Science·Rainforests·conceptual
Classifying Rainforest Organisms
Classify rainforest organisms into major groups — mammals (jaguars, monkeys, bats), birds (toucans, macaws, hummingbirds), reptiles (snakes, lizards, caimans), amphibians (tree frogs, poison dart frogs), insects (butterflies, ants, beetles), and plants (trees, epiphytes, ferns) — using observable features to sort them
Suggested ages 7–9
Evidence of understanding
- Sort at least eight rainforest organisms into correct groups: mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, insects, or plants
- State the key feature that defines each group (e.g. mammals have fur and feed milk to their young)
- Explain why classification helps scientists understand and study the huge variety of life in rainforests
Assessment prompt
If Classifying Rainforest Organisms looks at pictures of different rainforest creatures, can they sort them into groups like mammals, birds, reptiles, and insects, and explain why each one belongs in its group?
Standards alignment
No external standards are linked to this topic.