classification

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Slide 1: Video
BiologieMiddelbare schoolhavoLeerjaar 1

This lesson contains 42 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 4 videos.

Items in this lesson

Slide 1 - Video

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Slide 2 - Slide

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Slide 3 - Slide

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Slide 4 - Slide

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make your own species!
give it a name (genus+species) 5 min!
timer
1:00

Slide 5 - Open question

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4 Kingdoms: 
  • Animals
  • Plants
  • Fungi
  • Bacteria

Slide 6 - Slide

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Bacteria

Slide 7 - Mind map

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Different cell types in different organisms 
     Bacteria                  Fungi                      Animal                    Plant

Slide 8 - Slide

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Living as a bacterium
Bacteria reproduce through cell division

Slide 9 - Slide

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Useful bacteria?

Slide 10 - Slide

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Discussion point
Can bacteria actually be useful? Discuss this with your neighbour. Try to think of ways why or how bacteria can be useful. 

Slide 11 - Slide

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Useful bacteria
Most bacteria are useful:
  • Help digest food in our intestines
  • Kill harmful bacteria on our skin
  • Feed on dead organisms
  • Can be used in making food: Yoghurt, Sauerkraut

Slide 12 - Slide

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Antibiotics
Medicins against infections caused by bacteria. 

They kill the bacteria and slow down their growth



Slide 13 - Slide

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Which shapes do bacteria have?

Slide 14 - Slide

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The kingdom of fungi

Slide 15 - Slide

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Slide 16 - Slide

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Slide 17 - Video

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FINISH THE SENTENCE. Fungi are ...
A
Unicellular
B
Multicellular
C
Both

Slide 18 - Quiz

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Slide 19 - Slide

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The thin threads fungi can have are called...
A
Flagella
B
Fungi-threads
C
Yeast
D
Hyphae

Slide 20 - Quiz

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Which of the following statements about fungi is NOT true?
A
Fungal cells do not have a cell wall
B
Fungi can be unicellular or multicellular
C
Fungal cells have a vacuole
D
Fungal cell have a nucleus

Slide 21 - Quiz

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Plant kingdom
             Plants which make spores (seedless plants)
          Plants which make seeds (seed producing plants)

Slide 22 - Slide

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Photosynthesis
All plants and algae, some bacteria

Slide 23 - Slide

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Slide 24 - Video

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Slide 25 - Video

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Reproduction (new babies)

Fish                            Mammal
Amphibien           Reptile
Bird

Slide 26 - Slide

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How do plants reproduce?
Sexual reproduction
Asexual reproduction

Slide 27 - Slide

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Birds
  • Live on land + in the air
  • Eggs fertilized internally + have hard, chalky shells
  • Warm-blooded
  • Body is covered with feathers
  • breath with lungs

Slide 28 - Slide

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Fish
  • Aquatic
  • Most lay soft eggs 
  • Some are livebearing
  • Cold-blooded
  • Scales
  • Gills

Slide 29 - Slide

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Mammals
  • Live on land
  • Eggs fertilized internally
  • Have milk for their young
  • Warm-blooded
  • Hair or fur
  • Breath with lungs

Slide 30 - Slide

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Amphibians (Amfibiën)


  • Can live on water and land
  • lay eggs with soft shells
  • cold-blooded
  • don't have scales.
  • undergo metamorphosis.

Slide 31 - Slide

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Reptiles
  • Live only on land
  • Eggs fertilized internally + have hard, leathery shells
  • Cold-blooded
  • Lungs
  • Dinosaurs were also reptiles

Slide 32 - Slide

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Phyla of the animal kingdom
  • Sponges
  • Cnidarians
  • Molluscs
  • Arthropods 
  • Echinoderms
  • Vertebrates 

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The Kingdom of Animals

Slide 34 - Slide

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Molluscs
  • soft bodies protected by one or two shells


in Dutch 'weekdier' 

Slide 35 - Slide

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Cnidarians (Neteldieren)

  • One opening for eating and waste.
  • tantacles around the mouth.
  • Have hollow sac-like bodies.

Slide 36 - Slide

jellyfish/ anemone
Types of symmetry
  • bilateral symmetry
1 line
  • radial symmetry
More than 1 line
  • Asymmetric
no lines

Slide 37 - Slide

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Worms (Wormen)

Slide 38 - Slide

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Worms (Wormen)
  • Flatworm: long flat body, one opening, live in water
  • Roundworm: long threadlike body, live in soil
  • segmented worms: long body with segments, live in the sea or soil.

Flatworms and roundworms can be parasites.

Slide 39 - Slide

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echinoderms

Slide 40 - Slide

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Echinoderms
  • Examples: sea urchins and starfish 
  • Hard, spiny covering
  • 5 identical parts
  • Tube-like feet

  • There is even one species of echinoderms that are called sea cucumbers! (see image)
Sea urchin = zee-egel
Starfish = zeester

Slide 41 - Slide

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Next week
Team up in a group of 2/3
make a (short) presentation of +/- 2 minutes of one of the following basics using a poster
3.3 Cnidarians
3.4 Worms
3.5 Molluscs
3.6 Echinoderms

Slide 42 - Slide

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