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Published byLisa Nelson Modified over 8 years ago
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Take II
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3 Domains Highest level of organization Bacteria: prokaryotes Archaea: Live in extreme environments Eukarya: Protists, fungi, animals & plants
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Bacteria
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Archaea
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Eukarya Plantae Protista Fungi animalia
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Cnidarians Animals that use stinging cells to capture food and defend themselves Sponges Anemones Sea jellies
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Flatworms Flatworms: tapeworms & planarians; These have a long, flat body Roundworms: nematodes: These have a long, round body Annelida: earthworm
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Porifera Sponges: invertebrates with no body symmetry and no tissues and organs Sponges
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Arachnids Arthropods with 2 body sections, 4 pairs of legs, and no antennae Examples: spiders, mites, scorpions and ticks
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Crustaceans An arthropod with 2 or 3 body sections, 5 pairs on legs and 2 pairs of antennae Crabs & lobsters are examples
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Molluscs Organisms with a soft body and a shell. Represented by snails and slugs
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Bi-valves Mollusks with two shells Clams, oysters and mussels
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Insects Arthropods with an external skeleton, segmented body and jointed attachments called appendages Cicada Butterfly grasshopper
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Cephalopods An ocean dwelling mollusk that has adapted to form tentacles around its mouth. Squid, octopus and nautilus
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Amphibians, fishes, birds, reptiles, marsupials, monotremes, and placental mammals
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Animals that start their lives in water and then move onto land. Frogs, salamanders
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Animals that are designed to conserve water from their skin, kidneys and eggs. Snakes Turtles Lizards Alligators and crocodiles
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An endothermic vertebrate that has feathers and a 4- chambered heart. This animal also lays eggs. Eagle Duck Cardinal
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There are 3 classes: Placental mammals: connect to their mothers via a placenta (humans, giraffes, bears) Monotremes: mammals that lay eggs (Platypus and 2 spiny anteaters) Marsupials: infant develops in a pouch (koala bear, kangaroos, opossums)
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These are animals that obtain oxygen through their gills and live in water. Jawless fish have no jaws or scales: eels, lamprey, catfish Cartilaginous fish have jaws, scales and a skeleton made of cartilage; sharks, skates & rays Bony fish have jaws, scales a pocket on each side of the head (for holding the gills) and a skeleton of hard bones. This includes trout.
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For the Re-take quiz Friday: You must know: What kind of animals are found in which class & What are the characteristics of animals in each class Hint: Look in your notes-you just wrote it down!
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