1 / 14

Minibeasts

Minibeasts. What is a minibeast?. Arachnids (spiders). Crustaceans (woodlice). All of these creatures can be called minibeasts. Insects. Myriapods (centipedes/ millipedes). Worms. Molluscs (slugs and snails). They are all small!. What do they all share in common?.

boughton
Télécharger la présentation

Minibeasts

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Minibeasts

  2. What is a minibeast? Arachnids (spiders) Crustaceans (woodlice) All of these creatures can be called minibeasts Insects Myriapods (centipedes/ millipedes) Worms Molluscs (slugs and snails)

  3. They are all small!

  4. What do they all share in common? They do not have a backbone (spine)! They are called INVERTEBRATES We have a backbone! We are called VERTEBRATES

  5. They have an outer body skeleton What do they all share in common? As well as keeping the body solid, it also helps to protect them from harm.

  6. Where do you find minibeasts? Many places! soil leaf litter rotten logs under stones and bits of wood on trees and bushes

  7. How do you find them? You have to look very carefully! Many minibeasts use camouflage to protect themselves This means they try to look like part of their habitat (the place where they live)

  8. What should you avoid? • Areas where trees or branches have recently fallen. • Exposed tree roots • Wasps – they can sting • Wasps nests • Woodlouse hunting spiders – they can bite

  9. How should we handle minibeasts? Remember they are small and fragile We must be careful We must be gentle If you pick up a minibeast to take a closer look remember to put it back where you found it

  10. Simple ways to identify your minibeast • Use a ‘key’ • Use a good wildlife book • Count the legs and follow the simple rule: • 0 legs = Worms, slugs and snails • 6 legs = insects • 8 legs = spiders • 14 legs = woodlice • More than 14 legs = centipedes and millipedes

  11. Back in the classroom • Science - Make your own key • Art - Draw some minibeasts • Creative writing – a day in the life of a millipede, snail etc… • IT - Minibeast game – www.museumwales.ac.uk/en/learning/ • Drama – how do minibeasts move? • Music - Learn the insect song

  12. The insect song Head, thorax, abdomen, abdomen Head, thorax, abdomen, abdomen And 3 legs here And 3 legs there Eyes, and antennae on my head, on my head

More Related