Category Nature Science & Wildlife

When do birds migrate?

Migration is the mass movement of groups of animals or birds. It is caused by the need to find food, by climatic changes during the year, and by the need to breed. Every autumn, for example, swallows gather in large flocks to rest before they begin their long migration to Africa. Swallows, and their relatives, swifts and martins, all migrate to Africa when the weather becomes too cold for them to catch their insect prey. They return in the spring when the weather in northern Europe begins to warm up. The Arctic tern makes the longest-known migration of any bird we know, by travelling from the Arctic to the Antarctic and then back again. On its flight it passes through Japan, Alaska, Canada and Fiji before returning home again to breed.

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Many fish migrate in both fresh water and the ocean. Tuna make some of the longest migrations. The need to migrate is due to sea temperature, as fish need the correct temperature in order to breed.

 

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When an animal is termed a vertebrate?

An animal is classed as a vertebrate when it has a backbone to provide support for the muscles and protection for the spinal cord. Vertebrates include fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. The backbone is actually a series of small bones called vertebrate. They are joined together and locked with rope-like ligaments to provide a flexible but extremely strong anchor for the back muscles. The spinal cord runs down a channel inside the vertebrate, providing protection from damage. Some primitive fish, such as sharks and rays, have a spine made of a rough rubbery material called cartilage. There are approximately 45,000 living species of vertebrates. In size, they range from minute fishes to elephants and whales (of up to 100 tons), the largest animals ever to have existed. They are adapted to life underground, on the surface, and in the air.

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The duck-billed platypus is a very unusual, small, semi aquatic mammal. It lives in lakes and streams of eastern Australia and Tasmania. It is notable in having abroad, flat, rubbery snout, webbed feet, and in that it lays eggs.

 

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When did Linnaeus develop the classification system?

Carl Linnaeus (1707-1778) was a Swedish botanist and explorer who was the first to create a uniform system for naming plants and animals. Most plants and animals have popular names that vary from place to place. Scientific names are given so that the same name is recognized everywhere. Latin is the language used for scientific names. The scientific names are in two parts. The first is the generic name, which describes a group of related living things, and the second name is the specific name, which applies only to that living thing.

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The Latin name of the White Water Lily is Nymphaea alba. They are one of a group of plants whose flowers close up for the night.

 

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When did Darwin publish The Origin of the Species?

Upon his return from the voyage, Darwin turned over all the specimens he had brought back to cataloguing experts in Cambridge and London. In South America he had found fossils of extinct armadillos that were similar but not identical to the living animals he had seen. On November 24, 1859 Darwin published his theories in a book called The Origin of the Species. It caused a great sensation, but it was some time before it was accepted by the scientific world. The first edition sold out immediately and by 1872 the work had run through six editions. It became generally accepted that evolution took place along the lines that Darwin suggested. His theory on evolution of species solved many puzzles.

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We can see how evolution has changed living things by examining fossils. Fossils preserve the body parts of living creatures from long ago so that we can see how they have changed over millions of years.

 

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When did Darwin sail to the Galapagos Islands?

In the year 1831 Charles Darwin (1809-1882) set out on an exploratory voyage in the ship Beagle, heading for South America. The voyage lasted five years and during this time Darwin kept careful notes of everything he saw, in particular the strange animal life on the Galapagos Islands, off the western coast of Ecuador. He was disturbed by the fact that the birds and tortoises of the Galapagos Islands tended to resemble species found on the nearby continent, while inhabits of similar adjoining islands to the Galapagos had quite different animal populations. In London Darwin later learned that the finches he had brought back belonged to a different species, not merely different varieties, as he had originally believed.

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When Charles Darwin first published his theories on evolution they created a sensation, but it took a while before they were accepted.

 

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