| A | B |
| physical adaptation | ways animals look for or a feature an animal is born with for defense and survival |
| mimicry | an animals looks like or imitates another animal for survival |
| behavioral adaptation | certain activities that living things do to meet their needs for food, water, shelter and protection |
| camouflage | animals blend in with environment to protect themselves from enemies |
| migrate | moving a long distance from one place to another as seasons change |
| hibernate | animals go into a deep winter's sleep in which their body's activities slow down and they can live off stored food |
| instinct | a natural behavior animals are born with in order to survive. These behaviors are not learned by are instinctive |
| learned behavior | animal behavior that is not instinct; it must be learned by the animal |
| examples of living things | plants, animals, and humans |
| examples of nonliving things | rocks, soil, water |
| examples of animal adaptations | migrate, hibernate, dormant, estivate, camouflage, mimicry, storing and gathering food, finding shelter |
| animals that migrate | butterflies, hummingbirds, geese, ducks, whales, wildebeests, zebras, elephants |
| animals that hibernate | chipmunks, groundhogs, snakes, frogs, bats |
| animals that go dormant | bears and foxes |
| animals that use camouflage | deer with spots, moths that are the color of a tree, arctic foxes, lions, tigers, rabbits |
| animals that use mimicry | mockingbirds, leaf bugs, walking sticks, viceroy butterflies |
| ways animals defend themselves | playing dead, armor, symbiosis, bad odor, bad taste, sharp outer coverings |
| symbiosis | a way that animals help each other |
| what animals need to live | food, water, shelter, air |
| examples of instincts | beaver building a dam, spider spinning a web |