Date post: | 18-May-2015 |
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Molly Carmody & Taylor Marcel
Moss: Non-vascular plants.
Liverwort: Has a ribbon likeform.
Hornworts: Non-vascular withhorn like shape.
Firmosses: Oldest vascular Classification and reproduce by shedding spores.
Foxtails: Segmented, hollow stems.
Field Horsetail: Seedless vascular plants.
Palm Tree: Has a stout trunk with hard green leaves at the top.
Maidenhair Tree: Resembles a conifer.
Gnetum: Have vessels that transfer water throughout the plant.
Pine Trees: Grow faster than other plants and the leaves are able toSurvive extreme weather conditions.
Fungi: Unicellular and contain unreleasedspores.
Sporangium: Forms sphericalspores during reproduction.
Morel Mushroom: Does not have a sexual structure.
Mushrooms: Reproduce sexuallywith club-shaped spores.
Sea Sponge: They don’t use their mouths to eat but rather tiny holes on the outside to suck the water in.
Sea Nettle: Found in aquatic habitats. Body consists of mesoglea.
Freshwater Jellyfish: Include ahydroid stage in their lives.
“True” Jellyfish: It has a cup shape to its body.
Sea Anenome: Do not have a medusa stage but reproduce by releasing spermand eggs that form a planula.
Comb Jelly: Use the groups of “combs”for swimming.
Flatworms: Have no body cavity and no respiratory system
Bedford Flatworm: Lives in aquatic areas and has leaf-like shape.
Fluke: Flattened, oval like shape withmouth at the front end of the body.
Tapeworm: Lives in the digestivetract of an animal; parasitic flatworm.
Philodina: Microscopic aquaticCreatures, body is spherical or Cylindrical.
Nematode: Round worm with adigestive system.
Ribbon worm: Has a very slim bodyand feeds on dead animals.
Slug: Invertebrate and has a significant cavity for breathing.
Chiton: has a dorsal shell with shellplates or valves.
Snail: In Latin, Gastropoda meansstomach-foot. Snails and slugs bothuse their “stomachs” to move around.
Clam: The shell has two valvesand two hinged shells.
Octopus: Has a bilateral symmetricalbody, a prominent head and tentacles.
Consists of all ringed worms includingearthworms, flatworms and nematodes.
Sandworm: Marine worm with a body split into segments with bristles.
Leech: Flat and parasitic, usessuckers to get blood from prey.
Earth Worm: Terrestrial worms with“bristles” on the outside of the body.
Invertebrate animals with an exoskeleton, a segmented body and jointed appendages including spiders, crabs and all insects.
Spider: Joint-legged invertebrate animalwith eight legs.
Millipedes: Has two pairs of legs per segment.
Centipedes: Has one pair of legsper body segment
Lobster: Has an exoskeleton thatit molts to grow and has two-parted limbs.
Pill Bug: Small crustaceans with7 pairs of similar legs.
Plankton: Found in any water habitat andare very small crustaceans.
Crab: Has ten legs.
Praying Mantis: Three segment body with an exoskeleton, six legs,compound eyes and two antennae.
Head Lice: Blood feeding and causeskin irritations.
Ladybug: Has wings that are protectedby a “shield.”
Earwig: Has a pair of forceps pincers on their abdomen and has wings folded under other wings.
Mosquito: Has one pair of wings.
Aphid: Has a specific mouth with a beak-type to use to suck liquids, usually sap.
Bumble Bee: Has a set ofheavy wings.
Termites: Have same size and shapeof the wings.
Butterfly: Has scales coveringthe body and wings and undergo completemetamorphosis.
Dragonfly: Has teeth on theirmandibles.
Cricket: Have incomplete metamorphosis and also make sound by rubbing legs together.
Fleas: Wingless and has a tube or in order to suck blood from host.
Caddisfly: Moth-like with two pairs ofhairy wings
Consists of species such as starfish, sea urchins and sea cucumbers because they are marine animals found at the ocean’s depths.
Starfish: Has a star shaped body – A central disc with 5 arms coming from the disc.
Brittle Star: Has 5 long, slender whiplike arms for moving
Sand Dollar: Skeleton is made of tight and interlocking plates
Feather Stars: Have a mouth at the top surface that is surrounded by arms.
Sea Cucumber: Has leathery skin and an elongated body. Lives at the bottomof the ocean.
Human: Has a dorsal nerve cord, cartilage running under the cord and a post-anal tail at some point in the life.
Lamprey: Has no jaw.
Hagfish: Has a skull but no spine, alongwith no jaw.
Cephalaspis: Has no jaw and hasa single dorsal nostril.
Hippo: Vertebrate with jaws.
Shark: Jawed fish with scales, two-chambered heart and their bodies are made of cartilage rather thanbone.
Clown Fish: Bony fish rather than cartilaginous.
Toad: Vertebrate, cold-blooded and must go through metamorphosis.
Salamander: Has a long, well-developed tail.
Frog: Amphibian with no tail.
Caecilian: Live underground, lack limbs and look like worms.
Bearded Dragon: Breathe air, lay shelled eggs and have scales.
Green Sea Turtle: The only speciesfound in Chelonia because of its fatbeneath its upper shell.
Snakes: Has scaly skin that actas a shield.
Crocodile: Elongated snout, strong jaw and tail. They are adapted wellto living in aquatic habitats.
Robin: Feathered, winged, Endothermic, egg-laying,vertebrate animals.
Cat: Breathes air, vertebrate, has hair and mammary glands.
Platypus: Mammal that layseggs.
Koala: Gives birth to under-developed young.
Sheep: Even toed, vertebrate, hoofed animals.
Dog: Meat and flesh eatinganimal.
Dolphin: Best adapted to aquaticlife, has flippers and tail (flukes),contains almost no hair and has blubber. Basically meaning “largesea animal.”
Bat: Forelimbs are webbed and are seen as wings, only mammals capable of flight.
Anteater: Vertebrate joints have extra articulations.
Hedgehog: Eats mostly or only insects.
Rabbit: Resemble rodents, have a“hare form.”
Zebra: Odd-toed, vertebrate animals.
Monkey: Lives in trees and bushesand have characteristics such as 5 digits, 3 kinds of teeth and basicallywhat a human has as they are alsoprimates.
Elephant: Hoofed animal with trunk and tusks.
Squirrel: Has growing incisors inthe jaws that are kept short when they are used for gnawing.
Manatee: Completely aquatic, herbivorous animals.