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Science·Animals of the World·conceptual

Invasive Species

Understand that invasive species are animals (or plants) that have been introduced to a place where they don't naturally belong — like grey squirrels outcompeting red squirrels in the UK, cane toads poisoning native predators in Australia, or rabbits devastating ecosystems in Australia — and that they can cause serious harm to native wildlife by competing for food, spreading disease, or having no natural predators

Suggested ages 9–11

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Learning journey

Your child is discovering how animals have evolved amazing adaptations to survive in their environments, exploring complex animal behaviors and intelligence, and learning about conservation efforts to protect endangered species and biodiversity.

Evidence of understanding

  • Defines invasive species as non-native animals introduced to a new environment
  • Names at least 2 examples of invasive species and their impacts
  • Explains at least 2 reasons invasive species are harmful (no predators, outcompete natives, spread disease)
  • Understands the difference between a species naturally expanding its range and being introduced by humans

Assessment prompt

If Invasive Species learns that grey squirrels were brought to the UK from America, can they explain why introduced animals can be a problem for the animals that were already living there?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.