chapter 1examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. nonvascular...

36
Chapter 1 Classifying Plants and Animals

Upload: others

Post on 09-Jun-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Chapter 1

Classifying Plants and Animals

Page 2: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Lesson 1

Page 3: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Cells

A cell is the building block of life. It is the smallest unit of

a living thing and can perform all life processes.

All living things are made of cells.

Some living things are made of one cell, most living

things are many celled.

Every part of you from your muscles to your blood is

made of billions of cells.

Cells have a certain role. Some cells help you get

energy and some cells help protect you.

Microscopes are needed to see cells.

Page 4: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

CellsPLANT CELL ANIMAL CELL

Page 5: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Cell Parts

Cells that make up all animals have many similar

parts.

All cells have a cell membrane, cytoplasm, and

a nucleus.

A nucleus is the control center for the cell. It

acts like a brain.

The cell membrane is the cell’s outer border. It

controls what moves in and out of the cell.

The cytoplasm contains all the things the cell

needs to carry out its life processes.

Page 6: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

How are plant and animal cells

different? Plant cells have a cell membrane, cytoplasm,

and a nucleus.

Plant cells have two parts that animal cells do not have.

Plants have to make their own food. Chloroplasts are parts of a plant cell that trap the Sun’s energy. Plants use this energy for food.

Plant cells also have a cell wall. The cell wall is outside of the cell membrane. It helps to support and protect the cell.

Page 7: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

CellsPLANT CELL ANIMAL CELL

Page 9: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Cells Work Together Cells are like building blocks. They build an

animal or plant.

Cells work together. Different cells do different

kinds of work.

Groups of the same type of cells form a tissue.

Groups of tissues that work together form

organs.

Groups of organs that work together form

systems.

Page 10: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Lesson 2

Page 11: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

How are living things grouped?

There are over 1 MILLION different kinds of organisms.

Scientists have to sort all living things into different groups.

They look at its cells and parts the cells have.

They think about where it lives and how it gets its food.

All organisms in the same group have common characteristics.

Page 12: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

How would you classify these

animals?

Page 13: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Kingdoms

The largest classification system is a kingdom.

Some classification systems have six kingdoms.

All animals- from ants to elephants are in the animal

kingdom.

All plants belong to another kingdom.

Scientists also see how an organism gets its food in

determining what kingdom it is in.

Turn to p. 11

Page 14: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Kingdoms

What kingdom group is many-celled organisms with tissue, organs, and systems. They do not make their own food and eat other plants and animals.

What kingdom group is one-celled with a nucleus and other cell parts. They live in water and a moist environment?

What kingdom group make their own food, have one cell, and have no separate nucleus?

Page 15: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Answers:

Animal Kingdom Protists Kingdom

Ancient Bacteria Kingdom

Page 16: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Getting More Specific

Scientists divide kingdoms into smaller groups.

They keep dividing into smaller and smaller groups.

They use the organism’s features to decide whether

the organism belongs in the same group.

Scientists use the smallest two groups to name

organisms. The first part of an organism’s scientific

name is its genus. The second part of an

organism’s scientific name is its species.

Page 17: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Genus

A genus is a group of closely related living

things. This name is the first name of the

scientific name.

Black-footed cat

Felis nigripes

House cat

Felis domesticus

Page 18: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Species

A species is a group of similar organisms that can mate and produce offspring. The species name often describes and characteristic, such as where the organism lives or its color. The species name is the second part of the scientific name.

http://player.discoveryeducation.com/index.cfm?guidAssetId=0A01370B-6FF4-400E-AD7E-879BB9EA3A69&blnFromSearch=1&productcode=US

Canis lupis

Page 19: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Lesson 3

Page 20: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

How are plants classified? One way plants are classified is by how they

transport water and nutrients.

Vascular plants have tubes that connect the

leaves, stems, and roots to transport water and

nutrients. Examples of vascular plants are

grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions.

Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems,

or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only

from one cell to the cell next to it. Water does

not travel very far or quickly. The plants are

usually small. Examples of nonvascular plants

are mosses, hornworts, and liverworts.

Page 21: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Vascular and Nonvascular

Plants

Vascular Plants Nonvascular Plants

Have tubes that carry water to the

roots, stems, and leaves

Transports water from cell to cell.

These plants don’t have roots,

stems, or regular looking leaves.

Page 22: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

How are plants classified? The second way plants are classified is how they

reproduce and make new plants.

Plants with flowers or cones reproduce from

seeds. Pine trees have seeds, but do not make

flowers. Their pine cone makes seeds. Pine trees

are called conifers.

Some plants reproduce by producing tiny cells

called spores. Spores can grow into new plants.

Examples of plants with spores are ferns and

mosses.

Page 23: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Plants with seeds and sporesSeeds Spores

A seed has many cells and has a

young plant and stored food inside.

Flowering plants and trees with

cones reproduce with seeds.

A spore has one cell. They need a

moist, shady area to grow into a

new plant. Spores look like brown

dots. Moss and ferns are examples

of plants with spores.

Page 24: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Lesson 4

Page 25: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

How are animals classified?

Scientists divide animals into

two groups: those with

backbones and animals without

backbones.

Animals with backbones are

vertebrates.

Animals without backbones

are invertebrates.

Page 27: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Invertebrates Invertebrates are animals without a

backbone. Most of the animals in the world

are invertebrates.

Some invertebrates have a soft body like

jellyfish and worms.

Arthropods are invertebrates with jointed

legs. They have a soft body covered by a

hard exoskeleton. The exoskeleton acts

like armor protecting the animal. Insects,

spiders, and crabs are examples of

arthropods.

Page 28: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

InvertebratesARTHROPODS

Other Invertebrates

Page 29: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Lesson 5

Page 30: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Adaptations

An ADAPTATION is a physical feature or

behavior that helps an animal get food,

protect itself, move, or reproduce. Every

animal needs food, water, oxygen, and

shelter to survive.

Sometimes there are not enough resources

to go around and animals with good

adaptations have a better chance of getting

the resources it needs and surviving.

Page 31: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Adaptations

Birds have many adaptations

to help them get what they

need.

They have feathers to help

them fly.

The shape of the beak helps

them get the food that they

need.

Webbed feet help ducks move

in the water.

Cactus wrens can go without

much water in the desert.

Page 32: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Adaptations

Mammals have many

adaptations to help them

survive.

Polar bears have thick coats of

fur to keep them warm. Their

sharp claws and teeth help

them eat food.

A giraffe has a long neck to

reach leaves in trees.

Humans have two eyes in front

to tell how far away things are.

Page 33: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Adaptations that protect

Some animals have

adaptations that help

them from being eaten

by predators.

Some animals can

blend in to protect

itself. They have

colors, shapes, and

patterns that can keep

them hidden from

predators.

Page 34: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Adaptations that protect Some animals have poison to

protect them.

The poison dart frog has

enough poison to kill a person.

The European green toad has

a poison glad behind each

eye.

Some animals have a different

way of moving to escape their

predators.

Birds’ wings allow them to fly

away.

Fins allow fish to swim away

from a predator.

Other animals can run at top

speed longer than their

enemies.

Page 35: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Animal Instincts Instincts are behaviors that

are inherited. Ducklings just know to follow their mother.

Migration is traveling in search of food or a place to reproduce. Most animals migrate for the winter. Canada geese migrate to Mexico to escape the cold winter. They can fly 60 miles an hour.

Hibernation is a state of inactivity that occurs in some animals when outside temperatures are cold. Animals conserve energy by sleeping. They eat a lot before and store energy for while they are hibernating.

Page 36: Chapter 1Examples of vascular plants are grass, celery, ferns, trees, and dandelions. Nonvascular plants do not have roots, stems, or leaves. They pass water and nutrients only from

Parents Teach Offspring Animals have a lot of adaptations and instincts

to survive.

Parents also teach their offspring how to

survive.

Lion cubs learn to hunt from their parents.

A herd of zebras learn to stay together and not

be by themselves.

A lion cub learns to pounce on prey by pouncing

on its mother’s tail.