C Curriculum Explorer
Science·Insects & Minibeasts·conceptual

Insect Adaptations

Adaptation and evolution in insects: peppered moths as a famous example of natural selection (dark moths survived better on soot-covered trees during the Industrial Revolution). Stick insects evolved to look like twigs. Ant-mimicking spiders evolved to fool predators. How small changes over many generations lead to remarkable disguises.

Suggested ages 9–11

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Evidence of understanding

  • Retell the peppered moth story and explain how the environment changed which colour moth survived best
  • Describe how a stick insect's body shape is an adaptation that helps it avoid being eaten
  • Explain that adaptations develop over many generations through natural selection, not during one insect's lifetime

Assessment prompt

Can Insect Adaptations explain why peppered moths changed colour during the Industrial Revolution — and how that's an example of how living things adapt over many generations?

Standards alignment

No external standards are linked to this topic.