1 / 41

Animals

Animals. 4 th Grade Zoology Unit. Classifying Animals. 1 characteristic used to classify animals is whether or not they have a vertebral column . Other names for a vertebral column: backbone, spine, or spinal column. Vertebrates.

chavez
Download Presentation

Animals

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Animals 4th Grade Zoology Unit

  2. Classifying Animals • 1 characteristic used to classify animals is whether or not they have a vertebral column. • Other names for a vertebral column: backbone, spine, or spinal column

  3. Vertebrates • Animals that have a vertebral column are called vertebrates. • 5 groups of vertebrates: mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish • Animals that do not have a vertebral column are called invertebrates. Invertebrates make up 97% of all the animals in the world.

  4. Characteristics of vertebrates • ALL vertebrates have… • Vertebral Column • Endoskeleton • Brain Protected by a Cranium • Spinal Cord • Closed Circulatory System

  5. Characteristics of vertebrates • Vertebral Column • Made up of individual bones called vertebrae. • Vertebrae are connected by tissue called cartilage. • Cartilage is softer and more flexible than bone. (like our ears and nose)

  6. Characteristics of vertebrates • Endoskeleton • Means our skeleton is inside our bodies. • Made up of vertebral column, other bones, and cartilage. • Gives the body structure • Provides a place for muscles to attach • Protects vital organs, like brain, heart, and lungs

  7. Characteristics of vertebrates • Brain Protected by a Cranium • A cranium is the bones of the skull. • The cranium covers the brain.

  8. Characteristics of vertebrates • Spinal Cord • Located inside the vertebral column • Made up of nerves that carry messages from the brain to all parts of the body and from all parts of the body back to the brain • Protected by the vertebral column

  9. Characteristics of vertebrates • Closed Circulatory System • Blood circulates through the body in an endless loop of blood vessels. • Blood carries oxygen and nutrients to cells. • Blood removes waste products from cells.

  10. Classifying Vertebrates • Vertebrates are sorted into groups called classes. • Classes are based on things like… • Body coverings • How they get oxygen into their bodies • Internal body temperature • How they reproduce • 5 Classes of Vertebrates • Mammals • Birds • Reptiles • Amphibians • Fish

  11. Classifying Vertebrates • Body Coverings • Reptiles- dry, scaly skin • Amphibians- moist, smooth skin • Fish- skin with overlapping scales • Birds- skin covered in feathers • Mammals- skin covered by hair

  12. Classifying Vertebrates • How They Get Oxygen into Their Bodies • Vertebrates bring oxygen into their bodies and release carbon dioxide. • Lungs- mammals, birds, reptiles, & most adult amphibians • Gills- fish & some young amphibians • Some amphibians (like salamanders) can also absorb oxygen through their moist skin.

  13. Classifying Vertebrates • Internal Body Temperature • Homeotherm- warm-blooded- This means that the body temperature remains pretty constant (about the same). • Poikilotherm- cold-blooded- This means that the body temperature is able to change with its surroundings. (Low body temperature when it’s cold & high body temperature when it’s hot) • Homeotherms- birds & mammals • Poikilotherms- reptiles, amphibians, & fish

  14. Classifying Vertebrates • How They Reproduce • Reproduction means making more of one’s own kind • Mammals- young are born live • Birds, Reptiles, Fish, Amphibians- young develop in eggs outside the mother’s body • Birds- Hard-Shelled Eggs (on the ground or in nests) • Reptiles- Soft, Leathery Eggs (on land or buried underground) • Fish & Amphibians- Eggs do not have shells. (in water)

  15. Classifying Invertebrates • 5 Phyla of Invertebrates • Annelids • Cnidarians • Echinoderms • Mollusks • Arthropods

  16. Classifying Invertebrates • Annelids • Live in water or damp soil • Long, cylinder-shaped bodies • Body is divided into segments • Ex. Earthworm, Leech

  17. Classifying Invertebrates • Cnidarians • Most live in salt water • Stinging tentacles • Ex. Jelly Fish, Sea Anemone

  18. Classifying Invertebrates • Echinoderms • Live in salt water • Hard, spiny outer body cover • Tube feet • Ex. Sea Star, Sand Dollar

  19. Classifying Invertebrates • Mollusks • Usually live in water • Hard shell • Muscular foot • Ex. Snail, Clam, Octopus

  20. Classifying Invertebrates • Arthropods • Segmented body with jointed legs • Exoskeleton • Molt as they grow • Ex. Insects (wasp, butterfly, cockroach), Arachnids (spider, scorpion), Malocostracans (lobster, shrimp), Merostomata (horseshoe crab), Chilopods & Diplopods (centipedes & millipedes)

  21. Life Cycles of vertebrates • Life Cycle- the complete cycle from the beginning of an animal’s life until the time it produces a new animal like itself. • Some animals look like their parents from the time they are born. • Other animals will not look like their parents until they are older.

  22. Life Cycles of vertebrates • Mammals, birds, & reptiles are born looking similar to their parents. • Mammals- begin their life cycle inside their mother’s body • Birds & Reptiles- begin their life cycle inside eggs

  23. Life Cycles of vertebrates • Life Cycle of a Chicken- Bird • Egg, Chick, Adult • Life Cycle of an Alligator- Reptile • Egg, Hatchling, Adult

  24. Life Cycles of vertebrates • Young amphibians & fish hatch having bodies that look very different from the bodies of their parents. • Metamorphosis- the changing of an animal’s body form during its life cycle • 3 stages in the life cycle of amphibians & fish • Egg • Larva • Adult • Amphibians & Fish begin their life cycle inside eggs. • Baby amphibians & fish are called larva.

  25. Life Cycles of vertebrates • Life Cycle of a Frog- Amphibian • Egg, Larva, Adult • Larva Stage • Tadpole • Tadpole without gills • Tadpole with legs • Froglet

  26. Life Cycles of vertebrates • Changing Characteristics of a Frog During Metamorphosis

  27. Life Cycles of Insects • Insects begin their life cycles in an egg. • Young insects have bodies that look very different than their parents. • Metamorphosis- changing of an animal’s body form during its life cycle

  28. Life Cycles of Insects • Some insects look similar to their parents when they hatch but are missing some of the body parts an adult has. • Ex: Baby grasshoppers & cockroaches look like their parents but do not have wings. • Wings develop as they grow older. • Incomplete Metamorphosis- when new body features of an insect develop gradually as it grows

  29. Life Cycles of Insects • Incomplete Metamorphosis • 3 Stages • Egg • Nymph • Adult • Nymph- young insect that looks like its parent but is missing some body parts

  30. Life Cycles of Insects • Some insects look completely different from their parents when they hatch. • Ex: Eggs of butterflies hatch and out comes a caterpillar. Caterpillar looks completely different from the adult butterfly. • Complete Metamorphosis- process where young change form and look completely different as adults

  31. Life Cycles of Insects • Complete Metamorphosis • 4 Stages • Egg • Larva • Pupa • Adult • Larva- baby insect • Pupa- stage where the larva is ready to change to an adult. Body completely changes and develops new structures. • Ex: butterflies, bees, beetles, ants

  32. What Animals eat • All animals consume (eat) other organisms. • Some eat plants. • Some eat animals. • Some eat plants and animals. • Some only eat dead plants and animals.

  33. What Animals eat • Herbivores- animals that eat only plants • Ex: cows, mice, rabbits, deer, geese, iguanas, bees, grasshoppers

  34. What Animals eat • Carnivores- animals that eat only animals (meat) • Ex: lions, hawks, snakes, alligators, jellyfish, lobsters, sea stars, praying mantises, spiders

  35. What Animals eat • Omnivores- animals that eat both plants & animals • Ex: bears, skunks, robins, hummingbirds, sea urchins, ants, cockroaches, chimpanzees, human beings

  36. What Animals eat • Detritivores- animals that eat only dead plants and animals • Ex: earthworms, termites, millipedes, pill bugs

  37. How Animals obtain energy • Animal cells use glucose & oxygen to produce energy • Food provides the glucose. • Breathing provides the oxygen. • Digestive, respiratory, & circulatory systems are in charge of bringing the glucose and oxygen to the cells.

  38. How Animals obtain energy • Digestive System • Breaks down food & changes it into things the body can absorb • Digestion changes a lot of food into sugars like glucose.

  39. How Animals obtain energy • Respiratory System • Brings oxygen into the body & removes carbon dioxide • These gases are either exchanged in lungs or gills.

  40. How Animals obtain energy • Circulatory System • Carries glucose from digestion and oxygen from breathing to cells • Carries carbon dioxide away from cells

  41. How Animals obtain energy • Comparing Respiration in Plants & Animals • Glucose + oxygen = energy + carbon dioxide + water

More Related