Lesson 19
Plants vs. Animals
Learners explore the two major kingdoms of life and discover that the division between plants and animals is not about appearance or habitat but about how each organism gets its energy. Students sort organisms, examine physical features as clues to feeding strategies, and trace every food chain back to the sun. The lesson corrects the common misconception that plants feed on soil, guiding students to understand that a tree’s mass comes almost entirely from air and water.


Key Ideas
  • All living things belong to either the Plant Kingdom or the Animal Kingdom.
  • Animals must find and consume food. Plants make their own food from sunlight, water, and air.
  • Physical features like mouths, eyes, and legs are adaptations for finding and consuming food. Plants have no need for those features because they do not search for food.
  • Every food chain on Earth traces back to a plant, and every plant traces its energy back to the sun.
  • A tree’s mass comes almost entirely from carbon dioxide and water, not from the soil.


Vocabulary
  • Kingdom: The largest category scientists use to sort all living things.
  • Organism: Any living thing.
  • Adaptation: A physical feature or behavior that helps an organism survive.
  • Photosynthesis: The process by which plants use sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide to build their bodies and store energy.
  • Producer: An organism that makes its own food using sunlight.
  • Consumer: An organism that must eat other organisms to get energy.

Sources