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Chapter 4 Powerpoint File
Chapter 4 Powerpoint File

... • Competition- organisms of the same or different species use the same resources. – Water, nutrients, light, food or space ...
Ch. 33 - Ltcconline.net
Ch. 33 - Ltcconline.net

... 1. Hydrozoa - - hydras – can be freshwater, medusa and polyp form 2. Scyhphozoa – mostly medusa – the jellies 3. Cubozoans - sea wasps – cube shaped medusa 4. anthozoans – sea anemones and corals – “flower animals” – only as polyps III. Lophotrochozoans – some have lophophore, trochozoans. Some have ...
Disaster Preparedness For Steuben County Companion Animals
Disaster Preparedness For Steuben County Companion Animals

...  Before an emergency strikes, contact the hotels, motels, and pet boar ding facilities outside your immediate area to check for available lodging for all your pets in case of an emergency. Ask if “no pet” policies can be waived in an emergency and if you have notice of an impending disaster, call a ...
Life Science Chapter 13: Introduction to Animals
Life Science Chapter 13: Introduction to Animals

... - Characteristics of Sponges  All live in water, most in warm shallow salt water near the coast  Few live in freshwater  Many shapes, sizes (from size of marble to size of car) and colors  Some have radial symmetry, most asymmetrical  Sessile - live attached to one place  Live in colonies  Do ...
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer - Advanced Placement Literature
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer - Advanced Placement Literature

... 2. Tom Sawyer’s childhood adventures are predominantly a series of episodes. How does the author sustain interest and unify the story? 3. What does children’s literature reveal about the social values of the society in which it was written? of societies in which it is read? 4. Mark Twain origi ...
Scope
Scope

... surveillance the animal/s may be subjected to such tests and/or treatments as are specified by AQIS at the importer’s expense. If any animal fails a test or shows evidence of an exotic disease during PAQ, it may be detained in quarantine, exported at the importer’s expense or destroyed. Animals imp ...
BIOSC 041 Overview of Animal Diversity: Animal Body Plans
BIOSC 041 Overview of Animal Diversity: Animal Body Plans

... Animal body plans have evolved over time §  Many reflect ancient innovations – traits that have been conserved over evolutionary time §  Gastrulation is under molecular control by Hox genes §  Most animals (and only animals) have Hox genes that regulate the development of body form §  the Hox fa ...
CH 32 Animal Body Plans_small.pptx
CH 32 Animal Body Plans_small.pptx

... Points of Agreement All animals share a common ancestor (most likely a colonial flagellate similar to choanoflagellates) Sponges are basal animals Eumetazoa is a clade of animals with true tissues Most animal phyla belong to the clade Bilateria Chordates and some other phyla belong to the clade Deut ...
Ch 32 Animal Diversity
Ch 32 Animal Diversity

... The beginning of the Cenozoic era followed mass extinctions of both terrestrial and marine animals These extinctions included the large, nonflying dinosaurs and the marine reptiles Modern mammal orders and insects diversified during the Cenozoic ...
- Danville High School
- Danville High School

... • Protostomes (first mouth) are coelomates whose embryonic development shows a blastopore associated with a mouth. • Deuterostomes (second mouth) are coelomates whose embryonic development shows a blastopore associated with an anus, with a second opening forming the mouth ...
Animal Adaptations to the Desert - Reptiles
Animal Adaptations to the Desert - Reptiles

... dissipate heat faster. A large animal has a larger volume to surface body ratio than a small animal, keeping the body from absorbing heat quickly. Early morning, late evening, and night are the active times for many desert dwelling animals. There are trade-offs, however. Some animals have to be acti ...
Do Our Genes Make Socialism Impossible?
Do Our Genes Make Socialism Impossible?

... but changed from society to society, indeed might even be constantly changing. On this definition, the answer to the human nature objection would be "oh yes, human nature can change, just look at history". This was in fact the approach taken by the pioneer socialist Karl Marx. There's nothing wrong ...
4/20 & 4/21 - 7th Grade Agenda
4/20 & 4/21 - 7th Grade Agenda

... The balanced arrangement of a butterfly’s body is called ymmetry ilateral B_______ S________ • What are some characteristics of Bilateral Symmetry Animals? • Larger & More complex than radial symmetry animals • Moves more quickly • Sense organ in the front ...
behavior - ScienceToGo
behavior - ScienceToGo

... • In male stickleback fish, the stimulus for attack behavior is the red underside of an intruder • When presented with unrealistic models, as long as some red is present, the attack behavior occurs • Suggest an explanation for why this behavior evolved ...
Animal Introduction Powerpoint
Animal Introduction Powerpoint

... Dorsal - the back of the animal; the side opposite the ventral side. The vertebral column of vertebrates is on the dorsal side of the animal. Lateral - toward the side Median - toward the middle Anterior - the head end Posterior - the end opposite the head end Caudal - toward the tail Cranial - towa ...
KingdomAnimalia08
KingdomAnimalia08

... body sections, are used to distinguish them (most diverse group) show many structural similarities to annelids (common origins), but have also evolved distinctive differences: fewer body segments, exoskeleton, jointed-legs, muscle groups, developed jaws, sense organs ...
Lecture Outline
Lecture Outline

... 4. Animals reproduce sexually, and in some cases asexually, or both. 5. Most animals are motile during at least part of their life cycle. 6. Animal life cycles include a period of embryonic development; germ tissue layers (ectoderm, endoderm, and in most species, mesoderm) give rise to adult organs. ...
Chapter 32 Notes
Chapter 32 Notes

... grow and move independently of the outer body wall.  Current research suggests that true coeloms and pseudocoels have evolved many times in the course of animal evolution.  Thus, the terms coelomate and pseudocoelomate refer to grades, not clades. 4. Most animals can be categorized as having one o ...
Arthropods
Arthropods

... animal phylum more widely distributed over the earth than any other animal phylum live in virtually every habitat on earth includes 2/3rds of all known animals possibly 10 – 50 Million not yet described in terms of numbers of individuals: ...
Animals Review - OG
Animals Review - OG

... mouth; small particles swept into mouth 13. Shells- formed by secretions of the mantle 14. Shell’s inner nacreous layer – composed of calcium carbonate, can form pearls ...
The Animal Kingdom
The Animal Kingdom

...  This is the second most significant parasitic disease worldwide after Malaria  It is often called “Snail Fever” because snails serve as the intermediate host ...
Bio11 Animals Lower Invertebrates
Bio11 Animals Lower Invertebrates

... come together to form Zygotes which are diploid (2N)  Asexual reproduction is rare in animals and only in lower forms. ...
Chapter 7: Animals and Infection Control
Chapter 7: Animals and Infection Control

... Pets may enhance the experience of pupils in schools. However, some animals including exotic species such as reptiles, fish or birds that are often kept as pets can be a source of human infection. Infections that are passed from animals to humans are known as zoonoses. Some people such as pregnant w ...
BI101SQ Ch22
BI101SQ Ch22

... Blue-colored blood is found in most arthropods and mollusks. A molecule in their blood called hemocyanin transports oxygen. Hemocyanin differs from the more familiar hemoglobin because of the copper in the molecule that turns blue (http://www.mbl.edu/animals/Limulus/blood/bang.html) when exposed to ...
Level of organisation
Level of organisation

... 2. In higher animals all important sensory organs are concentrated towards anterior side as they are highly active. 3. Active animals move, run, find food, capture prey or attack enemy antriorwards. Therefore they require the sensory organs to locate the objects, enemy, food, or prey which are accum ...
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Theory of mind in animals

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