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P5 / PSLE Β· Adaptations

Animal Adaptations PSLE Science: Notes, Diagrams, Questions & Free Quiz

Master desert, Arctic, aquatic and rainforest adaptations β€” with model answers for every 'explain how this animal is adapted' question type.

Animal Adaptations PSLE Science: Notes, Diagrams, Questions & Free Quiz

πŸ“… Updated May 2026 Β· Aligned to MOE 2026 syllabus

Over millions of years, animals have evolved remarkable features that help them survive in specific environments. These features are called adaptations. An adaptation is any inherited characteristic β€” a body structure, a behaviour, or a physiological process β€” that improves an organism's chances of surviving and reproducing in its particular habitat. Understanding adaptations is one of the most richly tested topics in PSLE Science, and the key to answering these questions is always the same: link the adaptation to its function, and the function to the survival benefit.

What Is an Adaptation? (PSLE Definition + 3 Types)

An adaptation is a feature of an organism that helps it survive and reproduce in its environment. Adaptations can be:

For PSLE, you are mainly tested on structural adaptations, with some behavioural ones. The key skill is explaining HOW a feature helps the animal survive β€” not just naming the feature.

Desert Animal Adaptations β€” Camel, Fennec Fox & PSLE Questions

Deserts are hot and dry. Animals living here face two main challenges: extreme heat and very little water. Every desert adaptation addresses one or both of these challenges.

The Camel β€” Master of Desert Survival

Other Desert Animals

Arctic & Antarctic Adaptations β€” Polar Bear, Penguin & Cold Climate Notes

Polar regions are cold, often covered in ice and snow, with very little plant life. Animals here face the challenge of staying warm and finding food in a harsh, white landscape.

The Polar Bear

The Penguin

Aquatic Animal Adaptations β€” Fish, Dolphin & Ocean Survival Features

Aquatic animals live in water β€” oceans, rivers, or lakes. They must move efficiently through water, breathe in an aquatic environment, and often withstand significant water pressure.

Rainforest Adaptations β€” Humidity, Canopy & Competition Notes

Tropical rainforests (like those in the Malay Peninsula and Singapore's Bukit Timah) are warm, wet, and have a dense, multi-layered canopy. Animals here compete intensely for food and must avoid or escape many predators.

How to Answer PSLE Adaptation Questions for Full Marks

The formula for full marks on an adaptation question is always: Feature β†’ Mechanism β†’ Survival Benefit.

Example question: "Explain how the camel's hump helps it survive in the desert."

Model answer: The camel's hump stores fat. When food and water are scarce in the desert, the camel can break down this stored fat to release energy and water. This allows the camel to survive for long periods without eating or drinking in the hot, dry desert environment.

Always write in three parts: name the structure β†’ explain what it does β†’ explain why this helps survival. Leaving out any part will cost you marks.

⚠️ Common Exam Traps

Trap 1: "The camel's hump stores water." β€” WRONG. The hump stores FAT, which can be metabolised to release energy and water. The camel does store water in its blood and stomach, but NOT in the hump.

Trap 2: "White fur keeps polar bears warm." β€” The colour of the fur does not trap heat. The THICKNESS and DENSITY of the fur provides insulation. White colour provides camouflage β€” these are two separate benefits of the fur.

Trap 3: Listing adaptations without explaining them. "The fish has a streamlined body" gets 1 mark. "The fish has a streamlined body which reduces drag as it moves through water, allowing it to swim faster and catch prey more easily" gets full marks.

πŸ“‹ Key Facts Summary

  • Adaptation = inherited feature that improves survival in a specific environment
  • Always answer: Feature β†’ What it does β†’ How it helps survival
  • Camel hump stores FAT (not water); used for energy and water when food is scarce
  • Polar bear: blubber + thick fur + white camouflage + small ears
  • Desert adaptations: reduce water loss, tolerate heat, store energy
  • Arctic adaptations: insulate against cold, camouflage in snow
  • Aquatic adaptations: streamlined body, gills, fins, swim bladder
  • Bright colours = warning (poison); camouflage = hiding from predators

Ready to test yourself? Try the quiz β†’

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🧠 Key Points to Remember
  • An adaptation is an inherited feature that improves an organism's survival in its environment
  • Three types: structural (body features), behavioural (actions), physiological (internal processes)
  • Always answer with: Feature β†’ What it does β†’ How it helps survival (3-part structure)
  • Camel hump stores FAT, not water β€” a top PSLE trap
  • Polar bear: blubber + thick fur + small ears + black skin under white fur
  • Aquatic: streamlined body, gills, fins, swim bladder, lateral line
  • Bright colours = warning of poison (aposematism); camouflage = hiding from predators or prey
πŸ“

Practice Questions

πŸ“ Practice Question 1
Explain how the camel's hump helps it survive in the desert.
(2 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… The camel's hump stores fat. When food and water are scarce in the desert, this fat can be broken down to release energy and water, allowing the camel to survive without eating or drinking for long periods.
πŸ“ Practice Question 2
Give two structural adaptations of the polar bear and explain how each helps it survive in the Arctic.
(4 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… (1) Thick layer of blubber β€” acts as an insulator, trapping body heat and preventing the body from losing heat to the cold surroundings. (2) Small ears β€” reduce the surface area exposed to cold air, which minimises heat loss from the body.
πŸ“ Practice Question 3
A student says that a penguin's white belly is an adaptation for camouflage. Suggest how this camouflage works.
(2 marks)
β–Ό Show Answer
βœ… When a predator (such as a shark or orca) looks up from below the water, the penguin's white belly blends in with the bright, light sky above the water surface, making the penguin harder to spot.
βœ…
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How to Answer Animal Adaptation Questions in PSLE Science

Animal adaptation questions in PSLE Science always follow the same pattern: you are given an animal and asked to explain how a specific feature helps it survive in its environment. The key word is how β€” not just what the feature is, but the specific mechanism by which it helps. A student who writes "the polar bear has thick fur to keep warm" scores one mark. A student who writes "the polar bear has thick fur which traps warm air close to the body and reduces heat loss, helping it survive in cold Arctic temperatures" scores two marks. The additional mark comes from explaining the mechanism.

The 3-Part Formula for Full Marks on Adaptation Questions

Use this structure for every PSLE adaptation answer: (1) Name the feature β†’ (2) Explain how it works β†’ (3) State the survival benefit.

Example for a camel: "(1) Camels have a hump (2) which stores fat that can be broken down into water and energy when food and water are scarce, (3) allowing them to survive for long periods in dry desert environments without drinking." This three-part structure guarantees full marks on any adaptation question.

Common Animal Adaptations Tested in PSLE

Desert animals (camel, jerboa, fennec fox): Large ears increase surface area for heat loss. Pale colouring reflects sunlight. Nocturnal behaviour avoids daytime heat. Fat stored in hump (camel) provides energy and water. Ability to produce very concentrated urine conserves water.

Arctic/Polar animals (polar bear, arctic fox, penguin): Thick layer of blubber (fat) under skin insulates against cold. White or pale colouring provides camouflage against snow. Thick, dense fur traps warm air. Penguins huddle together for warmth and take turns at the cold outside. Small ears reduce surface area and minimise heat loss.

Aquatic animals (fish, dolphin, duck): Streamlined body shape reduces water resistance for efficient movement. Fins or flippers provide thrust and steering. Webbed feet (duck) act as paddles. Waterproof feathers (duck) trap air and provide buoyancy and insulation. Gills (fish) extract dissolved oxygen from water for gas exchange.

Rainforest animals (tree frog, monkey, sloth): Sticky toe pads (tree frog) for gripping wet leaves. Prehensile tail (monkey) grips branches, freeing hands for foraging. Camouflage colouring blends with leaves to hide from predators. Sharp curved claws (sloth) hook onto branches for energy-efficient hanging.

Structural vs Behavioural Adaptations

PSLE questions mostly focus on structural adaptations β€” physical features of the body like thick fur, webbed feet, or a streamlined shape. Behavioural adaptations are things the animal does β€” such as migrating to warmer climates in winter, hibernating during cold months, or being nocturnal to avoid predators or heat. When a PSLE question asks about an adaptation, first check whether the question specifies structural or behavioural. If it does not specify, a structural adaptation is usually the safer and more mark-scoring choice.

πŸ’‘ Exam tip: If you are shown an unfamiliar animal in an adaptation question, do not panic. Apply the same logic β€” identify the environment (desert, ocean, polar, rainforest), identify the challenge that environment presents (heat, cold, water, predators), then explain how the feature addresses that specific challenge. The science does not change just because you have not seen the animal before.