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Milkweed bugs – Investigation 1

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Presentation on theme: "Milkweed bugs – Investigation 1"— Presentation transcript:

1 Milkweed bugs – Investigation 1

2 Tony's creepy crawly zoo – milkweed plant info

3 What do organisms need in order to survive?

4 The Big 4 needed for survival
Water Shelter/space Temperature Nutrients or food (Many organisms need light or they need something else that needs light – Why?)

5 Sustaining Life Each type of organism needs certain kinds and quantities of nutrients to survive (to live). If only one key nutrient is missing, it will die. Even if one key nutrient is minimal (low), it’s growth can be stunted.

6 Food “Web” What do you know?

7 Food “chain” or Web Producers – Primary consumers -
Make their own food They get their energy from the sun (and simple chemicals) Made up mostly of___________________ and some bacteria. Primary consumers - They must eat something to get their energy. They eat green plants or bacteria Secondary consumers They eat (get their energy) from primary consumers Tertiary consumers Get energy from secondary consumers Decomposers - – Mainly bacteria and fungi (they break down complex chemicals into simpler ones that can be used again by the producers) NOTE: an organism can follow into more than one level.

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9 D E C O M P S R

10 Important Vocab Phototroph Heterotroph
Organisms that can produce their own energy and therefore do not need to “eat”. (usually from the sun, H2O, and CO2) Heterotroph - Organisms that must get their energy through eating other organisms (or their remains).

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14 Where does the energy go?

15 Even scientists make mistakes, can you find the one made here?

16 An ocean top, vs deep thermal vent (on the bottom) pyramid comparison

17 Classification

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19 Kingdom is most inclusive – species is most specific

20 The order of scientific classification – for living things
Did King Philip come over for good spaghetti? Domain, kingdom, phylum, class, order, family, genus, species Humans are Classified as such:

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23 Arthropods (phylum) - All have exoskeletons – skeletons on outside.
- All have bilateral symmetry (this means it can be divided in half and look like a mirror image) Exoskeletons are made of a hard protein called chitin.

24 2 classes and a subphylum (of Arthropod)
Insecta – includes all insects and bugs. Insect means segmented. Example: darkling beetles. Arachnida – includes spiders. (subphylum it has 2 classes within crustacea) Crustacea – includes lobsters, shrimp, (including brine shrimp). Isopods such as pill “bugs”, and sow “bugs”.

25 About Arthropods

26 classes of Arthropoda

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29 Body parts Insects Arachnida 3 body parts (head, thorax, abdomen)
6 legs Arachnida 2 body parts (head and thorax are combined, and abdomen) 8 legs

30 INSECTS About 1 million identified They think about 3million total.
All have exoskeletons 3 body parts 6 legs MOST have 2 pairs of wings MOST have 2 eyes and 2 antennae Largest group is beetles. BUGS: Have piercing & sucking mouthparts

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32 4 Instars (missing one) plus adult

33 Milkweed bug and 2 exoskeletons

34 Complete vs incomplete metamorphosis

35 Milkweed bug Incomplete metamorphosis – a process of gradual maturing of an insect (egg, nymphal stages or instars, and adult). Egg Nymph (5 instars) Adult


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