camouflage and mimicry. camouflage have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain...

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Camouflage and Mimicry

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Page 1: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

Camouflage and Mimicry

Page 2: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

Camouflage • Have you ever

wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors?

• Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference between life and death.

• Animals use their colors to blend into the environment.

• What is this called?

Page 3: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

Adaptations

• Camouflage is a type of animal adaptation.

• What is an adaptation?

• An adaptation is something that helps animals survive better.

Page 4: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

See if you can find the camouflaged animals in these pictures. The animals you are looking for are a deer, frog, and quail.

Find the critters!

Quail

Page 5: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

Deer!

Look closely to find this animal!

Page 6: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

Can you see the frog?

Page 7: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

Mimicry• Animals may also try to

look like another animals.

• For example, non poisonous snakes will rattle their tale and flatten their head to look poisonous to a predator.

• This is called Mimicry, where an animal tries to mimic or copy another.

Which snake is poisonous?

Page 8: Camouflage and Mimicry. Camouflage Have you ever wondered why animals have spots, strips, or certain colors? Sometimes an animal’s colors can be a difference

Other forms of mimicry…• Another example of

mimicry involves the monarch butterfly, which is toxic and very nasty to eat.Its bright orange coloration is a warning to birds to leave it alone. The non-toxic viceroy butterfly has developed colors and wing patterns that are very similar to those of the monarch and so most birds won’t take a chance by taste-testing it!