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Introduction to Animals Section 3 Section 3
Introduction to Animals Section 3 Section 3

... • Animals with bilateral symmetry have one of three basic kinds of internal body plans. The body plan may include a body cavity, or coelom. ...
Music and meaning, ambiguity and evolution
Music and meaning, ambiguity and evolution

... single truly bipedal mammal, we have brains that are much larger than would be warranted by our body size. It seems reasonable to assume that this large brain comes together with the immense cognitive flexibility that humans possess, a flexibility that enables us to manipulate our environments in ex ...
01 - cloudfront.net
01 - cloudfront.net

... 2. Invertebrates are animals without _______________. Invertebrates make up over _______________ percent of all known animal species. 3. Animals are divided into more than 30 major groups, which are called phyla. Each group of animals is defined by _______________ and _______________ characteristics ...
Ch. 17 (word) - Ltcconline.net
Ch. 17 (word) - Ltcconline.net

... 4). in most animals, a third layer forms between other 2 layers (endoderm) and becomes most other internal organs 5). many animals develop from gastrula into adults 6). some animals, like sea star, develop into 1 or more larval stages (intermediates). A larva is an immature individual that looks ver ...
Study Guide Evolution of Animals Chapters 32-35
Study Guide Evolution of Animals Chapters 32-35

... 26. Animals that possess a true coelom are known as coelomates. 27. Some triploblastic animals have a cavity formed from mesoderm and endoderm. 28. Such a cavity is a “pseudocoelom,” and animals that have one are called pseudocoelomates. 29. A pseudocoelom is a fully functional body cavity, despite ...
Mini-beasts and microhabitats
Mini-beasts and microhabitats

... other small creatures, nectar, rotting/dead plant material and much more! Can they think of a mini-beast that eats other creatures? Remind them that this is a carnivore. Ask the same question for one that eats plants and animals omnivore, and one that eats only plants, herbivore. Finally ask them if ...
Ch 17 (30 MCQ questions)
Ch 17 (30 MCQ questions)

... a) Attitudes and attributions summarize vast amounts of information from our complex social world. b) Many of the concepts and experimental methods central to the field of attitude research have been borrowed from work in cognitive psychology. c) Social cognition focuses on the perception and proces ...
animal evolution
animal evolution

... Evidence is the key word because even our most cherished ideas in science are probationary. ...
Conference Draft Paper  - Inter
Conference Draft Paper - Inter

... Duck (1985) also describes relationship development as a process and those getting to know one another seek to “match” themselves with others on the basis of a range of factors including physical appearance, attitude and nonverbal information. At the same time, individuals are attempting to reduce u ...
Chapter Assessment
Chapter Assessment

... • All animals depend either directly or indirectly on autotrophs for food. ...
anthropomorphism and morphism
anthropomorphism and morphism

... Within the field of visual literature, The Water Babies (Kingsley 1863), provides an example of one way in which morphed humans reflect concepts of ‘other’. The longstanding political, geographic, religious and social battle between the British and the Irish is referenced within this work. Kingsley ...
25.2 Animal Body Plans and Evolution
25.2 Animal Body Plans and Evolution

... Some people who are interested in animals and love to be around them own pets or volunteer at local animal shelters. Other people, however, want to devote their careers to caring for or studying animals. People who want to work with animals must decide what level of education and training they are w ...
25.2 Animal Body Plans and Evolution
25.2 Animal Body Plans and Evolution

... Some people who are interested in animals and love to be around them own pets or volunteer at local animal shelters. Other people, however, want to devote their careers to caring for or studying animals. People who want to work with animals must decide what level of education and training they are w ...
what is a mammal?
what is a mammal?

... Innate – behavior you are born with, also called INSTINCTS Learned – behavior that develops through experience ...
Pangolin - Solon City Schools
Pangolin - Solon City Schools

... Did you know there are only seven species of pangolins? This is only one of the fun facts I will tell you. A pangolin does not have scales on it’s snout, face, throat, belly or inner sides of its legs. Instead these areas are fleshy and hairy. A long tailed pangolin is the smallest species of pangol ...
exclusively marine
exclusively marine

... • Sponges are the simplest of all animals; best described as aggregations of specialized cells • Sponges do not have true tissues or organs; cells are largely independent of one another • All are sessile (non-mobile) • Porifera means “pore bearer” • NO body symmetry ...
Marine Invertebrates_7a (Porifera, Cnidaria, Ctenophora)
Marine Invertebrates_7a (Porifera, Cnidaria, Ctenophora)

... • Sponges are the simplest of all animals; best described as aggregations of specialized cells • Sponges do not have true tissues or organs; cells are largely independent of one another • All are sessile (non-mobile) • Porifera means “pore bearer” • NO body symmetry ...
Chapter 32: An Introduction to Animal Diversity
Chapter 32: An Introduction to Animal Diversity

... • Animal body plans also vary according to the organization of the animal‟s tissues • Tissues are collections of specialized cells isolated from other tissues by membranous layers (What is a tissue?) • During development, three germ layers give rise to the tissues and organs of the animal embryo ...
Document
Document

... Animals respond to their environment using: Receptor cells = sound, light, external stimuli Nerve cells => nervous system ...
Bonobo apes
Bonobo apes

... the symbols banna-berry. These apes have recently been given I pads and seem to navigate them fairly well and rapidly becoming more and more diverse in their language and learning skills. Also they have adapted some of our human English words to their vocabulary amongst themselves, although it is hi ...
Mollusks - Norwell Public Schools
Mollusks - Norwell Public Schools

... adults usually stay in one place (oysters and mussles) others like clams do move they use their foot to dig ...
2 Notes (Phylogeny II)
2 Notes (Phylogeny II)

... (Blastula folds in on itself to form a hollow core (archenteron), with a hole leading to the outside (blastopore). The inner and outer tissues become the ectoderm, endoderm, and sometimes the mesoderm.  After gastrulation, two different patterns of embryonic development separate them into either th ...
Representations and sensorimotor loops in intelligent agents
Representations and sensorimotor loops in intelligent agents

... tools that seem to be suitable only for reactive behaviours – or in general to behaviours that involve processes of physical adaptation to an environmental niche. Third, behavioural studies of various insect species suggest that the austere set of explanatory tools adopted by Brooks is insufficient ...
File
File

... o Morphological and molecular analyses published in 2009 indicate that sponges are monophyletic; other recent studies had suggested that sponges are paraphyletic. 3. Eumetazoa is a clade of animals with true tissues. o All animals except sponges and a few others belong to a clade of eumetazoans. o T ...
Communities IV Energy FLow
Communities IV Energy FLow

... 1. Relative resistance - how hard it is to move the community from its equilibrium state 2. Relative resilience - how quickly the altered system returns to its original state B. Food chain complexity and stability 1. Hypothesis #1 the more possible ways that energy can flow through a food web, the m ...
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Theory of mind in animals

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