Animal Instincts. Modified from a lesson found at

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Animal Instincts Modified from a lesson found at Materials Paper for writing and drawing assembled into a log Reference materials for researching animals Dice Procedure 1. The first task for your group is to determine which animal you will study. You are going to use the luck of the die to select an animal about which they will learn more. Here is what each roll determines: Roll One (kind of vertebrate) 1 or 2 = mammal; 3 or 4 = reptile; 5 = bird; 6 = amphibian Roll Two (size) 1 or 2 = small (1 oz to 30 lbs); 3 or 4 = medium (31 to 99 lbs); 5 or 6 large (100 lbs and over) 2. Use the Vertebrate List to select a vertebrate for your report. 3. Create an image of it such as a drawing or a three-dimensional composition. The rendering should be labeled, identifying major body parts and unique physical characteristics of the animal. 5. Each group should prepare three pages, titled Diet, Habitat, and Behaviors. In the next three steps, the groups will be working together to complete these pages. 6. Have groups use the reference materials to research and write a brief description of their animal's diet. Each group member should initial his or her written contribution to the description. Ask groups to consider what kind of food their animal eats. Is their animal a meat eater (carnivore), a plant eater (herbivore), or does it eat both plants and animals (omnivore)?

7. Next, have groups write a description of their animal's habitat. Again, each member should initial his or her written contribution to the description. 8. Now, have group members create individual lists of all the behaviors they can find for their chosen animal. Discuss the following questions with the class: How did your animal acquire each behavior? Which of your animal's behaviors are learned and which are instinctual? Are any of your animal's behaviors linked to the environment or climate in which it is found? How so? How does it adapt to seasonal changes? Do the animal's physical characteristics help it in any way? Have group members identify which of the behaviors on their animal behavior list are instinctual and which are behavioral. 9. Using group research, have each student compose a creative short story about his or her animal's life during one of the four seasons of the year. Stories will include the results of students' group research, describing environment, climate, diet, food availability, and physical attributes and how they all affect animal behavior. These stories and the group artistic renderings can be displayed for the entire class. Challenge students to try to identify the learned and instinctual behaviors of the animals in their classmate's stories.

Name Score Animal Instincts Modified from a lesson found at 1. How do the physical attributes of an animal affect its behaviors? 2. Can an organism's instincts and learned behaviors be related to its environment? (Think about this: In order to survive, a polar bear instinctively goes into winter sleep to conserve its energy when it has gone about two weeks without food, which can be scarce in the Arctic. What is the behavior-environment connection?) 3. Analyze some behaviors that both humans and animals display. Examples might include growling, purring, crying, or playing. Then discuss whether they are instincts or learned behaviors. For every learned behavior, explain how it was learned. Was it taught by a parent or learned through some other experience?

4. A mother grizzly bear instinctively raises and protects her young cubs. Yet after a mother iguana lays eggs, her job as a mother is finished. Explain why you think some animals have a strong instinct for parenting while others do not. How might it relate to the number of babies or amount of eggs it produces? 5. Create a list of 20 of your own behaviors throughout the day, such as waking up, brushing your teeth, walking, eating, or reading. Which of these are learned and which are instinctual? If they were learned, how did you learn them?

Vertebrate List Mammals Arctic Fox Koala Meerkat Mongoose Opossum Vampire Bats Beaver Chimpanzee Coyote Lynx Porcupine Sun Bear Blue Whale Giant Anteater Hyena Moose Mountain Lion Warthog Reptile Flying Snake Frilled Lizard Gila Monster Green Basilisk Lizard Marine Iguana Web-footed Gecko Boa Constrictor American Alligator Galapagos Tortoise Gavial (Gharial) Komodo Dragon Loggerhead Sea Turtle Nile Crocodile

Birds Albatross Arctic Skua Laughing Kookaburra Osprey Peregrine Falcon Snowy Owl California Condor Emperor Penguin Emu Ostrich Amphibian Poison Dart Frog Chinese Giant Red-Eyed Tree Salamander Frog Spotted Salamander Tiger Salamander Wallace s Flying Frog Warty Newt