Citations
Sites
www.fickr.com
www.enviro-map.com
www.unique-southamerica-travel-expierience.com
http://www.amersol.edu.pe/ms/7th/7block/jungle_research/new_cards/14/pinkdolphin.jpg
http://www.dangerouswildlife.com/images/giant-otter.jpg
http://majorlyenglish.files.wordpress.com/2008/02/sloth1-r3-wm.jpg
http://www.self.org/images/caiman.gif
http://library.thinkquest.org/5053/SouthAmerica/jaguar.jpg
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_RV2NWWxKi90/R4pU2m5cdgI/AAAAAAAAATc/9J1Oy5J6UY0/s400/macaw.jpg
http://www.wildernessclassroom.com/www/schoolhouse/rainforest_library/animal_images/toucan.jpg
http://www.thenervousbreakdown.com/photos/uncategorized/2007/12/17/anaconda.jpg
https://biomesfirst.wikispaces.com/file/view/Food_Web_Pic.JPG/32390653
http://imagecache5.art.com/p/LRG/20/2097/KTS2D00Z/oliver-strewe-trees-and-ferns-in-beech-forest-oparara-new-zealand.jpg
http://www.birminghamzoo.com/image_gallery/hi_res/macaw.jpg
http://beautyofnature2009.files.wordpress.com/2009/02/jaguar-42.jpg
http://i.ehow.com/images/GlobalPhoto/Articles/5139451/ARockPython-main_Full.jpg
http://fireflyforest.net/images/firefly/2006/July/bromeliad.jpg
http://www.landcraftenvironment.com/mm5/graphics/00000001/FERN-BFl.jpg
http://www.sln.org.uk/geography/images/SLN@Malaysia2005/Chris%20C/Lianas%20on%20tree2.JPG
http://www.srl.caltech.edu/personnel/krubal/rainforest/Edit560s6/www/images/plants/neobunch.jpg
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Wednesday, November 18, 2009
Food Web
Key
Decomposers:bracket fungi, jelly-like fungi, gilled fungi, slime mold, coral fungi
Producers: orchids, seeds, banana trees, bamboo, coconut trees
Consumers (left to right): Macaws, fruitbats, monkeys, insects
Secondary consumers(slightly up) chimpanzees, parrots
Secondary consumers continued: vampire-bat, iguana,red-eyed tree frog
Top of food chain: python, jaguar
Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Animals that Adapted to the Amazon Rainforest
Macaw: sharp hooked beak perfect for eating nuts, fruits, and seeds found in the rainforest. More choices of what to fill their tummy with.
Poison Dart Frog: Growing a poisonous skin. No animal can eat it without dying and one frog could kill 100 humans.
Jaguar: They adapted to swim, run, and climb so it can catch a variety of prey. Also the spots help to blend it in to the environment around it so its prey can't see it and neither can its predators.
Three-toed Sloth: They adapted by allowing green algae to make its home in their fur so it blends in with the tops of the trees and its predators can't see it.
Wooly Spider Monkey: a tail like a hand that can be used to hang from trees and to grab food like fruit.
Plants that Adapted to Rainforest Life
Epiphytes: these pants don't sprout from the soil but high up on branches of trees. They then have a steady water supply without low down animals that might eat them. These plants don't even have to worry about the ground being too crowded.
Fern: Fern are low on the ground and grow close to the trunks of trees. They have adapted to the shady conditions with all the trees blocking out most of their sun.
Lianas: a type of climbing vine that begin life on the ground but use trees for support as they climb towards the sun.
Bromeliads: a plant whose waxy leaves form a bowl in the middle to catch rainwater.
Some animals of the Amazon
Animal
What It Eats
Endangered?
Spider Monkey: Grows up to 2 ft. tall not including tail. Enjoys hanging around by its tail.
Fruits, seeds, and leaves
no
Sloth: Enjoys hanging upside down. Rarely comes down from the tree. Loves to sleep.
Fruits, leaves, bugs
no
Giant River Otter: Grows up to 6 ft. long and weighs around 70 pounds. Biggest of its kind in the world.
Fish, small reptiles, small birds
Yes, highly
Capybara: biggest rodent on Earth. 2 ft. tall and 100 pounds! This giant rodent is a great swimmer and it even swims underwater. capybara
Grass, aquatic vegetation, melons, squashes
Yes, the capybara is endangered for two main reasons. One reason is that it is hunted for its prize meat by humans, jaguars, caimans, anacondas, ocelots, and more. But the number one reason is deforestation. This big rodent is losing its home.
Amazon Pink River Dolphin: local don’t kill them because they think it is bad luck.
Fish, they get them from ripping open fisherman’s nets
No, becoming endangered fast
Toucan: colorful beak, can grow from about 7 inches to over 2 ft.
It is a herbivore
No
Macaw: largest of the parrot family, height ranges from 1 ft. to 3 ft.
Nuts, fruits, and seeds
Yes, because of poaching, and deforestation
Black Caiman: largest predator in the Amazon river. No enemy other than human. Grows up to 20 ft. long and weighs up to 3,000 pound!
Capybara, piranha, giant river otter, humans, and basically anything else it wants
yes
Anaconda: reaching up to 37 ft. long and 600 pounds this snake squeezes its prey until it suffocates than swallows it whole.
It doesn’t eat often but when it does it eats things from capybara to human
No
Jaguar: one of the most dangerous animals in the Amazon. An amazing hunter that reaches 6 ft. long and can weigh up to 250 pounds
Small crocodiles, fish, turtles, dear, bird, ect.
No
Monday, November 16, 2009
Characteristics that make the Amazon rainforest Special
#1 The Amazon rainforest is home to an abundance of animals and plants and may contain half of the world's species! Your sure to run into some type of animal or plant if you go strolling down the Amazon rainforest.
#2 The Amazon rainforest is the largest rainforest in the world taking up most of the Amazon basin. Make sure you keep with your tour guide so you do not get lost.
#3 With all those trees and plants it is no surprise that more than 20% of Earth's oxygen is produced in the Amazon rainforest giving it the name "the lungs of the Earth".
#4 About 2,700 million acres of the Amazon rainforest are burned each year. That is a lot of land to waste. What happens to the animals and people that live there?
#5 Amazon Rainforest plants can be used in tons of medicines. 1 out of 4 ingredients in our medicine is from rainforest plants.
#1 The Amazon rainforest is home to an abundance of animals and plants and may contain half of the world's species! Your sure to run into some type of animal or plant if you go strolling down the Amazon rainforest.
#2 The Amazon rainforest is the largest rainforest in the world taking up most of the Amazon basin. Make sure you keep with your tour guide so you do not get lost.
#3 With all those trees and plants it is no surprise that more than 20% of Earth's oxygen is produced in the Amazon rainforest giving it the name "the lungs of the Earth".
#4 About 2,700 million acres of the Amazon rainforest are burned each year. That is a lot of land to waste. What happens to the animals and people that live there?
#5 Amazon Rainforest plants can be used in tons of medicines. 1 out of 4 ingredients in our medicine is from rainforest plants.
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