What is a root?
Tiny creatures with "cilia" or hairlike structures for mobility.
What are ciliates?
These sea creatures have arms that can grow back if they are cut off.
What are starfish?
These reptiles have no legs, ears, or eyelids.
What are snakes?
This term describes a mammal's ability to maintain a constant body temperature.
What is warm-blooded? (accept homeostasis)
The teeny tiny seed of a fungus
What is a spore?
Tiny animal-like creatures with "flagella" or whiplike structures for mobility.
What are zooflagelates?
These creatures are categorized as segmented, flat, and round. Some eat dirt.
What are worms?
This term means "both lives", referring to life in the water and on land.
What is amphibian?
This is the term for pouched mammals, such as the kangaroo and wombat.
What are the marsupials?
A unicellular fungus that reproduces by "budding"
What is yeast?
False feet that are used both for mobility and feeding.
What are Pseudopods?
This category of invertebrates has exoskeletons and jointed legs.
What are arthropods?
What are cartilaginous fish?
This is the number of monotreme types know in the world.
What is 2?
Plant tissue that provides structure to the stem and transports sap UPWARDS.
What is Xylem?
A type of sarcodine with pseudopods.
What is an amoeba?
This category of invertebrates has spiny skin and includes sea urchins and starfish.
What are echinoderms.
This category of fish includes fish that have a swim bladder.
What are bony fish?
This is the only marsupial native to North America?
What is the opossum?
A symbiotic relationship between an alga and a fungus. It can grow in harsh conditions.
What is lichen?
These microscopic creatures have glassy shells.
What are diatoms?
What are the Cnidarians?
What are lizards?
This large category of mammal gives birth to well-developed young that do not need to ride in a pouch.
What are the Eutherians or Placental Mammals?