Extinct
Fish/Amphibians/Reptiles
Birds/Mammals
Insects/Arachnids/Crustaceans
Invertebrates
100

This prehistoric "living fossil" fish was thought to have gone extinct with the dinosaurs until a live one was discovered off the coast of South Africa in 1938.

A Coelacanth

100

This major biological transformation allows a fully aquatic, gill-breathing tadpole to develop legs and lungs to become a land-dwelling adult.

The metamorphosis

100

This incredibly intelligent bird is part of the corvid family, known for using tools, solving puzzles, and even remembering human faces.

A Crow

100

To grow larger, crabs and lobsters must routinely cast off their old, rigid exoskeletons in a vulnerable biological process called what?

Molting (or ecdysis)

100

This bizarre, flat ocean predator is the largest species of venomous fish, using a jagged, toxin-laced barb on its tail for self-defense.

A Stingray
200

Growing up to 50 feet long, this prehistoric cousin of the Great White was the largest shark to ever swim the oceans before vanishing around 3.6 million years ago.

A Megalodon

200

Most bony fish use this internal, gas-filled organ to control their buoyancy and maintain their depth without wasting energy swimming.

A swim bladder?

200

What Stuffed Animal does Ricki own?

A Cow

200

Pound for pound, this liquid protein extruded from a spider’s spinnerets is stronger than steel and can stretch up to 140% of its length without snapping.

Spider Silk

200

This brightly colored reef dweller is famous for its symbiotic relationship with stinging ___ _______

Sea Anemone

300

With a wingspan comparable to an F-16 fighter jet (around 33 feet), this giraffe-sized creature from late Cretaceous North America is the largest known flying animal to ever exist.

A Quetzalcoatlus

300

These uniquely structured marine fish always swim vertically, use their prehensile tails to anchor themselves to coral, and the males carry the eggs.

A Sea Horse

300

This semi-aquatic Australian mammal breaks the standard rules of its class by laying eggs instead of giving birth to live young.

Platypi

300

Honeybees communicate the precise distance and direction of patch flowers to the rest of their hive by performing this rhythmic, figure-eight movement.

The waggle dance

300

Lacking a brain, heart, or eyes, these gelatinous marine invertebrates are made of roughly 95% water and use stinging cells called nematocysts to catch food.

A Jellyfish

400

These marine cephalopods featured a spiral, chambered shell resembling a ram's horn and are closely related to modern octopuses and squids, despite their snail-like appearance. 

Ammonites

400

Famous in Minecraft, This smiling, critically endangered Mexican salamander is famous for retaining its aquatic larval traits—like its feathery external gills—for its entire life. 

An axolotl

400

Unlike most birds, owls can fly in complete silence thanks to specialized, velvety feathers that break up air currents and muffle the sound of their wings.

Serrated feathers

400

Found in fireflies, this highly efficient chemical reaction combines luciferin and oxygen to produce light with virtually zero heat loss.

Bioluminescence

400

These tiny, colonial marine invertebrates secrete a hard skeleton made of calcium carbonate, building massive underwater structures that support 25% of all ocean life.

Coral

500

Unlike its modern, tree-dwelling relatives, this massive Ice Age beast lived on the ground, grew up to 20 feet long, and used its giant claws to dig burrows or pull down entire tree branches.

A giant ground sloth (or Megatherium)

500

Growing up to 10 feet long and weighing over 150 pounds, this apex predator found on a few Indonesian islands is the largest living lizard species on Earth.

The Komodo dragon

500

This small, scaly, ant-eating creature is famous for rolling into an impenetrable ball when threatened and holds the tragic title of the most trafficked non-human mammal in the world.

A pangolin

500

With a leg span that can stretch over 12 feet across, this massive deep-sea creature found off the coast of Japan is the largest living arthropod on Earth.

The Japanese Spider Crab

500

These microscopic, nearly indestructible invertebrates are famous for their ability to survive the vacuum of space, extreme radiation, and boiling temperatures by entering a state of deep animation. 

(Hint: H2O + Grrrrr!)

Water Bears (Tetrigrades)
M
e
n
u