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Phylum Brachiopoda (Lamp Shells)
Phylum Brachiopoda (Lamp Shells)

... most live specimens are dull yellow or gray a few are orange or red ...
(a) Kingdom - Roslyn School
(a) Kingdom - Roslyn School

...  Include diatoms – single celled organisms with intricate silica cells  Include dinoflagellates with flagella  Include brown and red algae  Algae can reproduce sexually and asexually  Includes giant kelp that is multicellular (may be grouped as a plant also) ...
Kingdom Animalia - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca
Kingdom Animalia - hrsbstaff.ednet.ns.ca

... to a group of animals known as "arthropods". Arthropods include animals such as centipedes, crabs, insects, and spiders. This means that the majority of animals come from a group of critters that give most folks the creeps! So, what exactly is an "animal"? With so many different kinds of animals, it ...
SCIENCE LABORATORY 4th. Grade Teacher Raymundo Delgado
SCIENCE LABORATORY 4th. Grade Teacher Raymundo Delgado

... food. Plants are able to make their own food by photosynthesis. They use sunlight to turn simple molecules like carbon dioxide and water into more complex carbohydrate molecules. Animals are unable to make their own food so rely on other plants and other animals for their nutrition. Animals take in ...
Think Like a Scientist
Think Like a Scientist

... For over 3,000 years, scientists have looked for traits that would relate living things to one another. From about 350 B.C. to the mid-1900s, most scientists were content to classify organisms into just two groups-plants and animals. But as science has advanced over the years, so have ideas about cl ...
Unit 5, Module 14 Animals
Unit 5, Module 14 Animals

... through moist skin and enter the bloodstream. Other invertebrate animals such as insects may have specialized structures in certain body segments to take in oxygen. Examples include tiny pores called spiracles in insects. ...
Cells - Eolaíocht
Cells - Eolaíocht

... called nutrients A food's energy value is how much energy that can be obtained from the food. A balanced diet consists of the correct amounts of each type of food . The main nutrients are: Carbohydrates (sugars) are found in sugar rich foods, e.g. honey, sweets, and jam. They provide energy and fibr ...
animals classification
animals classification

... Animals are divided into two groups according to their body symmetry 1) Radial symmetry has one main axis around which its body parts are arranged. (Simple sponges, sea anemones, Cnideria have radial symmetry). These animals move slowly or not at all. ...
Activity 1 Adaptations
Activity 1 Adaptations

... water sources beneath the soil. Others develop shallow roots that extend horizontally.This maximizes water absorption at the surface. Many desert plants have small and narrow leaves.This decreases the heating from the Sun. Even though plants are not able to move, they are still able to disperse. The ...
Introduction to Biology
Introduction to Biology

... groups of two or more tissues working together to perform a specific function Human body has 11 organ systems - circulatory, digestive, endocrine, excretory (urinary), immune (lymphatic), integumentary, muscular, nervous, reproductive, respiratory & skeletal ...
5M Science Handbook
5M Science Handbook

... It strengthens the muscles, including the heart It develops the lungs It helps body coordination develop (so you can catch and throw) It uses up food for energy and can prevent the body getting fat It can help you sleep at night time ...
How is it different from traditional agricultural breeding and genetic
How is it different from traditional agricultural breeding and genetic

... Synthetic biology uses new techniques combining biology and engineering to make new or modified living things and materials. Throughout history, humans have strived to create more desirable products such as food that is easier to grow and tastes better. Synthetic biology builds on the science of agri ...
Topic 5.3 Classification Invertebrates & Vertebrates
Topic 5.3 Classification Invertebrates & Vertebrates

... This group includes only three species, the platypus and two species of spiny anteater (echidnas), and are found only in Australia and New Guinea Platypuses forage for food in the water and eat small vertebrate and invertebrate animals  Echidnas are terrestrial and eat insects and worms they dig ou ...
Biology Review
Biology Review

... 52. Sample Blood Type (Multiple Allele/ co-dominant) Question: Mr. Jones has blood type A and Mrs. Jones has blood type AB. What is the probability that they will have a child with blood type A if both of Mr. Jones’s ...
carson and gavy doc
carson and gavy doc

... Some organisms have to consume protein in order to get nitrogen, but plants are able to take in many different forms of the element, and do not need other sources of protein. They use their chloroplasts to perform this complicated feat. Plants require significant amounts of water, which is necessar ...
Sexual Reproduction
Sexual Reproduction

... Tissues and Organs •Digestion Simple animals have a gastrovascular cavity with only one opening, while more-complex animals have a one-way gut. •Respiration Simple animals exchange gases directly through their skin. More complex aquatic animals use gills, while terrestrial animals use a variety of ...
Slide 1 - mazarelloscience.com
Slide 1 - mazarelloscience.com

... Case Two - Select the correct answer and explain ...
Diversity Notes
Diversity Notes

... 3. Anterior – front / head of the organism. 4. Posterior – tail / hind end of the organism. B. Symmetry – balanced arrangement of body parts around a point or a line. 1. Bilateral symmetry – each side is a mirror image of the other. a) Ex: humans, fish, birds, reptiles ...
9 grade biology 1 Qt Trail Talking Points Evolutionary History/History
9 grade biology 1 Qt Trail Talking Points Evolutionary History/History

... They most likely used hydrogen or hydrogen sulfide as sources of electrons, rather than water.[8] Cyanobacteria appeared later, around 3,000 million years ago, and drastically changed the Earth when they began to oxygenate the atmosphere, beginning about 2,400 million years ago.[9] This new atmosphe ...
Document
Document

... C. internal fertilization and external development in water. D. internal fertilization and external development in leathery-shelled ...
Animal Systems I
Animal Systems I

... ▶ Detritivores feed on detritus, or decaying bits of plant and animal material. Detritivores often obtain extra nutrients from the bacteria, algae, and other microorganisms that grow on and around the detritus. ▶ Carnivores eat other animals. ▶ Herbivores eat plants or parts of plants in terrestrial ...
science vocabulary for 5th grade
science vocabulary for 5th grade

... Heart-- Muscular organ the size of a fist that beats about 70 to 90 times a minute, pumping blood through the blood vessels. Interdependence-- the dependence of every form of life on other living things and on the natural resources in its environment, such as air, soil, and water Intestines-- Small- ...
Biology 1 (Year 10)
Biology 1 (Year 10)

... • Some plants start dying because there is increased competition for light. • Decomposing bacteria decompose (rot) the dead plants. • The number of decomposing bacteria increases. • The decomposing bacteria use up the oxygen in the water for respiration. • There is less oxygen in the water. • Animal ...
Development and Growth
Development and Growth

... • An egg hatches into a nymph which usually looks like an adult without wings. • As the nymph grows it may shed it’s exoskeleton several times. ...
Amphibians and Mammals
Amphibians and Mammals

... body of the tadpole changes into a frog body. This dramatic physical change in which a frog develops is called metamorphosis. ...
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