1.8 Warm-blooded and cold-blooded animals Practice

Unit 1 Basic 3
Warm-blooded and cold-blooded animals
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Slide 1: Slide
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This lesson contains 30 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 1 video.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

Unit 1 Basic 3
Warm-blooded and cold-blooded animals

Slide 1 - Slide

Learning goals
  • I can describe respiration in organisms and explain the relationship with physical activity using theterms glucose, oxygen, water, carbon dioxide, energy
  • I can describe the differences in respiration between cold-blooded and warm-blooded animals

Slide 2 - Slide

What is the formula of respiration (= combustion in your body)? 
Glucose
Oxygen
Energy
Carbon dioxide
Water

Slide 3 - Drag question

Combustion in your body = respiration
Getting energy from food 
  • Our fuel is glucose
  • Oxygen is needed to break down glucose (breathing)


Slide 4 - Slide

Slide 5 - Slide

What adaptations do animals
have to survive in the cold

Slide 6 - Open question

Why is it that birds and mammals are virtually the only animals living in the polar regions for most of the year?

Slide 7 - Open question

Bats hibernate: they sleep during the ENTIRE winter
Squirrels fake hibernate: they sleep during winter, but wake up sometimes to eat

Slide 8 - Slide

To which type of hibernation does the graph belong?
A
True hibernation
B
Fake hibernation

Slide 9 - Quiz

Because of their habit of roosting together in large groups, bats are very vulnerable. If their rest is disturbed, an entire colony can be destroyed. There are not many good daytime resting places (hollow trees) nor many good places to hibernate through the winter where they will not be disturbed and where the winter temperature does not fall below freezing. During hibernation, bats live from the food reserves they have stored in their bodies. 

In Limburg, a number of bunkers from the Second World War have been set up as places where bats can spend the winter. 

Slide 10 - Slide

What happens to the body temperature of bats that are woken up during hibernation?

Slide 11 - Open question

Explain why bats that are disturbed multiple times during hibernation are more at risk of dying during a long winter than bats that are not woken up.

Slide 12 - Open question

6

Slide 13 - Video

The Fennec fox has developed large ears to give off heat better
The artic fox has developed small ears to reduce heat loss

Slide 14 - Slide

00:44
About how many species of songbirds migrate?
A
30
B
75
C
200
D
350

Slide 15 - Quiz

01:04

During flight, how long does it take for birds to lose up to 1% of their body weight?
A
1/2 hour
B
1 hour
C
12 hours
D
24 hours

Slide 16 - Quiz

02:41

What proportion of birds that migrate in the fall return to breed the following spring?
A
1/10
B
1/4
C
1/2
D
3/4

Slide 17 - Quiz

02:43
Building collisions are responsible for nearly _____ bird deaths every year.
A
100.000
B
500.000
C
1 million
D
1 billion

Slide 18 - Quiz

03:00
What other services do birds provide?
A
insect control
B
pollination
C
dispersing seeds

Slide 19 - Quiz

03:54

While migration is one way to avoid the hardships of winter, many animals as well as some bird species have found ways of adapting to limited food and cold temperatures without needing to leave their homes. What are some examples of how species tough it out through difficult times?

Slide 20 - Open question

which dog cools down the least quickly? Explain why

Slide 21 - Open question

Slide 22 - Slide

Is the green line a warm-blooded or cold-blooded animal?
A
warm-blooded
B
cold-blooded

Slide 23 - Quiz

Marine iguanas
Marine iguanas live on the Galapagos Islands. Like most reptiles, they often bask in the sun to warm up. Once they are sufficiently warm, they dive into the water and go looking for food. Marine iguanas graze on the algae on rocks on the seabed. They often can't do this for more than an hour or so because the water is cold. Then they come back up and find a spot on the warm rocks. 

Slide 24 - Slide

Are marine iguanas cold-blooded or warm-blooded?
A
warm-blooded
B
cold-blooded

Slide 25 - Quiz

Explain the advantage to marine iguanas of warming up in the sun first before they go in search of food.

Slide 26 - Open question

Which frog has the higher body temperature?
A
frog in container 1
B
frog in container 3

Slide 27 - Quiz

Drag the  green square to the container where most respiration takes places, and the orange circle where there is the least respiration

Slide 28 - Drag question

Why is it more likely to find a whale (marine mammal) around the poles, but unlike to find a shark around there?

Slide 29 - Open question

What do you want me to repeat the last class before the test and what would help you study?

Slide 30 - Open question