9. Can you think of adaptations that
animals we discussed have had?
• Cephalopods: what is an example of a
cephalopod?
– Modified mantle to swim in open water
– Beak from radula to crush prey
– Males modified organ to deposit sperm so females
don’t eat them
• Fish:
– body shapes adapted for habitat
– Coloration for mates, defense or
camouflage
10. Questions so far???????
• Continue to work on vocab…
• We will continue to review on Friday (when
your vocab is due!!!!)
11. Day 2 Review: Osmosis and Diffusion
• What is osmosis and diffusion?
• Hypertonic solution?
• Isotonic solution?
• Hypotonic solution?
• What happens to an animal cell when placed
in these solutions?
12.
13. Plate Tectonics
• What are the type of boundaries and ecosystems
related to each?
– Convergent (subduction)
• What ecosystems do you find here?
• What adaptations for animals?
– Divergent
• What newly discovered ecosystems here
• What adaptations for animals?
– Hot Spots
• What ecosystems are formed?
14. Reproduction
• Asexual- What process is this type?
• what is the advantage?
• What is the disadvantage?
• When would this be the better method of
reproduction?
• What types of organisms reproduce this way?
• Types of a asexual: budding: offspring grows out of
parent, fragmentation: part of parent breaks off that
can reproduce
15. Reproduction
• Sexual – what process is this type?
• what is the advantage?
• What is the disadvantage?
• When would this be the better method of
reproduction?
• Types external and internal fertilization.
– Which has higher survival rate?
– What organisms reproduce these ways?
16. Taxonomy
• How do you classify species into groups?
• How can you find the scientific name of a
species unknown to you?
17. Population Density
• What data do you collect in the field?
• What organisms are best to sample this way?
• What can this data tell you about other
organisms living in this ecosystem?
18. How are organisms affected by these
in an ecosystem
• Abiotic Factors • Biotic Factors
• Temp • Other organisms
• Salinity • Plants
• Turbidity • animals
• Pressure
• Amount of sunlight
• Pollutants
• Weather conditions
19. Properties of Water
• Polar molecule
• Cohesion
• Adhesion
• Viscosity
• Density
• Ability of light to penetrate
**** how are animals affected by these?
****what adaptations do they have?
20. Exam Topics
• Food webs and trophic levels
• Keystone/invasive species
• Osmosis and diffusion
• Taxonomy
• Properties of water
• Population sampling
• Scientific method
• Phylums we have discussed this year
• Reproduction
• Plate Tectonics
Notas do Editor
What are the trophic levels in this web? How does it change with removal of keystone species?
Can you tell what the non-native invasive species that were introduced are?What happens to biodiversity of this ecosystem over time?
Advantages: don’t need a mate and can produce many offspring without expending much energyDisadvantage: no genetic variation so if the ecosystem changes like with introduction of invasive species or removal of keystone species; consequences could be deadly to all( weakness is present is all)organisms that don’t move that much( worms, echinoderms, plankton, bacteria) budding: tapeworms; fragmentation: earthworms: Annalids
Advantage: genetic variation; set of genes from each parent: weeds out weaknesses or harmful mutationsDisadvantage: need to find a mateBetter: animals that are on the move; places where there are abundant number of individuals in a population