lunes, 30 de noviembre de 2015

Invertebrates: Arthropods

Arthropods: they have an external skeleton , jointed legs and a segmented body.

The easiest way to distinguish an arthropod from any other animal is to see if they have:

1) A segmented body.

This means that they will have a body made up of more than one part.  Spiders have two segments and flies have three segments.

Two Segments


2) Many jointed legs or limbs.
   

Spiders have 8 legs, millipedes can have...  Hundreds!

  

3)  An exoskeleton.

This is an external skeleton. Like armor, it protects the arthropods body.  When arthropods are born the exoskeleton is soft but hardens quickly and it can be shed as the creature grows.  Arthropods are invertebrates; which means that they do not have a backbone.

4)  Cold blooded

Arthropods are cold blooded -- which means, their body temperature depends on the temperature of the environment surrounding them.


They include insects, arachnids, crustaceans and myriapods. 
- Insects:
  • Insect bodies have three parts, the thorax, abdomen and head.
  • Insects have two antennae.
  • Insects have three pairs of legs.

- Arachnids:  
  • Arachnids bodies have two parts.
  • Arachnids do not have antennae. They do not have wings. 
  • Arachnids have eight legs.

- Crustaceans: 
  • They have got 4 antennae.
- Myriapods:
They have got many legs

Centipede


Invertebrate: molluscs

Molluscs are a large group of invertebrate animals. Molluscs have soft bodies, and their bodies are not divided into rings like the segmented worms called annelids . Molluscs don't have legs, though some have flexible tentacles for sensing their environment or grabbing things. Most mollusc species grow a hard shell for protection, but their shell grows in only one or two pieces. It doesn't have joints like the exoskeletons of insects and crustaceans .
There are three main groups of molluscs. 
1)Snails ( Gastropoda (gastrə pod′), ) are the most diverse group, there are tens of thousands of species. Nearly all snails grow a spiral shell that is all one piece. A few snail groups have stopped growing shells; they're called slugs 
   

2) Bivalvia  (/ˈbaɪˌvælv/ )  , the clams, oysters, and mussels . These are molluscs with two shells that they can close up tight for protection.
Herbacious Linguine and Clams     
 3)Cephalopoda (sefə lə pod′) , the squids and octopuses. They only live in salt water. They have no shells, but are larger, smarter, and faster than their relatives in the other groups. Squids and octopuses are all predators; they eat fish, crustaceans, and other mollusks.

  

jueves, 26 de noviembre de 2015

Bacteria

Find the bacteria in the pond and answer 6 questions

Groups of living things

Short description and activity

Activity: Classify

Invertebrates



Sponges are very simple animals that live permanently attached to a location in the water.

The body of this animal has thousands of pores which let water flow through it continually. Sponges obtain nourishment and oxygen from this flowing water. The flowing water also carries out waste products. 


Suck the water in, filter out the food, and send the water out. 

These invertebrates range in size from a few millimeters to 2 meters tall.




Cnidarians : they have soft bodies with tentacles to catch their prey. Some can move about ( jellyfish); others are attached to surfaces beneath the sea (coral).


Habitantes de la superficie: Las mareas rojas | Los Bloggers de Axena


Echinoderms are marine animals. They have an internal skeleton made up of plates. Many echinoderms have spines.



If you ever turn a starfish over you will see hundreds of little tubes on each arm. Those tubes attach to an object, suck in, and attach to help the creature move.


Worms have long, soft bodies. They do not have legs. Some worms are terrestrial and some are aquatic.

HOW AND WHAT DO WORMS EAT? |The Garden of Eaden


Molluscs are a large group of invertebrate animals. Molluscs have soft bodies, and their bodies are not divided into rings like the segmented worms called annelids . Molluscs don't have legs, though some have flexible tentacles for sensing their environment or grabbing things. Most mollusc species grow a hard shell for protection, but their shell grows in only one or two pieces. It doesn't have joints like the exoskeletons of insects and crustaceans .
There are three main groups of molluscs. 
1)Snails ( Gastropoda (gastrə pod′), ) are the most diverse group, there are tens of thousands of species. Nearly all snails grow a spiral shell that is all one piece. A few snail groups have stopped growing shells; they're called slugs 
   

2) Bivalvia  (/ˈbaɪˌvælv/ )  , the clams, oysters, and mussels . These are molluscs with two shells that they can close up tight for protection.
Herbacious Linguine and Clams     
 3)Cephalopoda (sefə lə pod′), the squids and octopuses. They only live in salt water. They have no shells, but are larger, smarter, and faster than their relatives in the other groups. Squids and octopuses are all predators; they eat fish, crustaceans, and other mollusks.


  


Arthropods:

The easiest way to distinguish an arthropod from any other animal is to see if they have:

1) A segmented body.

This means that they will have a body made up of more than one part.  Spiders have two segments and flies have three segments.

Two Segments


2) Many jointed legs or limbs.
   

Spiders have 8 legs, millipedes can have...  Hundreds!

   

3)  An exoskeleton.

This is an external skeleton. Like armor, it protects the arthropods body.  When arthropods are born the exoskeleton is soft but hardens quickly and it can be shed as the creature grows.  Arthropods are invertebrates; which means that they do not have a backbone.

4)  Cold blooded

Arthropods are cold blooded -- which means, their body temperature depends on the temperature of the environment surrounding them.






Invertebrates: Echinoderms.

Echinoderms are marine animals. They have an internal skeleton made up of plates. Many echinoderms have spines.





If you ever turn a starfish over you will see hundreds of little tubes on each arm. Those tubes attach to an object, suck in, and attach to help the creature move.







Invertebrates: Worms

Worms have long, soft bodies. They do not have legs. Some worms are terrestrial and some are aquatic.


HOW AND WHAT DO WORMS EAT? |The Garden of Eaden

Invertebrates: Cnidarians

Cnidarians : they have soft bodies with tentacles to catch their prey. Some can move about ( jellyfish); others are attached to surfaces beneath the sea (coral).




Habitantes de la superficie: Las mareas rojas | Los Bloggers de Axena    



Mammals

Mammals

martes, 24 de noviembre de 2015

Invertebrates: Sponges


  


Sponges are very simple animals that live permanently attached to a location in the water.

The body of this animal has thousands of pores which let water flow through it continually. Sponges obtain nourishment and oxygen from this flowing water. The flowing water also carries out waste products. 


Suck the water in, filter out the food, and send the water out. 


These invertebrates range in size from a few millimeters to 2 meters tall.