Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Types of Adaptations Notes & Assignment

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Types of Adaptations Notes & Assignment"— Presentation transcript:

1 Types of Adaptations Notes & Assignment

2 Types of Adaptation The 3 types of animal adaptations are. . .
Anything that helps an organism survive in its environment is an adaptation.  It also refers to the ability of living things to adjust to different conditions within their environments.  The 3 types of animal adaptations are. . . 1. Structural= a body part or coloring that aids survival (Ex. Protective coloration (camouflage) Mimicry ) 2. Physiological= jobs of body parts controlling life processes that aids survival (Ex. Snake making venom, storage of food in a bulb) 3. Behavioral= an action that aids survival (Ex. Hibernation or Migration)

3 Animal Structural Adaptations
A structural adaptation involves some part of an animal's body. Teeth Body coverings    Movement A structural adaptation involves some part of an animal's body, such as the size or shape of the teeth, the animal's body covering, or the way the animal moves.   Teeth - since different animals eat different things, they don't all have the same kind of teeth Body coverings - Hair, scales, spines, and feathers grow from the skin.  All of these parts help animals survive in their environments.   Movement - animals find food by moving from place to place

4 Types of Structural Adaptations
CAMOUFLAGE/COLORATION: blending in with the environment for protection from predators or to help sneak up on prey. Use: Obtaining food and protection

5 Types of Structural Adaptations
MIMICRY: copying a behavior or appearance. Used for protection or obtaining food and protection.

6

7 Types of Structural Adaptations
Bent hind legs – prey run fast to escape & predators run fast to catch prey Used for: protection, locomotion

8 flippers wings Bent legs

9

10 Types of Structural Adaptations
Body Structures Predator – Eyes facing forward to find prey.

11 Physiological Definition- jobs of body parts controlling life processes that aids survival, metabolic processes (Ex. Hibernation, producing poison or toxin, resistance to antibiotics or pesticide, ecto or endothermic)

12 Physiological Adaptations
Hibernation – adaptive winter survival technique where animal becomes inactive and all body processes slow down. Examples: bears, chipmunks, squirrels, bats, frogs

13 Physiological Adaptations
Producing Toxin or poison – Examples: Snakes, frogs, spiders, scorpions

14 Physiological Adaptations
Resistance to Antibiotics or Pesticides Examples: bacteria, insects, and plants

15 Physiological Adaptations
Endo or Ectotherms– warm vs cold blooded Ectotherm Examples: Invertebrates, fish, reptiles & amphibians Endotherm Examples: Mammals and birds

16 Behavioral Adaptations
Definition: Ways an organism act to help them survive in their environment. EX: Migration, warning calls, mating dances, hunting in packs.

17 Behavioral Adaptations
Migration - seasonal or periodic movement of animals in response to changes in climate or food availability, or to ensure reproduction. Migration most commonly involves movement from one area to another and then back again. Examples: geese, whales, salmon, Monarch butterflies

18 Behavioral Adaptations
2. Living in a Group – more eyes in a group to watch out for prey or predator, protection Examples: fish, wildebeest, walruses, lions

19 Behavioral Adaptations
3. Tool Use - any object manipulated by an animal in order to perform a specific task. (monkeys, otters, birds) 4. Playing Dead - By pretending that they are dead, some animals escape bodily harm. (snakes, possums)

20 Behavioral Adaptations
5. Calling – communication between animals 6. Threatening Gestures – scares off potential predators

21 Plant Adaptations

22 PLANT ADAPTATIONS Structural Plant Adaptations
1. Structures - adaptations on the body: holdfasts, empty space for water storage, catch animals for minerals, tallness, heartiness, thorns, flexibility, floatation devices 2. Seeds – all seeds have adaptation to better enable it to survive long enough to plant itself and grow.

23 Plant Adaptations 3. Protection – thorns, bad taste, poison, coloration, spikes 4. Obtaining Food – All plants do photosynthesis and make glucose in their leaves. The larger the leaves the more Sun they can capture.

24 PLANT STRUCTURE ADAPTATIONS
Below are pictures of plants. Pick out their adaptations.

25 SEEDS Seeds are the baby plants!!! They are formed when the pollen fertilizes the egg. Fruit protects the seed.

26 SEED ADAPTATIONS For plants to survive, seeds have to be dispersed away from the parent plant.

27 Types of seed dispersal:

28 SEED DISPERSAL Look at the seeds below and name how they
are dispersed.

29 Plant REPRODUCTION (Pollination)
Fertilization – occurs when the pollen from the anther is carried to the pistil by animals. The sperm(pollen) falls down the style to the egg and fertilizes the egg.

30 Plant REPRODUCTION (Pollination)
Flowers and nectar are to attract specific Pollinators.

31 PLANT BEHAVIORS Plants not only have structural adaptations; they have behaviors that help them to survive in their environment. Tropism: movement of a plant toward or away from a stimulus. Toward is called positive, away is called negative.

32 Example 1-Phototropism
When the plant senses light and the shoots (stems & leaves) grow toward the light source. This is a positive tropism because the plant is growing toward the stimulus.

33 Example 2-Gravitropism
When growth of a plant changes in response to direction of gravity. Shoots (stems & leaves) have a negative Gravitropism because they grow in the opposite direction of the force of gravity. Roots mostly have positive gravi- tropism because they grow toward the force of gravity (downward).

34 Ex: gravitropism – responding to gravity
Stems grow up (negative) Roots grow down (positive)

35 PLANT BEHAVIORAL ADAPTATIONS A state of rest or inactivity. DORMANCY -
Many plants go dormant in the winter. Fall is the time of year when plants are preparing for dormancy. What other types of plants go dormant in the winter? Why do trees loose their leaves in the fall?

36 DORMANCY Seasonal Changes in Trees to survive winter. All trees lose their leaves at some point. Stop taking in water so the xylem will not freeze. Trees like pines and holly lose their leaves all through out the year. They are called evergreens. Holly Pines

37

38 Assignment Look at each picture.
Choose 6 organisms (3 plants, 3 animals) Research, list, and explain as many structural, behavioral, or physiological adaptations of the organism that enhances it’s survival.

39 Hummingbird

40 Bulbs

41 Bear

42 Hedgehog

43 Wasp

44 Tree frog

45 Lion

46 Snake

47 Bird of Paradise Flower

48 Bat

49 Hammerhead Shark

50 Blueberry Plant

51 Turtle

52 Moray Eel

53 Conifer Tree

54

55 Sundew Plant

56 Tarantula

57 Clownfish

58 Acacia Plant


Download ppt "Types of Adaptations Notes & Assignment"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google