Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label animals. Show all posts

Monday, June 4, 2012

Wonderful, Wild, and Amazing Animals, 2012! Part 2: A Bird of Prey and a Marsupial!

Beverly  from Wildlife Experience 
 visited our class again
with animals that are native to North America!

 They are a non-profit wildlife education organization that brings native and exotic animals to schools and teaches children about the importance of our natural world.





Today we were visited by a seven-year-old Harris' hawk, a bird of prey.




One very special behavioral adaptation of a carnivorous Harris' hawk is that it, unlike other hawks, hunts with a group of hawks. This is called communal hunting. Together, they fly over a sagebrush, scare out a rabbit, and surround it, so it can't escape!

Do you see an important physical adaptation for this predator?


Harris' hawks live in the desert. Here is a photo of one with its young. 
You can see it is using a cactus as a nesting ground!


 The Harris' hawk that built this nest used twigs, animal hair (including horse hair), 
paper bags, newspapers, and even dryer sheets!




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Our second guest was the only marsupial that lives in North America,
an opossum!
Opossums are nocturnal, so she had to wake our furry friend up for the visit!











 Since this omnivore had eaten some meat in the last class it visited,
Ms. C. gave it a banana in our class!




Check out this amazing physical adaptation, a prehensile tail!




Because opossums are marsupials, their babies, called joeys, stay in the mother's
 pouch until they are big enough....


to ride on Mom's back!


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What other facts can you share about these creatures?

Do you remember how many razor sharp teeth
 an opossum has?

Can you explain the behavioral adaptation of the opossum that helps it stay safe from predators?

Do you remember a fact about the white tips on the tail of the
Harris' hawk?

Sunday, June 5, 2011

Wonderful, Wild, and Amazing Animals!

As part of our animal adaptation science unit, Beverly Critcher 
from Wildlife Experience will bring wild animals
that are native to North America
to Mrs. Ranney's class for careful
scientific observation.



They are a non-profit wildlife education organization that brings native and exotic animals to schools and teaches children about the importance of our natural world.


During our first lesson, the class talked about animals 
that come out at night (nocturnal
as well as day dwellers (diurnal).

Diurnal  animals:  lizards, squirrels, crows and ravens, snakes, hawks, and vultures

Many California animals are nocturnal:  coyotes, owls, raccoons, bats, bobcats, mountain lions, and opossums

Beverly said that wildlife is all around, even if we don't see it.  We can look at what the animals have left behind and know that they have been around:  bones, fur, owl pellets (if you open the pellets, you'll find undigested bones!), feathers, tracks, dung or scat. 
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Our first wild visitors were....

an eight-year-old gopher snake and...


Hoot, a barred owl!

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Enjoy the slide show about these two incredible critters!

 Native Neighbors on PhotoPeach

 




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What did you learn from Beverly during her first Wildlife Experience visit to our class?

Have you done any additional research about these animals?
Do you have some fascinating facts to add?