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Inherited Trait / Instinct
Inherited Trait / Instinct

... Chimpanzees learn to use twigs to dig for termites. Dolphins and whales are trained to do tricks at Sea World. Dogs are taught to sit and roll over. ...
Chapters 25 & 26 Notes
Chapters 25 & 26 Notes

... into free swimming larvae- They become attached to a rock (etc.) when they become adults 11. Organisms that don’t move from place to place are known as sessile organisms Animals must digest food ...
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1.3 Organisms change in form and behavior as part of their life

... hatched from eggs (for example, chickens, sea turtles or crocodiles). 3. Animals change throughout their lives. Many animals begin life as smaller, less capable forms of the adult. As they develop, they grow larger and become more independent (for example, humans or robins). 4. Some animals change d ...
Gymnázium, Brno, Slovanské nám. 7, WORKBOOK
Gymnázium, Brno, Slovanské nám. 7, WORKBOOK

... where digestion take place  gastrula – two-cell-layer sac with an opening at one end that forms from the blastula during embryonic development  gemmules – in sponges, specialized structures that can survive difficult environmental conditions, such as frost or drought, and contain archeocytes surro ...
Animal Adaptations to the Desert - Reptiles
Animal Adaptations to the Desert - Reptiles

... 3) Writing/drawing materials BACKGROUND Many animals, including mammals, birds, reptiles, fish, insects and other invertebrates, have adapted to the stresses of the Sonoran Desert. Desert adaptations can be manifested in behavior, size, shape, or physiology. The highest priorities for any desert dwe ...
Adaptations and interactions between organisms
Adaptations and interactions between organisms

... How do ectotherms adapt? • Most marine fish and invertebrates, however, live in water that stays the same temperature. • When the weather is warm, they become active. They slow down when the temperature drops. – To warm up, reptiles find sunny places, and stretch out for maximum exposure. If it get ...
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 7

... ALONG A CENTER LINE  Two types of symmetry ...
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CH 29 Review Answer Key

... 2. Having a complete digestive track allows animals to more efficiently process or absorb nutrients from food. The flatworms (phylum Platyhelminthes) do not have a tube within a tube body plan so food as to go in, get processed and then out the same opening. This obviously decreases the amount of ti ...
Animals intro
Animals intro

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[edit] Origin and fossil record
[edit] Origin and fossil record

... choanoflagellates, fungi and a few small parasitic protists. The name comes from the posterior location of the flagellum in motile cells, such as most animal spermatozoa, whereas other eukaryotes tend to have anterior flagella. The first fossils that might represent animals appear in the Trezona For ...
Behavioral
Behavioral

... with due consideration of their relevance to human or animal health, the advancement of knowledge, or the good of society. • The animals selected for a procedure should be of an appropriate species and quality and the minimum number required to obtain valid results. [Alternative] methods…should be c ...
Kingdom Animalia
Kingdom Animalia

... In another group of animals, the parazoa, cells are not organized into true tissues, and organs do not develop. ...
PP – Classification
PP – Classification

... Autotrophs capture the light energy from sunlight and convert it to chemical energy they use for food. Heterotrophs must get energy by eating autotrophs or other heterotrophs.  Decomposers (aka saprobes) are heterotrophs that recycle dead organisms by breaking them down. Fungi are decomposers. ...
Animal Introduction Powerpoint
Animal Introduction Powerpoint

... is not completely lined with mesoderm. The “tube within a tube” body plan. This category is also composed of mostly worms. ...
Chapter 8
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... D. Did the animal kingdom evolve from a flagellated protist? • Most scientist agree that the animal kingdom in monophyletic; animal lineages can be traced back to a common ancestor. • Likely a a flagellated protist over 700 million years ago. • Related to a choanoflagellate, which arose about a bil ...
Study Questions 1
Study Questions 1

... List the major functions carried out by animal bodies. (NOTE: As we go through the course, you should be able to list these key functions and describe how the animal actually carries them out.) ...
Biobowl_1_students
Biobowl_1_students

... 73. Through which type of vessels does blood flow most slowly? 74. Blood is “forced” out of capillaries at their arteriole end by _______________. 75. What kind of cells line capillaries? 76. T or F – If false, correct it to make it true. Arteries are vessels which carry oxygenated blood. . 77. Card ...
Zoology Semester Exam Study Guide 1st semester 1. Which of the
Zoology Semester Exam Study Guide 1st semester 1. Which of the

... b. the living world. d. the environment 17. You propose the presence of water could accelerate the growth of bread mold. This is a(an) a. conclusion. c. experiment. b. hypothesis. d. analysis 18. A controlled experiment allows the scientist to isolate and test a. a conclusion. c. several variables b ...
5/10/2014
5/10/2014

... each segment; the oldest segments break off and leave the host via the feces. Many tapeworms produce larvae that infect the prey animal, while the adult tapeworms infect that ...
Scope
Scope

... for at least 30 days in post-arrival quarantine (PAQ). The approved premises must have work practices and adequate security to prevent the escape of live animals, or any part or product of an animal from which another animal could be produced. During PAQ the animal/s are to be monitored daily for si ...
Study Guide
Study Guide

... 1. Contrast the structure of a blastula with that of a gastrula. _________________ _______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ 2. Name the three germ layers in order, from outside to inside. _______________ _________ ...
Chapter 8
Chapter 8

... other organisms. Early animals populated seas, fresh water, and eventually the land. B. Three things we focus on: ...
Kingdom Animalia
Kingdom Animalia

... 1. Parazoa ("beside the animal") - animals that lack true tissues 2. Eumetazoa - animals with well defined tissue layers B. The Radiata-Bilateria Split The eumetazoa are divided into 2 major branches depending on the type of body symmetry (=body plan or organization) that evolved. 1. Some organisms ...
Name Class Date SECTION 32-1 Study Guide THE NATURE OF
Name Class Date SECTION 32-1 Study Guide THE NATURE OF

... 1. Contrast the structure of a blastula with that of a gastrula. _________________ _______________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________________________ 2. Name the three germ layers in order, from outside to inside. _______________ _________ ...
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Animal cognition



Animal cognition describes the mental capacities of animals and its study. It has developed out of comparative psychology, including the study of animal conditioning and learning, but has also been strongly influenced by research in ethology, behavioral ecology, and evolutionary psychology. The alternative name cognitive ethology is therefore sometimes used; much of what used to be considered under the title of animal intelligence is now thought of under this heading.Research has examined animal cognition in mammals (especially primates, cetaceans, elephants, dogs, cats, horses, livestock, raccoons and rodents), birds (including parrots, corvids and pigeons), reptiles (lizards and snakes), fish and invertebrates (including cephalopods, spiders and insects).
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