Science • Years 4-8 • Ecology and survival

Animal Adaptations Inquiry

Use this handout to help ākonga classify structural, behavioural, and physiological adaptations, then explain how those features help living things survive in particular habitats.

Ingoa / Name
Akomanga / Class

Best for

Primary and intermediate science, ecology, and local-environment units where students need explicit adaptation language and an evidence-based comparison task.

Kaiako use

Use after students have looked at habitats, or as the bridge into field observation, species study, or an ecosystem/future-change lesson.

Ākonga use

Students sort adaptation types, analyse Aotearoa species examples, sketch and label a chosen animal, and explain the relationship between feature and environment.

Free classification task, premium localisation path

This page already contains the sorting, response, and drawing materials. If you want the inquiry rebuilt around your rohe, Te Wānanga can localise it to native manu, marine life, or ngahere species from your own curriculum sequence.

  • Swap the sample species for local animals from your area.
  • Generate a simpler oral-language version or a stronger extension version.
  • Save the adapted copy in My Kete and reopen it in Creation Studio later.

Kaiako planning snapshot

  • Use length: 35-50 minutes.
  • Grouping: Whole-class modelling, then pair talk and individual response.
  • Prep: Optional photos of local species or a short habitat video.
  • Teaching move: Keep adaptation separate from a random fact or learned trick. Students should explain how the feature helps survival.
Classification Ecology

Resources already provided

  • Adaptation type summaries
  • Aotearoa species comparison table
  • Explanation and sketch space
  • Support, core, and stretch prompts
  • Teacher-only curriculum companion

If the lesson mentions sorting, comparison, or drawing tasks, those materials already exist on this page.

Ngā Whāinga Akoranga / Learning Intentions

  • We are learning to identify different kinds of animal adaptations.
  • We are learning to explain how habitat and survival needs shape animal features.
  • We are learning to use examples from Aotearoa when describing living systems.

Paearu Angitu / Success Criteria

  • I can correctly classify at least three adaptations.
  • I can explain how one feature helps an animal survive in its habitat.
  • I can compare two animals or environments using science vocabulary.

Curriculum integration / Te Mātaiaho alignment

Use the companion page to connect this handout to ecology, observing living things, and developing causal explanations in science. The strongest use is when students move from naming traits to explaining why those traits matter.

Living world Observation Explanation

Science in an Aotearoa context

Adaptations make sense only in relationship to habitat, food, danger, and climate. In Aotearoa, species such as kiwi, gecko, kārearea, and kekeno show how life changes over time in response to very specific places and pressures.

Mātauranga Māori strengthens this inquiry by reminding us that animals are not just isolated examples. They sit within wider webs of whakapapa, place, and kaitiakitanga.

Three main adaptation types

Structural

Physical features such as beaks, fur, fins, claws, or camouflage that help an animal survive.

Behavioural

Actions such as migration, burrowing, huddling, or hunting at night that increase survival.

Physiological

Internal body processes such as venom, temperature control, or salt balance that help the animal function.

Aotearoa species comparison

Species Habitat Adaptation How it helps survival
Kiwi Ngahere / forest floor Long beak with nostrils near the tip Finds insects and worms in soil and leaf litter.
Gecko Rocky and bush habitats Toe pads and camouflaged colouring Keeps grip and helps the animal avoid predators.
Kekeno / fur seal Coast and moana Streamlined body and thick insulating fur Moves efficiently in cold water and keeps warm.
Your choice

Explain and sketch

Short response

  1. Which type of adaptation is easiest to notice first? Why?
  2. How could an adaptation become less helpful if the habitat changes?
  3. Why is it important to explain the habitat when you describe an adaptation?

Labelled drawing

Draw an animal and label two features that help it survive. Add arrows and notes to explain what each feature does.

Support, core, stretch

Support

Use the sentence frame: “This adaptation helps the animal survive because...”

Core

Classify the examples accurately and explain one habitat-feature relationship in full sentences.

Stretch

Compare how the same habitat pressure could lead to different adaptations in two species.

Students may respond through labelled drawing, bullet points, oral explanation, or a full paragraph depending on readiness.

Hononga Marautanga · Curriculum Alignment

Science — Pūtaiao

Level 3–4: Investigate how living and physical systems work; understand relationships between organisms and their environments; collect, interpret, and evaluate scientific evidence to explain natural phenomena.

Social Sciences — Tikanga ā-Iwi

Level 3–4: Understand how human activity affects natural environments; explore the connection between ecological health and community wellbeing; recognise the role of cultural knowledge in environmental decision-making.

Aronga Mātauranga Māori

Mātauranga Māori is a sophisticated knowledge system built through centuries of careful observation, hypothesis, testing, and refinement — the same processes that define scientific inquiry. Māori knowledge of ecology, weather patterns, seasonal change, and animal behaviour guided sustainable resource management for generations before Western science arrived in Aotearoa. Understanding science through a dual-knowledge lens — bringing mātauranga Māori and Western science into dialogue rather than hierarchy — produces richer, more contextually grounded understanding. The concept of kaitiakitanga reminds us that scientific knowledge carries obligations: understanding how natural systems work means accepting responsibility for how we treat them.

Ngā Rauemi Tautoko · Support Materials

This handout is designed to be used alongside the broader unit resources available at Te Kete Ako handouts library. Related resources from the same unit are linked in the unit planner. All resources are provided — no additional preparation is required to use this handout in your classroom.

📋 Teacher Planning Snapshot

Ngā Whāinga Ako — Learning Intentions

Students will engage with this resource to build understanding of Aotearoa New Zealand's ecosystems, biodiversity, and the role of kaitiakitanga in environmental stewardship.

Ngā Paearu Angitū — Success Criteria

  • ✅ Students can explain key concepts from this resource using their own words.
  • ✅ Students can connect the content to real-world environmental contexts in Aotearoa.

Differentiation & Inclusion

Scaffold support: Provide sentence starters, word banks, or graphic organisers to scaffold access for students who need it. Offer entry-level and extension tasks to address a range of readiness levels.

ELL / ESOL: Pre-teach key vocabulary and provide bilingual glossaries where available. Allow students to respond in their home language first.

Inclusion: Use accessible formats — clear font, adequate whitespace, structured tasks. Neurodiverse learners benefit from chunked instructions and choice in how they demonstrate understanding.

Prior knowledge: Best used after the relevant lesson sequence. No specialist prior knowledge required for entry-level engagement.