Classroom lesson · Amazon · 🇧🇷 Brazil

The Amazon rainforest

The world's biggest rainforest, where one in ten animals on Earth lives

An aerial view of the Amazon rainforest and river

Photo · Wikimedia Commons

What is it?

The Amazon is the largest rainforest on Earth. Most of it sits inside Brazil, but it spreads across eight other countries too. It is so big that if it were its own country, it would be the seventh-largest in the world - roughly the size of Western Europe.

Tell me more

About one out of every ten kinds of animal known to science lives in the Amazon. That includes jaguars, sloths, capybaras, toucans, giant otters, pink river dolphins, and millions of insects so small you would need a magnifying glass to see them. New species are discovered there almost every week.

Running through the middle of the forest is the Amazon River. It carries more water than the next ten biggest rivers in the world put together. In some places it is so wide that you cannot see the other bank - it looks more like a sea.

The trees of the Amazon do something amazing for the whole planet. They breathe in carbon dioxide (the gas cars and factories let out) and breathe out oxygen (the gas we need to live). Scientists sometimes call the Amazon 'the lungs of the Earth'.

Around a million Indigenous people live in the Amazon, in more than 400 different communities. Some of them have lived there for thousands of years and know which leaves are food, which are medicine, and how to walk through the forest without getting lost.

In the classroom

Walk your class through this in 15 minutes.

Talk together

Discussion prompts

  1. 01Why might it be useful to call a forest 'the lungs of the Earth'? What do lungs do?
  2. 02Scientists keep finding new species in the Amazon. How might you discover a new animal nobody has ever named?
  3. 03What would change for the rest of the world if there were no rainforests at all?
Try this

Classroom activity

On A3, draw a slice of the rainforest from the forest floor up to the tops of the tallest trees (the 'canopy'). Label one animal at each layer: floor, understorey, canopy, emergent. Then add yourself standing next to the tallest tree to see how small you look.