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Introduction to Biomes and Habitats

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To view these resources with no ads, please Login or Subscribe to help support our content development.

School subscriptions can access more than 175 downloadable unit bundles in our store for free (a value of $1,500).

District subscriptions provide huge group discounts for their schools. Email for a quote: sheri@exploringnature.org.

Below are ten habitats that can be used to introduce Biomes and Food Webs. They have no animal names so you can look at them and think critically about what makes each a successful working ecosystem.

Remember that an ecosystem is a biological community together with all the non-living (abiotic) things around it, like rocks, water, sun and air.

A community includes the many different populations of species living in one area and interacting, like a herd of deer grazing on a meadow of grass (not including the non-living parts).

So, look at each habitat illustration and note the living populations of animals and non-living parts of the ecosystem.

Think about how they interact.

Think about which living things preys on one another. Which are scavengers and which are producers?

 

*Thanks to Marla Goldberg, Sixth Grade Advisor, The Skokie School for recommending this activity.

African savannah Biome
amazon rainforest Biome
Prairie Biome
coral reef biome Biome
deciduous forest Biome
African rainforest Biome
Desert Biome
temperate forest Biome
arctic biome
Lake biome

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