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Classifying Critters

Year 6, Topic 1, Switched on Science. Classifying Critters. Did you know?. Pears, peaches and apricots are members of the rose family? Peanuts aren ’ t nuts at all. They ’ re a bean. A prairie dog is not a dog at all. It ’ s a type of squirrel!. Let ’ s think like scientists!.

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Classifying Critters

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  1. Year 6, Topic 1, Switched on Science Classifying Critters

  2. Did you know? • Pears, peaches and apricots are members of the rose family? • Peanuts aren’t nuts at all. They’re a bean. • A prairie dog is not a dog at all. It’s a type of squirrel!

  3. Let’s think like scientists! • You have found a plant that you don’t recognise. What could you do to try and name it? • Are trees plants? How can you tell?

  4. In this topic, you will: • Understand how living things are classified into groups scientifically. • Know the difference between invertebrates and vertebrates. • Observe similarities and differences and use them to classify living things.

  5. Key vocabulary • Flora • Fauna • Vertebrate • Invertebrate • Mammal • Bird • Amphibian • Reptile • Fish • Fungi • Mushroom • Toadstool • Fermentation • Microbe • Bacteria • Species • Genus • Organism

  6. Spot the difference • How are these two things the same? • How are they different? • What makes an animal different to a plant?

  7. Vertebrates There are 5 main groups of vertebrate. amphibian bird mammal fish reptile

  8. Has hair Gives birth to live young. Doesn’t lay eggs. Mammals Feeds its young with milk. Warm-blooded

  9. Slimy, scaly skin. Some lays jelly-like eggs. Fish Lives in water. Has gills. Cold-blooded

  10. Slimy, smooth skin. Lays jelly-like eggs. Has to return to water to lay its eggs. Amphibians Warm-blooded

  11. Dry, scaly skin. Lays leathery eggs on land. Reptiles Cold-blooded

  12. Covered in feathers. Has wings. Lays eggs with a hard shell. Birds Has a beak. Does not have teeth. Warm-Blooded

  13. How are these two animals the same? How are they different?

  14. Mammals don’t lay eggs. They give birth to live young.

  15. Reptile eggs are laid on land, and have leathery shells. Amphibian eggs are jelly-like and laid in water like this frog spawn. a/w 6.14 Some fish lay jelly-like eggs. Others lay large eggs, like this sharks egg. Birds lay eggs with hard shells.

  16. Reptiles are cold-blooded. They have to sit in the sun to warm themselves up. Fish and amphibians are also cold blooded. Birds and mammals are warm-blooded. They can live in places where it would be too cold for reptiles and amphibians.

  17. Invertebrates • Invertebrates do not have a backbone • Some have a hard shell on the outside of their bodies called an exoskeleton • Some don’t have a skeleton at all.

  18. How are these two animals the same? How are they different?

  19. Insects Has a hard skeleton outside the body. Has six legs Body has three main segments Such as : beetles, bees, ants

  20. Spiders Has a hard skeleton outside the body. Has eight legs Body has two main segments Such as : spiders and scorpions

  21. Marvellous Microbes • Bacteria are tiny, single celled organisms. • They are quite different to plants and animals. They reproduce by splitting themselves in two. • They are so small that we cannot see them without a microscope. • Some bacteria cause diseases, but other bacteria can be very useful to us.

  22. Bad Bacteria: Plague Plague was caused by a bacteria called Yersinia pestis. This was spread to humans by fleas which were carried on rats. The Black Death 1346-1350 Between 75 million and 200 million people died. The Great Plague of London 1664-1666 Roughly 100,000 people died.

  23. Good Bacteria Some foods wouldn’t exist without bacteria. Special bacteria change milk into cheese and yoghurt.

  24. Bacteria (and fungi) play an important role in decomposing dead / waste material. • Without bacteria, things would not rot away.

  25. Is it a plant? • In what ways is this mushroom like plant? • In what ways is it not like a plant?

  26. Mushrooms, toadstools and mould are all examples of fungi. • They are not plants because they cannot make their own food. • They do not make pollen like plants do, they reproduce by making spores. • They don’t have any chlorophyll.

  27. Yeast • Yeast is a single-celled fungi. • It is very important for making bread, beer and wine.

  28. Mouldy Food • What happens when food turns mouldy? • What different ways can we stop our food going mouldy? • What did people do before the days of freezers to preserve their food?

  29. The Kingdoms • Living things can be grouped into five main kingdoms: • Animals • Plants • Fungi • Protists • Bacteria

  30. Animal: Any multicellular organism that feeds on plants or other animals. • Plant: A living organism that is able to make its own food by the process of photosynthesis. • Fungi: A group of organisms that include microorganisms like yeast and moulds. Examples of fungi include athlete’s foot, ringworm, mushrooms and toadstools. • Bacteria: Simple single-celled organisms without a nucleus. • Protists: A group of microbes that do not fit into the other categories. Include amoeba, algae and protozoa.

  31. Sycamore Oak Horse Chestnut Ivy Birch Holly Can you make a key to identify these leaves?

  32. The system we use to classify living things was developed by Carl Linnaeus He was born in Sweden on 23rd May 1707.

  33. Linnaeus spent a lot of his life studying and collecting plants and animals. • At that time, names were very confusing because people in different places would have different names for the same plant or animal. • For example in different parts of the world, the word squirrel can mean different animals.

  34. French: écureuil German: eichhörnchen Plus the same animal could be called different things in different languages. Italian: scoiattolo Portuguese: esquilo

  35. Smith, John • Linnaeus wanted a system that everyone could understand. • He wanted every living thing to have a name that was unique – a name that only that particular animal or plant had. • In his system - each plant and animal was given a name made up of two words in Latin. • The first word is a family name, like your surname. This is called the genus. The second name is called the species, and is like your first name.

  36. For example, the Horse Chestnut was called Aesculushippocastanum Genus name. Named after the roman name for an edible acorn Species name. Hippo was the latin for horse Castanum is the latin for chestnut

  37. Living things with the same family name are related. • For example all bushy tailed squirrels were given the name Sciurus meaning “Shadow tail”. • Sciurus vulgaris = red squirrel • Sciurus carolinensis = grey squirrel

  38. This group of plants have the name Echinocereus – From the Greek word “echinos” meaning a porcupine, and cereus meaning “like a candle”. Can you think why? They are sometimes called Hedgehog Cactus!

  39. Linnaeus published this system in a book. • Scientists soon started using this way of naming every living thing on Earth. • Carl Linnaeus had invented a way of naming living things that everyone all over the world could understand.

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