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Beep By: Tristan Gee, Haley Mccracken, and Melissa Avila.

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Presentation on theme: "Beep By: Tristan Gee, Haley Mccracken, and Melissa Avila."— Presentation transcript:

1 Beep By: Tristan Gee, Haley Mccracken, and Melissa Avila

2 How it was made The Beep was bred in a lab. It was bred between a bee and a sheep. The Beep was bred in a lab. It was bred between a bee and a sheep.

3 Multicellular or Unicellular The Beep is a multicellular because it is made up of many cells. The Beep is a multicellular because it is made up of many cells.

4 Prokaryotic or Eukaryotic The Beep is eukaryotic because the cells have a nucleus. The Beep is eukaryotic because the cells have a nucleus.

5 More about the Beep The Beep is heterotroph and eats grass and pollen. The beep is the size of a hawk. The Beep is heterotroph and eats grass and pollen. The beep is the size of a hawk.

6 Classification The domain for the Beep is eukarya because the cells of the animal have a nucleus and it is part of the animal kingdom because it’s an animal. The domain for the Beep is eukarya because the cells of the animal have a nucleus and it is part of the animal kingdom because it’s an animal.

7 Surroundings Daisies, bees, sheep, beeps, rocks, water, fish, and grass are the ecosystem surroundings. The bees and sheep are the community surroundings. Also hundreds of other Beeps are the population surroundings.

8 Reproduction The beep does sexual reproduction, because it takes two beeps to reproduce. The beep does sexual reproduction, because it takes two beeps to reproduce.

9 Why ours is best Ours is best because it creates honey and wool to help humans have food and clothes.

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