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Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner

Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

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Page 1: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Relationships in NatureBy: Kathy Kinsner

Page 2: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Introduction

• They are talking about how cheetahs hunt.

• Animals help each other when it comes to hunting.

• Learning about finding new things when people hunt.

Page 3: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Page 4 and 5

• The animals that eat their prey are called predator.

• The predator and the prey have a close relationships but they still kill it.

• In the winter the hare food decrease.

Page 4: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 6-9

• The snail kite and the apple snail have a predator relationship snail kite is a medium sized halk.

• When there are fewer places to live there are fewer snail kites.

• They have more snail kites thanks for protection.

Page 5: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 10-11

• Some predators have methods to capture prey one familiar one is chasing it.

• Some insects blend it there is one called walking twig.

• Some mice have 10 litters a year.

Page 6: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 12 - 13

• Some cheetahs run to 60 miles but they maintain the speed.

• Some halks have sharp clouds to cut the prey.

• Prairie dogs bark to warn for changer.

Page 7: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Page 16-17

• Some animals have special partnership.

• The color of clown will make it find easier.

• The colors benefits the relationship.

Page 8: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 18-19

• The relationship that fish called wrasse.

• The ant and aphid insect partner.

• An call oxpecxer.

Page 9: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Page 20

• They use disk to attach themselves.

• They think sharks need help.

• They think rhinos helps sharks.

Page 10: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 21

• Paraitism is another type of relationships.

• That is one type of relationship.

• The mosquitos are females are good.

Page 11: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 22

• Parama card was bored.• Yellow fever was

carried by mosquitos.• Yellow virus was under

control.

Page 12: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Page 23

• Parasites feed blood.• Many people have been

bitten by them.• When the bite they pass

palsies.

Page 13: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 24-25

• Humans preyed on wild animals

• They prey on more than just food

• One time alligators were killed for food

Page 14: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 26-27

• Rarely humans become prey

• They killed a man but didn’t kill the women

• When they found his body they ate him

Page 15: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Pages 28-29

• Mosquitoes hide with plants

• The players don’t eat sandwiches because they say that it makes them sick

• They got sick because it ripped their mouth guard

Page 16: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Conclusion

• Some partnerships aren’t good with other animals but we need each other just like humans need each other

Page 17: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 1

Animals that hunt for their food are called _____________, the animals they eat are called ___________ ?

Page 18: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 2

• What is the animal called that camouflages with the twig?

Page 19: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 3

• What does adapt mean and why must animals adapt?

Page 20: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 4

• What does mutualism mean and how does it work?

Page 21: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 5

• What is the honey badger’s favorite food?

Page 22: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 6

• How do aphids benefit?

Page 23: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 7

• How long does it take a female mosquito to eat it’s food?

Page 24: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 8

• What is the meaning of parasitism?

Page 25: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 9

• Why are ticks so dangerous to human?

Page 26: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 10

• How can humans have the same role as the predators?

Page 27: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 11

• Where do tiny mites live?

Page 28: Relationships in Nature By: Kathy Kinsner. Introduction They are talking about how cheetahs hunt. Animals help each other when it comes to hunting. Learning

Question 12

• If ticks bite, can they transmit diseases?