Fish
Amphibians
Reptiles
Vertebrate/Invertebrate
RANDOM
100

Fish are ___________ - blooded vertebrates

cold 

100

Amphibians are __________ blooded vertebrates

cold 

100

Reptiles are ________-blooded vertebrates

cold

100

This animal has a backbone. Is it a vertebrate or an invertebrate? 

Vertebrate

100

The process of an animal changing form as it grows is called ____________.

Metamorphosis 

200

fish have _____ and slime covering their bodies

scales

200

Amphibians have thin, smooth, ___________ skin

moist

200

Reptiles have tough, dry, __________ skin

scaly 

200

The two groups of vertebrates are ______ _______ and _______ _________. 

warm blooded and cold blooded 

200

God gave people the job to _______ the animals. 

manage

300

Fish breathe with ___________

gills

300

amphibians breathe with gills when young and breathe with _______ as adults 

lungs

300

Reptiles breathe with _________

lungs

300
Are humans vertebrates or invertebrates? 

Vertebrates

300

The temperature used by scientists is called the ___________ scale 

Celsius 

400

Fish live in ___________

water

400

Amphibians live on ________ and in __________.

land ... water

400

Reptiles live on _______ all their lives

land
400

What do fish, amphibians and reptiles all have in common?

They are vertebrates

400

A characteristic is a _________ or feature of something. 

quality 
500

Fish use _______ to move around 

fins

500

Picture this: You come across some damp leaves in the first. The leaves start moving and out pops a small, thin animal. It has four legs and a tail. It's shiny, moist skin is dark black with tiny blue dots. What type of animal did you find?

An amphibian BECAUSE it lives in a damp area and has moist, shiny skin. 

500

_________ is an example of a reptile. 

Answers may vary. 

Examples: snake, lizards, dinosaurs, turtle, crocodile, chameleons, geckos, iguanas

500

BONUS = 1000 points 

Who was the FIRST person to classify animals?

Adam

500

In a frog's metamorphosis, what comes after the egg stage?

Tadpole. 

Followed by teenage frog, then adult frog.