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PA Mammals Envirothon 2011

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PA Mammals. Envirothon 2011. Predator. A predator is an animal that feeds on other animals in order to survive. Some examples would be bears, coyotes, snakes Some predators can also be prey as well, like sometimes lions eat other lions Most of the time predators herbivore. Prey. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: PA Mammals

PA MammalsEnvirothon 2011

Page 2: PA Mammals

Predator

• A predator is an animal that feeds on other animals in order to survive.

• Some examples would be bears, coyotes, snakes

• Some predators can also be prey as well, like sometimes lions eat other lions

• Most of the time predators herbivore

Page 3: PA Mammals

Prey

• Prey are the animals eaten to keep other animals alive.

• More often then not the animals eaten are herbivores.

• Some examples of prey are bunnies, mice, and fish.

Page 4: PA Mammals

Autotrophs v. Heterotrophs

• Autotrophs– Produce food from the

sun

• Heterotroph– Must eat other things

(living or non living) for energy

Page 5: PA Mammals

Carnivore

• Animals that eat meat, mostly other animals that are smaller than they are or less fierce.

• Some examples of carnivores– Bobcats– Coyotes– Owls– Praying mantis

Page 6: PA Mammals

Herbivores

• Herbivores are animals that eat plants and greens such as leaves and grass.

• When herbivores eat it is usually called grazing.

• An example of an herbivore would be a rabbit or goat.

Page 7: PA Mammals

Omnivore

• An omnivore is an animal that eats plants and other animals.

• An example of an omnivore would be a bear because a bear eats berries and fish.

Page 8: PA Mammals

Food Chain

• The food chain is the order in which the animals eat or are eaten.

Page 9: PA Mammals

FOOD CHAINS AND FOOD WEBS - illustrate the flow of energy in an ecosystem

*Note the direction of the arrows: they indicate where the energy is going when

one organism consumes another.

Each step in a chain or web is called a TROPHIC LEVEL

Page 10: PA Mammals

Identify:

Autotroph

Primary Consumers

Secondary Consumers

Tertiary Consumers

Find the Omnivore

Page 11: PA Mammals

Identify• Autotroph

– Two sets of leaves

• Primary consumer– Mouse, cricket, rabbit, squirrel

• Secondary consumer– Fox, mouse, frog, snake

• Tertiary consumer– Fox, owl, snake

• Omnivore– mouse

Page 12: PA Mammals

Ecological Pyramids

Energy PyramidBiomass PyramidPyramid of Numbers

Page 13: PA Mammals

Mammal

• Mammals (formally Mammalia) are a class of vertebrate, air-breathing animals whose females are characterized by the possession of mammary glands while both males and females are characterized by hair and/or fur, three middle ear bones used in hearing, and a neocortex region in the brain. Some mammals have sweat glands, but most do not. Give birth to live young.

Page 14: PA Mammals

Endangered

• Pose a threat to go extinct. • Some endangered animals are

– Gray wolf, Mexican bobcat, West Indian Manatee, and the jaguar.

Page 15: PA Mammals

Extinct

• No longer in existence.• Some animals that are extinct are

– Barbados Raccoon, Bulldog rat, and Dark flying fox.

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Why animals go extinct or become endangered.

• Loss of habitat• Low food source • Not enough room to live• Poachers• Pollution• Killed of by other animals• Disease

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Major causes of habitat loss in Pa.

• Deforestation • Water pollution• Mining • Logging• Trawling- when boats use nets to catch fish.• Urban sprawl- when cities get bigger• Noise pollution

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How we can help.

• Reduce• Reuse• Recycle• Refuse• Car pool• Turn off lights when not in use.• Use energy saving light bulbs.• Reuse unbleached recycled paper.

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Adaptations

• Usually related to the food they eat– Teeth– Feet– Muscular system– Eyes/eyesight

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Teeth adaptations

1.Human – omnivore

2.Herbivore3.Carnivore4.Carnivore5.Herbivore