43
What is wildlife?

Opening day project wild

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Opening day project wild

What is wildlife?

Page 2: Opening day project wild

Wildlife includes all animals that have

not been domesticated by

people

Page 3: Opening day project wild

What does domesticated

mean?

Page 4: Opening day project wild

•animals that humans have kept in captivity and bred for special purposes.

Page 5: Opening day project wild
Page 6: Opening day project wild
Page 7: Opening day project wild

This is a dust mite.

It’s habitat is bedding, pillows and furniture.

It’s not even a millimeter large.

Page 8: Opening day project wild
Page 9: Opening day project wild
Page 10: Opening day project wild
Page 11: Opening day project wild

Wildlife can be:•spiders

•insects

•amphibians

•fish

•birds

•mammals

•microscopic creatures

Page 12: Opening day project wild

Final test. . .

Page 13: Opening day project wild
Page 14: Opening day project wild

Wildlife can be:

•silent

•invisible to us

Page 15: Opening day project wild

He’s called a water bear. . .

Scientists have reported their existence in hot springs, on top of the Himalayas,

under 5 m of solid ice and in ocean sediments!

Page 16: Opening day project wild

Let’s find some wildlife!

•Right here.

•Right now.

Page 17: Opening day project wild

Explore the room.Look for:

•Spider webs

•dead insects near lights

•inset holes along baseboards and behind books

•????

Page 18: Opening day project wild

What did you find?

Page 19: Opening day project wild

Sometimes. . .

•We share the same environment and we don’t even know it

Page 20: Opening day project wild

What’s an animal?

•any living organism other than. . .

Page 21: Opening day project wild

a plant!

Page 22: Opening day project wild

Any living organism other than a plant.

Page 23: Opening day project wild

What’s wild?

Page 24: Opening day project wild

•An animal that lives in a natural state, provides for its own food, shelter, and other needs in a suitable habitat.

Page 25: Opening day project wild
Page 26: Opening day project wild

Wildlife is also:

•an animal that is not domesticated or tame

Page 27: Opening day project wild

What does domesticated

mean?

Page 28: Opening day project wild

•animals that humans have kept in captivity and bred for special purposes.

Page 29: Opening day project wild

All domesticated animals have their

origins in wild ancestors.

Page 30: Opening day project wild

•A 33,000 year old dog skull found in a cave in Siberia.

•It shows some of the earliest evidence of domestication. . .it lived during the last Ice Age.

Page 31: Opening day project wild

•The Greeks had domesticated dogs over 2,000 years ago.

Page 32: Opening day project wild

Cattle, sheep, and pigs are

domesticated.

Page 33: Opening day project wild

Tame animals are “pets”

•All domesticated animals are not pets, only some of them. . .like your dog or your cat or your fish!

Page 34: Opening day project wild

How do we know it’s wild?

•If it can live on its own, survive and even reproduce, it is probably wild.

Page 35: Opening day project wild
Page 36: Opening day project wild

People and Wildlife

•share the same environment.

Page 37: Opening day project wild

What is a habitat?

Page 38: Opening day project wild

Shelter

Page 39: Opening day project wild

•Food

Page 40: Opening day project wild

•water

Page 41: Opening day project wild

•space

Page 42: Opening day project wild

•shelter, food, water and space

•different for an animal

Page 43: Opening day project wild

Let’s see for ourselves.