Classification Basics
Vertebrate Venture
Invertebrate Investigation
Eco-Adaptations
Scientific Purpose
100

This term refers to the variety of different types of life found on Earth.

What is Biodiversity?

100

This broad anatomical feature is what distinguishes all vertebrates from invertebrates.

What is a backbone?

100

This massive group of organisms, which includes the Honeybee, is defined by lacking a backbone entirely.

What are Invertebrates?

100

This general term describes any structure, behavior, or trait that helps an organism survive in its specific environment.

 What is an Adaptation?

100

This adjective describes living things or organisms that are too small to be seen by the naked human eye.

What is Microscopic (or Microorganisms)?

200

This is the highest rank of organisms in the biological classification system, of which there are exactly three.

What are Domains?

200

Warm-blooded animals like the Atlantic Puffin have feathers and lay eggs, placing them squarely in this vertebrate class.

What are Birds?

200

This phylum includes invertebrates with jointed legs and a hard outer exoskeleton, encompassing both insects and spiders.

What are Arthropods?

200

This is the legal biological definition of a species that is at immediate risk of becoming completely extinct.

What is Endangered?

200

This is the primary reason scientists use a standardized classification system instead of using local, regional names.

What is to avoid confusion and ensure universal communication among scientists globally?

300

This specific domain includes all organisms with complex cells containing a nucleus, such as plants, animals, and fungi.

What is Eukaryotes (or Eukarya)?

300

These aquatic vertebrates possess gills, fins, and scales, much like the Atlantic Cod.

What are Fish?

300

 Scientists use these two specific physical count tallies to differentiate an arachnid from an insect.

What are body segments (2 vs 3) and walking legs (8 vs 6)?

300

This specific physical adaptation allows the Pitcher Plant to catch and digest its food in nutrient-poor bogs.

What are hollow, fluid-filled leaves?

300

When building a dichotomous key, this is the exact number of choices a scientist must provide at every single step.

What is two choices?

400

This tool is used by scientists to identify organisms based on a series of choices between two distinct physical traits.

What is a Dichotomous key?

400

These cold-blooded vertebrates usually have scaly skin and lay leathery eggs on land.

 What are Reptiles?

400

Mostly aquatic arthropods like the Newfoundland lobster boast a hard shell, gills, and this specific number of antennae pairs.

What is two pairs of antennae? (They also have 10 legs/claws).

400

This is the primary ecological role of microscopic bacteria and fungi in a food web.

What is to break down dead organic matter and recycle nutrients into the soil? (Decomposers).

400

To make sure a dichotomous key works flawlessly, all choices must be based on these kinds of observable traits rather than behaviors or locations.

What are physical (or structural) characteristics?

500

 Fungi are largely categorized and classified by scientists based on these two specific structural and reproductive characteristics.

What are their distinct shapes and spore-producing structures (or reproductive methods)?

500

 While an American Toad has moist skin and no tail as an adult, a Caribou has fur and hooves. These are the two distinct vertebrate classes they belong to.

What are Amphibians and Mammals?

500

 An Earthworm is categorized as this type of legless, segmented invertebrate.

What is a segmented worm (or Annelid)?

500

These are the preserved remains or structural traces of organisms that lived long ago, giving us clues about ancient ecosystems.

What are Fossils?

500

If a zoo keeper refuses to house an Atlantic Cod and a Caribou in the same habitat, they are citing differences in these two fundamental survival needs.

What are their habitats and breathing structures (gills vs lungs)?