Habitats and Niches
A habitat is the place where a plant or animal lives. It provides food, shelter, protection, and a place to find mates. A habitat can be as large as an island or as small as a tree or a rock.
A niche is the role an organism plays in its habitat. It includes what it eats, how it gets food, and how it interacts with other living and nonliving things. Different niches allow many species to live together without competing too much.
For example, in a school, the building is the habitat, but teachers have different niches—one teaches science, another teaches English, another teaches social studies.
In nature, animals and plants also have different niches. In a forest, woodpeckers and bats eat insects, helping control insect populations. Squirrels and chipmunks spread seeds when they store food or leave droppings, helping new plants grow.
On the Galápagos Islands, several types of finches live in the same habitat but have different niches. Some eat insects, others eat seeds, and others eat cactus. Their different beaks help them eat different foods, allowing them to survive together.
Habitats stay healthy and balanced because organisms each have a special niche.
Habitat vs Niche Free Worksheet
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