animal life cycles unit 4 lesson 6

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Animal Life Cycles Unit 4, Lesson 6

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explains the life cycle of animal

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Page 1: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Animal Life Cycles

Unit 4, Lesson 6

Page 2: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

A series of distinct growth stages in an animal’s life cycle that are different from one another.

What is metamorphosis?

Page 3: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

A series of four distinct growth stages in an animal’s life cycle.

Egg, larva, pupa, adult

What is complete metamorphosis?

Page 4: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

An immature stage in complete metamorphosis where the organism does not resemble the adult

Larva

Page 5: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

A non-feeding stage in complete metamorphosis in which a hard, case-like cocoon surround the organism

Pupa

Page 6: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

A series of three growth stages that occur gradually

Egg, nymph, adult

Incomplete metamorphosis

Page 7: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

A stage of metamorphosis where the organism is similar to an adult form but is smaller

Nymph

Page 8: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Larva

In the life cycle of a butterfly, what stage is the caterpillar?

Page 9: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

The organism gets bigger but keeps the same basic shape and form

What happens during the nymph stage of incomplete metamorphosis?

Page 10: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Complete metamorphosis has 4 distinct stages, while the incomplete metamorphosis has only 3 distinct stages.

How does the complete metamorphosis differ from the incomplete metamorphosis?

Page 11: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Most tadpoles are herbivores, or plant eaters

What do tadpoles eat?

Page 12: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Frog eggs are laid in the water. If tadpoles hatched with lungs rather than gills, they would not be able to breathe.

Tadpoles are completely aquatic for the first part of their lives

Why don’t tadpoles hatch with lungs?

Page 13: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

It moves onto landBreathes airBegins meat eating diet

What happens when a froglet becomes an adult?

Page 14: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

The shell keeps the embryo from drying out.

The yolk provides food for the developing embryo.

How does a bird’s egg protect the embryo developing inside?

Page 15: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

It is protected by a jellylike layer that surrounds the egg

How is a fish or amphibian egg protected?

Page 16: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Butterflies Moths Flies Beetles

Name some animals that go through complete metamorphosis

Page 17: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Grasshoppers Termites Bedbugs

Name some animals that go through incomplete metamorphosis

Page 18: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

In incomplete metamorphosis, the nymph stage is the same as the larva stage in a complete metamorphosis, and the pupa stage is skipped.

What metamorphosis stage is skipped in incomplete metamorphosis?

Page 19: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Grasshoppers have an exoskeleton

Why can’t grasshoppers grow gradually like mammals, reptiles, and birds do?

Page 20: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Amphibians go through metamorphosis, but other vertebrate do not.

How does an amphibian’s life cycle differ from that of other vertebrates?

Page 21: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Animals have different eggs depending on their structures and the environments in which they live.

Why do animals have different eggs?

Page 22: Animal Life Cycles Unit 4 Lesson 6

Monotremes are the only mammals that lay eggs.

What are the only mammals that lay eggs?