches to reach acorns. Squirrels with thin tails often fell when trying to reach the same acorns. After a year with very little food on the ground, which squirrels were more likely to survive?
PROBLEM 3 — INTERMEDIATE
A pond has two types of frogs. Type 1 frogs have webbed feet that help them swim fast. Type 2 frogs have less webbing and swim slowly. A new predatory fish is added to the pond that chases frogs in the water. Which statement best uses evidence to explain what would happen?
PROBLEM 4 — ADVANCED
A scientist studied two groups of wildflowers in a meadow. Group A flowers bloom early in spring when few insects are around. Group B flowers bloom later in spring when many bees are flying. Both groups need bees to spread their pollen so they can make seeds. Which group is more likely to reproduce successfully, and what evidence supports this?
PROBLEM 5 — ADVANCED
Students observed two groups of mice living near a barn. Group X mice had excellent hearing and could detect an owl approaching from far away. Group Y mice had average hearing. The students collected data showing that over one year, 80% of Group X mice survived, but only 40% of Group Y mice survived. What is the best explanation using this evidence?
SECTION 9

What's Next?

🔮 WHAT'S NEXT?
SUMMARY

What We Learned

Varsity Tutors • 3rd Grade Science (NGSS) • Survival and Traits: Using Evidence to Explain Survival Differences