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61. Producer - Organism that makes its own food from sunlight (e.g.
61. Producer - Organism that makes its own food from sunlight (e.g.

... 61. Producer - ...
Environment and Microbes Finding food
Environment and Microbes Finding food

... If you cannot get a disease you are said to be ‘immune’ to it. imm-you’n-eyes-ay- Making people immune to diseases. shun When a microbe gets into your body you are ‘infected’ by it. A drug that helps the body to ease the symptoms of a disease or cure the disease. Bacteria that are not affected by an ...
Name: Date Human Body Project Success Criteria I will be
Name: Date Human Body Project Success Criteria I will be

... - identify interrelationships between body systems (e.g., the respiratory system provides oxygen and removes carbon dioxide for the circulatory system) - describe the basic structure and function of major organs in the respiratory, circulatory, and digestive systems (e.g., we have two lungs; each on ...
DRILLING #3 Subject : Science Name : Chapter : Diversity of Living
DRILLING #3 Subject : Science Name : Chapter : Diversity of Living

... 41. Study the following figures below. Animals which are classified into invertebrates are…. a. 1 and 2 b. 2 and 3 c. 3 and 4 d. 1 and 4 42. Birds are animal that classified as a homoeothermic. This is mean to…. a. The body temperature is capable of maintaining independently from their environment ...
Memory: An organism`s aty bilito stoer retain and recall information
Memory: An organism`s aty bilito stoer retain and recall information

... Interactions between species drive evolution and underlie many aspects of our world that we take for granted. Almost all plants and animals rely on other organisms to grow and survive: from fungal associations in the roots of land plants, to nutritional microbes living in animal guts, to bacteria th ...
Populations and Limiting Factors
Populations and Limiting Factors

... Populations and Limiting Factors SNC1D ...
THREE DOMAINS NOTES
THREE DOMAINS NOTES

... 1) organisms that capture free energy from small inorganic molecules (such as sulfur or methane) present in their environment (this process can occur in the absence of oxygen) 2) includes certain groups of bacteria F. Metabolism = the chemical processes that occur within a living organism in order t ...
Transportation Systems in Animals
Transportation Systems in Animals

... Planet Earth is home to at least how many species of animals? ...
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Ch 1 Organization - Miss Gleason`s Science

... Levels of organization Subatomic part(e−,p⁺,nⁿ)atomsmoleculesmacromolecules Cells- basic unit of structure + function Tissues- cells organized into layers/masses w/ specific funct. Organs- groups of tissue - complex structures w/ specialized function Organ system- groups of organs that function ...
Ecology – Study Guide #1 – Vocabulary
Ecology – Study Guide #1 – Vocabulary

... Ecology = the scientific study of how living things interact with each other and their environment Ecologist = scientist who studies relationships between organisms and environments Ecosystem = all the living (biotic) and nonliving (abiotic) things that interact in a particular environment; an ecosy ...
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What is an inference

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CH 32 Foldable Mammals Internal content

... Because of its high metabolic rate, a mammal has to eat 10 times as much food as a reptile of the same size to maintain homeostasis. All mammals, even those living in water, use lungs to breath. The mammalian circulatory system is divided into two completely separate loops with a 4-chambered heart. ...
Levels of Structural Organization within the Human Body
Levels of Structural Organization within the Human Body

... inside (as lining and/or covering of internal organs) and outside (as layer of skin) – Connective tissue—connects all parts of the body and provides support (for example tendons, ligaments, cartilage—blood, bone, and fat are also connective) ...
Animals are the most physically diverse kingdom of
Animals are the most physically diverse kingdom of

... The invertebrates—animals that have exoskeletons and jointed legs—may be the majority of all multicellular species. The vertebrates—animals with a spinal column, or backbone—are another large group of animals. Most members of this kingdom reproduce sexually, are motile, or capable of locomotion, and ...
Unit 8 -Ecology Populations, Communities, Ecosystems, and Biomes
Unit 8 -Ecology Populations, Communities, Ecosystems, and Biomes

... Remember: Because of ___________ ____________ every organism has a variety of __________________ that are suited to it’s specific living conditions. The role of an organism in it’s habitat is called its _________________. (what it eats, how it gets the food, what eats it, how and when it reproduces, ...
Ecosystems Vocabulary - Brandywine School District
Ecosystems Vocabulary - Brandywine School District

... Abiotic: Nonliving things or factors that can affect living organisms – temperature, rain, oceans…  Biotic: Living organisms or factors – plants, animals ...
Zoology Study Guide Chapter 33 Comparing Chordates
Zoology Study Guide Chapter 33 Comparing Chordates

... 2. Pikaia was an early ________________. 3. A flexible, supporting structure found only in chordates is the ________________. 4. The backbone is a characteristic of all ________________. 5. Convergent evolution is the process that produces closely related species that are similar in ________________ ...
Blank Jeopardy
Blank Jeopardy

... D. where vegetation was sparse, longnecked tortoises were favored because they could reach higher to get their food. E. short-necked tortoises had resulted because of spontaneous generation. ...
File
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... Resource partitioning – the sharing of resources among organisms that would typical occupy the same niche but instead have willingly partitioned themselves into smaller niches ...
Commensalism
Commensalism

... • a contest between individuals, groups, nations, animals, etc. for territory, a niche, or a location of resources. ...
sxES_G6_RNG_ch10-B_179-188.fm
sxES_G6_RNG_ch10-B_179-188.fm

... • Natural selection is the way that characteristics become common in a species. Individual organisms with helpful characteristics survive. These organisms reproduce. Their offspring inherit the helpful characteristics. • Natural selection results in adaptations. An adaptation is a behavior or physic ...
Zoology Study Guide CH 33 Comparing Chordates
Zoology Study Guide CH 33 Comparing Chordates

... The resemblance of the flying squirrel of North America-a placental mammal…to the sugar glider of Australia- a marsupial…(both animals are nocturnal, live in trees, and can glide through the air using a flap of skin that stretches between the legs on each side of the body)…is an example of _________ ...
unit 1 notes
unit 1 notes

... mouth, teeth, tongue, interior of digestive organs, anus ___________________________Cavity: part of the passages of the respiratory system ___________________________Cavity: houses the eyes ...
General Characteristics
General Characteristics

... way?are there? live Do they in same look environment? alike? Do you know how many types of species Do they have backbone? ...
What`s your job?
What`s your job?

... predator) kills and eats another (called prey) * what is an example of a predator/prey relationship? ...
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Allometry

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