ag-wl-3. activity choose 3 species from the next slide research the habitat and potential food...

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HABITAT REQUIREMENTS AG-WL-3

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HABITAT REQUIREMENTS

AG-WL-3

Activity

Choose 3 species from the next slide Research the habitat and potential food

sources for each species Create 3 concept maps (from the design

provided), 1 for each species Make these creative and colorful! YOU WILL SHARE YOUR

INFORMATION WITH THE CLASS

Identify habitat requirements for specific species Armadillo

Barred Owl Bat Black Bear Black Racer Bobcat Bobwhite Quail Brown Thrasher Canebrake Rattlesnake Chipmunk Cooper’s Hawk Copperhead Snake Coral Snake Corn Snake Coyote Crow Eastern Bluebird Eastern Cottontail Rabbit Eastern Diamondback

Rattlesnake Eastern Hognose Snake Eastern Indigo Snake Eastern Mockingbird Feral Hog Field Mouse Fox Squirrel Garter Snake Golden Eagle Gopher Tortoise Great Horned Owl Grey Fox Gray Squirrel Kestrel King Snake Mole Mountain Lion Mourning Dove Opossum

Porcupine Pygmy Rattlesnake Raccoon Red Fox Red-cockaded

Woodpecker Redtail Hawk Ruby Throated

Hummingbird Ruffed Grouse Screech Owl Short-Tailed Shrew Striped Skunk Turkey Vulture Weasel Whitetail Deer Wild Turkey Woodcock

Taxonomy

Taxonomy is the orderly classification of plants and animals according to their presumed natural relationship

Plant taxonomy involves four interrelated fields: Botany

Systematic pursuit of specific facts and knowledge about plants

Taxonomic SystemBased on facts that are found, using

knowledge to set up classifications and arrangements of plant groups and concepts of evolutionary sequence of characteristics

Plant taxonomy involves four interrelated fields: Nomenclature

Uniform method of naming plants based on international rules that botanists have agreed on in order to promote a reasonably stable system○ Only one name for each plant

DocumentationIncludes illustration, photo, and preservation

of actual plant specimens○ In museums and herbariums

Plants are the basis of the food chain for all living things;

therefore animals depend on plants for survival

How are wildlife plants used as food by wildlife? Plants are eaten by various animals and

insects

Plants are at the bottom of the food chain and provide the greatest amount of food material

How are wildlife plants used as food by wildlife? Parts generally eaten by species are

stems, leaves, fruit, seed, buds, flowers, and roots

Like humans, animals have preferences in the following order:Preferred food: high nutritiousStaple food: maintain body weightEmergency food: will not maintain vitalityStuffer food: provide bulky, have almost no

nutrient value Quality and quantity of available food

determines the diet selection of wildlife

How are wildlife plants used as food by wildlife?

How are wildlife plants used for cover by wildlife?

Cover is the protective part of an animal’s environment

Plants provide cover and allow certain animals to blend into the scenery so that they are camouflaged

Assist in travel, breeding, nesting, sleeping, feeding, and hiding

Cover requirement are often quite different for varying species

What other benefits do plants have?

Help stabilize or prevent soil erosion

Provide organic matter to soil layer

Clean the environment by removing harmful pollutants from the air and water

Plants have values as medicines, food, aesthetics, and drinks – economical value

What are various types of plant species?

Native SpeciesPart of the natural environment

Introduced SpeciesNon-native plant speciesMay be beneficial or harmful

What are various types of plant species?

Invader SpeciesOpportunistic plantsOften appear when animals exceed carrying

capacity

Cultivated SpeciesMonoculture cropsOften used for food plotsExamples: corn, millet, oat, wheat

How are plants classified? Modern Classification of Plants

Criteria○ Plants are grouped according to many

different criteria, either formally or informally○ Examples provided on the next slides related

to ornamental plants, but can be applied to agriculture and botanical specimens.

○ The last three categories provide the basis for the formal classification of plants by botanists

ClimaticTemperate zone plants such as stone fruits

vs. tropical zone plants such as the Ficus houseplant

SeasonWinter annual weeds vs. summer annual

weeds

How are plants classified?

TemperatureWarm season crops such as zinnias and

petunias vs. cool season crops such as primroses and snapdragons

Life CycleAnnuals such as sweet alyssums and

pansies vs. perennial such as gazanias or roses

How are plants classified?

Growth HabitPlants that grow tall such as trees and

shrubs vs. plants that remain low to the ground such as ground covers and turf grasses

UsePlants used for street trees such as

flowering plum and London plane vs. plant used for hedges such as privets and boxwoods

How are plants classified?

MorphologyPlants with a particular form, structure, or

development such as four-petal poppies vs. five-petal roses

PhysiologyPlants with particular functions and activities

such as evergreen fir trees vs. deciduous larch trees

How are plants classified?

EvolutionPlants with advanced characteristics such

as flowering plants vs. those with more primitive systems such as ferns, which reproduce by spores

How are plants classified?

Activity

Choose 3 species from the next slide Research the duration, size, fruit type,

distribution, and benefit Create 3 concept maps (from the design

provided), 1 for each species Make these creative and colorful! YOU WILL SHARE YOUR

INFORMATION WITH THE CLASS

Click icon to add pictureDuration

(Season)

Size

(How large it grows)

Fruit Type

(Description)

Distribution

(Where it grows)

Benefit

(What do we get from this plant)

Photo of Species

American Beautyberry American Holly Austrian Winter Pea Autumn Olive

Bahiagrass Beggarweed Black Cherry Black Locust Blackberry Blackgum Blueberries Broomsedge Browntop Millet Buckeye Butterfly Pea Chestnut Oak Chinaberry Chinese Privet Chufa Clover Corn Cowpeas Dove Proso Eastern Redbud Flowering Crabapple Flowering Dogwood Forage Chicory

Gallberry Gopher Apple Grain Sorghum Greenbrier Hawthorn Honeylocust Japanese Honeysuckle Kudzu Lespedeza Live Oak Longleaf Pine Milk Pea Mockernut Hickory Morningglory Mulberry Northern Red Oak Oats Partridge Pea Pawpaw Peanuts Pecan Persimmon Pignut Hickory Pigweed Plum Pokeweed Post Oak

Ragweed Red Maple Ryegrass Sassafras Sawtooth Oak Serviceberry Slash Pine Sourwood Southern Magnolia Southern Red Oak Soybeans Sparkleberry Strawberry Bush Sumac Sweetgum Turkey Oak Turnips Vetch Virginia Creeper Water Oak Waxmyrtle Wheat White Oak White Titi Wild Grape Yaupon Yellow-Poplar

Identify plant materials that serve as food and/or cover for wildlife

Review Identify habitat requirements for 6 specific species

used in the lesson. Define Taxonomy. What is Nomenclature? What is botany? How is wildlife plants used as food by wildlife? How is wildlife plants used for cover by wildlife? What other benefits do plants have? What are various types of plant species? How can plants be classified?