Vocabulary
Types of Animals
Clouds and Weather
Australia, New Zealand and Pacific islands
Indigenous vs. Invasive species
100

Plants and animals native to a specific region.

What does indigenous mean?

100

This type of marsupial has gray fur, eats and lives in eucalyptus trees.

What is a koala?

100
Pick a cloud type and describe it.

Answers vary.

100

This is the only country in the world that is also a continent.  It is referred to as the "island continent"

What is Australia?

100

When Europeans began to settle in Australia in the 1800s, they brought along this species, which quickly became feral and caused serious damage to crops and grazing lands.

What are European Rabbits?

200
A mammal whose females carry their babies in a pouch. Examples include kangaroos, koalas, wallabies, and tasmanian devils. 

What is a marsupial?

200

This animal is the only amphibian in New Zealand.

What is a frog?

200

Make a sentence with one of the cloud types.

Answers vary.

200

These are unusually hot parts of the Earth's mantle that magma can rise up from.

What are hotspots?

200

This is an indigenous animal to Australia and New Guinea and the only mammal in the world that can lay eggs and has a beak. 

What is a platypus?

300

When referring to animals, this is the opposite of domesticated. 

Wild. 

What is feral?

300

These types of mammals lay eggs.  Examples include the Echidna and the Platypus.  Their name means "one hole."

What are monotremes?

300

These types of winds blow over large areas of Earth.

What are global winds?

300

These islands are formed by volcanic activity as tectonic plates move over hotspots. 

What are high islands?

Also acceptable: what are volcanic islands?

300

This type of invasive plant species is devastating New Zealands native plant populations by smothering native foliage and can even take down large trees.

What is old man's beard?

400

The amount of water vapor in the air. 

What is humidity?

400

These hunting animals were brought to Australia by seafaring travelers about 3,000 years ago and today prey on native kangaroos and wallabies. 

What are dingoes?

400

These local winds blow during the day when the land heats up faster than the sea, and the cooler, high-pressure air flows over the water onto the land.

What is a sea breeze?

400

These islands are also called low islands and form over long periods of time by a gradual buildup of the skeletons of corals and other tiny marine animals.  

What are coral islands?

Also acceptable: what are atolls?

400

These animals were introduced to Australia for both hunting and to solve the invasive European rabbit problem.  They became an invasive problem as well. 

What are (European) red foxes?

500

Islands formed on top of coral reefs after millions of years of erosion of a volcanic island.

How are atolls formed?

500

This indigenous Australian flightless bird can grow as high as five feet tall and can be aggressive

What is a cassowary?

(arguably also: what is an emu?)not aggressive

500

This type of precipitation occurs when rain falls through a layer of freezing air.  The raindrops turn into small lumps of ice before hitting the ground.  

What is sleet?

500

These islands are great for growing crops because they get plenty of rain and have nutrient-rich soil. 

What are high (volcanic) islands?

500

Predators in Australia are not adapted to this invasive animal's toxin, and therefore this animal is able to move freely and can poison people, pets, and many native species in Australia.

What are cane toads?

M
e
n
u