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Standards 4 & 5

Standards 4 & 5. Standard 4. All organisms respond to their environment. A response is a reaction to a stimulus . For example, if a lion charges a gazelle, the gazelle may respond by running away. Stimulus & Response Video

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Standards 4 & 5

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  1. Standards 4 & 5

  2. Standard 4 • All organisms respond to their environment. • A response is a reaction to a stimulus. For example, if a lion charges a gazelle, the gazelle may respond by running away. • Stimulus & Response Video • Most living things have adaptations that help them survive. Adaptations are responses by organisms to an internal or environmental stimulus that help them survive.

  3. Examples of animal responses to temperature changes that help maintain internal temperature: • Shedding: Used to maintain internal temperatures • animals form thick coasts of fur to insulate their body from cold weather • in hot weather animals will shed this extra fur, providing a cooling effect. • Sweating: Used to get rid of excess heat • When sweat evaporates from the surface of the skin, it removes excess heat and cools the animal.

  4. Panting: Used to get rid of excess heat • When an animal pants (breathes heavily), increased air flow causes an increase in evaporation from the animal’s mouth and lungs, cooling the animal. • Shivering: Used by mammals to increase heat production. • Shivering is an involuntary response to a drop in the temperature outside or within the body, • It is a method that the body uses to increase the rate at which energy is transformed into heat.

  5. Examples of other common responses to changes in environmental stimuli: • Blinking • Blinking is a response to moisture loss; it also provides protection to the eye. • Animals need to blink to keep their corneas covered with a tear film. • This tear film serves to protect the eye from drying out and from potential infection. • The blink response also serves to protect the eye from injury if a foreign object comes near the eye.

  6. Food gathering: The process of finding food by hunting or fishing or the gathering of seeds, berries, or roots, may be seasonal. • Storing food: Many animals will begin to gather and store food for the winter. One such animal is a squirrel or a rat. • Storing nutrition in the form of fat:Many animals will overeat and reduce their physical activity to conserve energy in response to environmental stimuli such as cold weather or drought. Ex: Bears, Whales, Seals

  7. Standard 5 • A complex set of responses to a stimuli is called a behavior. • Behavioral responses how animals cope with changes in their environments. • Examples of behavioral responses to environmental stimuli that animals exhibit are: • Hibernation : a state of greatly reduced body activity, used to conserve food stored in the body. • Stimulus is cold weather. Conserves food storage in the body. • Some animals "hibernate" for part or all of the winter. • The animal’s body temperature drops, its heartbeat and breathing slow down, and it uses very little energy. • Ex: ants, snakes, black bears, beavers, and ground squirrels.

  8. Migration: the movement of animals from one place to another in response to seasonal changes. They travel to places where food is available. • Migrating animals usually use the same routes year after year. • The cycle is controlled by changes in the amount of daylight and the weather. • Ex: monarch butterflies, orcas, caribou, and ducks. • DefenseDefense mechanisms vary with different types of animals. Some examples are: • Camouflage is a protective coloration to aid an animal to survive in its environment. Some animals develop their camouflage in response to the weather. • The artic fox and snowshoe hare. They develop a white coat for the winter to blend in with the snow and a gray coat in the summer to blend in with the forest. The chameleon adjust their color to match their surroundings.

  9. Smells: Skunks use an offensive odor in response to fear. The smell is a stream of oily, foul smelling musk that repells predators. • Stingers: Wasps and bees use a stinger for protection when frightened or threatened. • Ejection: (Octopus & Squid) Release a black ink cloud that causes the water to get cloudy so they can escape from predators. When the horned lizard gets really scared, it shoots blood out of its eyes by increasing the blood pressure in its sinuses until they explode. The blood doesn't hurt the lizard's enemy but it scares them, so the horned lizard has time to escape.

  10. Mimicry: a weaker animal copies stronger animals' characteristics/adaptations to warn off predators. Some flower flies resemble black and yellow wasps that have a powerful sting and use this disguise to ward off predators. Ex: walking stick, tree hopper looks like a leaf, dirt dobber looks like a wasp. • Grouping: this behavior occurs when certain animals travel in groups to protect individuals within the group or to fool a predator into thinking the group is one large organism. Ex: Herds (buffalo, zebra, cattle), packs (wolves), or schools of fish. • Courtship :When adult animals of a species find a mating pair. • Courtship behaviors ensure that males and females of the same species recognize each other. • Environmental stimuli such as warmer weather and longer days will stimulate courtship. • Often sensory cues will attract a potential mate. Chemical odor cues (deer pee) or color (peacocks & turkey) often serve as courtship attractants in animals.

  11. Animal Intelligence • Animal Adaptations • Adapting to Changes in Nature • Science of the Sea: Dolphins, Rays, and Other Adaptations

  12. Draw one of these in notebook for each behavior: Hibernation, Migration, Camouflage, Smells, Stingers, Ejection, Mimicry, Grouping, and Courtship What Process? Who? Hibernation Where? When?

  13. Group Assignment: Copy this organizer on Chart Paper

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