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SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK Ocean Life OCEAN FISH PERCH STINGRAYS SHARK SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK SHARKS GREATWHITE SHARK Sharks have been alive longer than dinosaurs. They live in oceans and seas all around the world.
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SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK Ocean Life OCEAN FISH PERCH STINGRAYS SHARK
SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK SHARKS GREATWHITE SHARK • Sharks have been alive longer than dinosaurs. • They live in oceans and seas all around the world. • Sharks do not have bones or backbones and their skeleton is made of cartilage. • There are about 368 different species of sharks. • Each species have their own characteristics in size, color, fins, teeth, habitat, diet, and personality. TIGER SHARK HAMMERHEAD SHARK
SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK STINGRAYS • Stingrays are found in bays and oceans. • They have a long thin tale and a round shaped body. • Their eyes are found on the top of their body and their mouth is found underneath. • Stingrays have poison in their tales which can be very harmful to other ocean animals.
SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK FISH IN THE OCEAN • Fish are backboned animals that live in all kinds of water. • Gills allow fish to swim underwater without needing air. • Some fish swim towards the bottom of the ocean while others swim in open water. • Cod fish, Tuna fish, and Herring are only three out of thousands of fish species found in oceans around the world. COD FISH HERRING TUNA FISH
SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK SELF CHECK Click on the picture of the animal that does not live in the ocean.
SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK TRUE True or False: Sharks have backbones. FALSE
SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK What allows fish to swim under water without needing air? • Noses • Eyes • Gills • Fins
SHARKS FISH STINGRAYS SELF CHECK Venom Sugar Poison Bones Fill in the blank Stingrays have ____________ in their tales which can be harmful to other ocean animals.
REFERENCES PRINTED Cole, Joanna. The Magic School Bus On the Ocean Floor. New York: Scholastic, 1992. National Geographic Animal Encyclopedia. Washington, D.C.: National Geographic Society, 2000. WEBSITES All About Sharks. Enchanted Learning.com. 1998-2003. http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subjects/sharks Cornish, Jim. Ocean Species of Fish. Feb. 4, 2001. http://www.stemnet.nf.ca/CITE/oceanfish.htm New Jersey State Aquarium Webpage. 2002. http://www.njaquarium.org Yahoo! Groups. Amazing Rays. 2003. http://www.groups.yahoo.com/group/amazing_rays