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Science·Animals of the World·conceptual

Biodiversity

Understand that biodiversity — the variety of different species in an ecosystem — is essential for healthy ecosystems, and that keystone species (like wolves in Yellowstone, sea otters in kelp forests, or bees as pollinators) have an outsized impact on their ecosystem, so that losing one key species can cause a cascade of changes affecting many others

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 biodiversity as the variety of species in an ecosystem
  • Explains why biodiversity matters (stability, resilience, ecosystem services)
  • Defines keystone species and gives at least 2 examples
  • Describes a trophic cascade or chain reaction from removing/adding a species

Assessment prompt

If Biodiversity learns about how wolves were brought back to Yellowstone and the whole ecosystem changed, can they explain what a 'keystone species' is and why having many different species in an area matters?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.