There are about two million different types of living things today! Although they share similar features, there are also great differences between them. People have found it useful to sort living things into groups. The two largest groups are the plant and the animal kingdoms.

 

Within these groups there are many different types, or ‘species’. So scientists divide the plant and animal kingdoms into smaller groups. Animals are firstly divided into those that have backbones, the ‘vertebrates’, and those that do not, the ‘invertebrates’. Plants have also been divided into many different groups that distinguish between their structure and their leaf or flowering cycles.

 

The animal kingdom

Most animals are invertebrates (without a backbone). For example, earthworms, butterflies, spiders and crabs are just a few invertebrates. Vertebrates can be put into five groups: fish, amphibians (vertebrates which spend part of their lives in water and part on land), birds, reptiles and mammals. Mammals are the only animals which produce milk to feed their young.

 

 

 

 

Giraffes, the tallest living animal, are found in the open grassland of Africa.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Many different types of plant species can be found in this meadow.