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  1. 3rd Grade Science
  2. Organisms in Their Habitats

3rd Grade Science • Biological Evolution: Unity and Diversity

Organisms in Their Habitats

Why do certain animals and plants live in some places but not in others? Let's explore a pond habitat to find out.

Section 1

The Phenomenon: A Pond Full of Life

🔍 Anchoring Phenomenon

Then you walk up a hill to a dry, rocky meadow just a few hundred meters away. You don't see any of those pond animals here. Instead, you notice grasshoppers, prairie grass, a hawk soaring above, and a rabbit dashing into a burrow. The two places are very close together, but they have completely different groups of living things!

Why are certain organisms found in the pond but not the meadow? Why does each place have its own special group of plants and animals?

CattailsDragonflyTadpolesTurtleCrayfishPOND HABITAT
Illustration of a pond habitat with tadpoles, cattails, a dragonfly, a turtle, and a crayfish
💭 Thinking Questions
  • What do you think the pond organisms need to survive that the pond provides?
  • Why wouldn't a tadpole be found in the dry meadow?
  • What would you want to investigate to find out why each habitat has different organisms?
Section 2

What Scientists Know: Organisms and Habitats

Scientists have studied habitats all around the world, from deep oceans to dry deserts. They've discovered that every habitat has a unique group of organisms — living things — that are well-suited to live there. Let's look at the big ideas that explain why.

1

What Is a Habitat?

A habitat is the natural home of a plant or animal. It provides everything an organism needs to survive: food, water, shelter, and the right temperature. A pond, a forest, a desert, and an ocean are all different habitats.
2

Organisms Match Their Habitat

The organisms in a habitat have traits (body features and behaviors) that help them survive in that specific place. Frogs have webbed feet for swimming in ponds. Cactus plants have thick stems to hold water in the desert. Each organism fits its habitat.
3

Different Habitats, Different Organisms

Because habitats have different conditions — wet or dry, hot or cold, sunny or shady — they support different kinds of organisms. A fish needs water to breathe, so you won't find fish in a dry meadow. A cactus needs very little water, so it wouldn't grow well in a swamp.
4

Organisms in a Habitat Depend on Each Other

Living things in a habitat are connected. Plants make food from sunlight. Insects eat plants. Frogs eat insects. A hawk eats frogs. If one type of organism disappeared, it would affect the others. Scientists call these connections a food chain.
✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Key Takeaway
Section 3

Let's Investigate: Observing a Habitat

Scientists learn about habitats by making careful observations. They watch, listen, and record what organisms live in a place, what the habitat looks like, and what resources are available. This is the Science and Engineering Practice of constructing explanations based on evidence. Let's think about how we would investigate our pond and meadow.

🔬 Investigation Spotlight

Habitat Survey: Recording What Lives Where

Question: What organisms live in a pond habitat compared to a meadow habitat?

What scientists do: They visit each habitat and carefully observe. They write down every organism they find and describe the conditions of the habitat (Is it wet? Dry? Sunny? Shady? What's the temperature like?).

Materials they might use:

  • A notebook and pencil for recording observations
  • A magnifying glass for looking closely at small organisms
  • A thermometer to measure temperature
  • A camera to document what they see

What they would observe: The pond has organisms that need water (tadpoles, fish, water plants). The meadow has organisms that need dry, open ground (grasshoppers, prairie grass, burrowing animals). The evidence shows that each habitat has a distinct group of organisms suited to its conditions.

HABITAT COMPARISON: Pond vs. Meadow🌊 POND HABITATWet • Cool • Shady areas🐸 FrogWebbed feet for swimming; breathes through skin🐟 FishGills to breathe underwater; fins to swim🐢 TurtleShell for protection; can swim and walk on land🌿 Cattail PlantRoots grow in wet mud; tall stems reach sunlight🦞 CrayfishGills to breathe in water; claws to catch food🌾 MEADOW HABITATDry • Warm • Open and sunny🐰 RabbitStrong legs for running; digs burrows in dry soil🦗 GrasshopperLong legs for jumping through tall grass🦅 HawkSharp eyes to spot prey in open fields🌾 Prairie GrassDeep roots to find water in dry soil🐍 Garter SnakeScales to keep dry; hides in tall grass
Comparison diagram showing organisms found in a pond habitat versus a meadow habitat, with their key traits
Section 4

What We Discovered: Why Habitats Have Different Organisms

When scientists survey habitats, they collect data on what organisms they find and what the habitat conditions are like. Based on the evidence from many investigations, scientists have discovered that organisms live in habitats that meet their needs. Let's look at what the data would show from our pond and meadow survey.

Habitat FeaturePondMeadow
Water availabilityLots of standing waterVery little surface water
Soil typeWet, muddyDry, rocky, sandy
TemperatureCooler (water stays cool)Warmer (sun heats dry land)
SunlightPartially shaded by treesOpen and very sunny
Types of plantsWater plants, lily pads, cattailsGrasses, wildflowers
Types of animalsFrogs, fish, turtles, crayfishRabbits, hawks, grasshoppers, snakes

The data shows a clear connection between habitat conditions and the organisms that live there. The pond has lots of water, so it supports organisms with traits for living in water — like gills, webbed feet, and roots that grow in mud. The meadow is dry and sunny, so it supports organisms with traits for dry, open conditions — like deep roots, strong legs for running, and sharp eyes for spotting prey across open ground.

This tells us something important: organisms don't just end up in random places. They live where their traits help them find food, water, shelter, and everything they need to survive. If the conditions of a habitat change — for example, if a pond dries up — the organisms that live there would be affected because their needs would no longer be met.

✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Key Takeaway
Section 5

Patterns and Connections: Cause and Effect

Scientists look for patterns that appear in many different places. One powerful pattern is called cause and effect. This means that when one thing happens (the cause), it makes something else happen (the effect). Understanding cause and effect helps scientists explain why things are the way they are.

In our habitat study, we can see cause and effect clearly. The conditions of a habitat (the cause) determine which organisms can survive there (the effect). This same pattern shows up across all of science! Let's look at some examples.

Science AreaCauseEffect
Life Science (Habitats)A pond provides water, shade, and wet soilFrogs, fish, and water plants live there
Life Science (Traits)A duck has webbed feetThe duck can swim well and find food in water
Earth Science (Weather)A region gets very little rainThe land becomes dry, and only desert plants grow there
Earth Science (Seasons)Winter brings cold temperatures and snowSome animals migrate; others hibernate

See the pattern? In every example, the conditions of the environment (temperature, water, sunlight) directly cause certain outcomes for living things. Scientists use this pattern to make predictions. If you know a habitat is very cold and icy, you can predict it will have organisms with thick fur or blubber — not thin-skinned tropical animals.

✦ KEY TAKEAWAY
Key Takeaway
Section 6

Real-World Connections: Protecting Habitats

Understanding organisms and their habitats isn't just interesting — it's also really important for solving real-world problems. When people build roads, houses, or farms, they sometimes change or destroy habitats. Scientists who study habitats help us figure out how to protect the organisms that live there.

For example, wildlife biologists study which organisms live in a forest before a road is built through it. They might discover that a rare salamander lives only in that particular stream. Based on their evidence, they can recommend building the road in a different spot, or adding a tunnel under the road so animals can cross safely.

🏗️ Engineering Challenge: Design a Wildlife Crossing

Imagine a highway is being built near a pond habitat where turtles cross the road to lay their eggs in a sandy area on the other side. Many turtles get hurt crossing the road. How would you design a solution?

Think like an engineer:

  • Define the problem: Turtles need to cross the road safely.
  • Brainstorm solutions: A tunnel under the road? A fence that guides turtles to a safe crossing? A bridge over the road just for wildlife?
  • Compare solutions: Which one would work best for slow-moving turtles? Which is easiest to build?
  • Test and improve: Engineers would build a small version first, watch whether turtles actually use it, and then make changes to improve the design.

Real wildlife crossings like this exist all over the world! In some places, special tunnels have been built under highways for turtles, salamanders, and even bears.

Section 7

Key Vocabulary Review

📖 Key Vocabulary
  • Habitat — The natural home of an organism. A habitat provides the food, water, shelter, and conditions that an organism needs to survive.
  • Organism — Any living thing, including plants, animals, fungi, and tiny creatures you can't see without a microscope.
  • Trait — A feature or characteristic of an organism, such as webbed feet, sharp claws, or deep roots. Traits help organisms survive in their habitat.
  • Food chain — The path that shows how energy from food moves from one organism to another. For example: plant → grasshopper → frog → hawk.
  • Observe — To watch something carefully and notice details. Scientists observe habitats to learn which organisms live there and why.
  • Evidence — Information collected through observations or investigations that scientists use to support their explanations.
  • Cause and effect — A pattern where one event (the cause) makes another event (the effect) happen. Example: A habitat has lots of water (cause), so frogs live there (effect).
Section 8

Practice: Test Your Understanding

PROBLEM 1 — PROBLEM 1
A scientist visits a pond and finds frogs, cattails, dragonflies, and algae. Which of the following best describes what the scientist identified?
PROBLEM 2 — PROBLEM 2
Which group of organisms would you most likely find living in a forest habitat?
PROBLEM 3 — PROBLEM 3
A student makes a list of things found in a meadow: butterflies, rabbits, and wildflowers. Which item on the list is a plant?
PROBLEM 4 — PROBLEM 4
A student observes a stream and records the following: trout, rocks, crayfish, and water striders. Which of these is NOT an organism?
PROBLEM 5 — PROBLEM 5
A desert habitat has very little rain and can be very hot during the day. Which organism is best suited to live in a desert?
Section 9

What's Next?

🔮 What's Next?
Summary

What We Learned

Varsity Tutors • 3rd Grade Science (NGSS) • Organisms in Their Habitats