Activa JavaScript para disfrutar de los vídeos de la Mediateca.
ANIMALS - Contenido educativo
Ajuste de pantallaEl ajuste de pantalla se aprecia al ver el vídeo en pantalla completa. Elige la presentación que más te guste:
ANIMALS KINGDOM
Hello kids! Today we're going to talk about animals. Do you like animals? What's your favorite
00:00:00
animal? Do you like elephants, octopus, cats, dogs? Whatever animal that you can think of,
00:00:07
you can put into a category. You can put it into a category based on whether or not it has
00:00:18
a backbone you can put it in a category based on what it eats you can put it in a category
00:00:25
based on how they carry their babies and you can put it in a category based on how they look
00:00:34
and how they're related to other animals so today we're going to talk about a few different
00:00:40
categories that you can put animals into so first we're going to talk about animals that have
00:00:47
a backbone. So remember we learned backbone is this right here. So if you
00:00:54
have a backbone you are a vertebrate. So we humans are vertebrates. There are five
00:01:00
different groups of vertebrates. The first group are mammals. Mammals have
00:01:09
fur and they carry their babies inside. So humans, we are mammals. If you have a
00:01:16
cat or a dog at home, that's a mammal. Next are birds. Birds have wings and they
00:01:25
can fly. Unlike mammals like us that have fur or hair, birds have feathers. Birds
00:01:36
also have a beak, a beak that they use to break their food. So nuts and seeds and worms, they use
00:01:46
their beak. The next type of vertebrate are reptiles. So reptiles are like iguanas and
00:01:55
lizards. They have very dry skin and scales. So they don't have skin like humans, like we do.
00:02:02
They have scales. The next category are amphibians. Amphibians have moist skin
00:02:12
because they spend a lot of their lives in water. They also go on land. So amphibians are born in
00:02:21
the water. The most popular amphibian is a frog. And the last type of vertebrate is a fish. So like
00:02:29
reptiles fish have scales but fish don't live on land fish live under water fish have fins
00:02:38
so that they can swim they have gills so they don't breathe air like us they have gills
00:02:48
to take in oxygen from the water and then last they have a tail in the back which like their
00:02:56
fins helps them swim. So we talked about how we can put animals into categories based on whether
00:03:02
or not they have a backbone. So if they have a backbone, they're a vertebrate. If they don't
00:03:10
have a backbone, they're an invertebrate. And then within the vertebrates, we can separate them into
00:03:16
categories based on their characteristics of their body. Now we're going to talk about putting
00:03:23
animals into categories based on what they eat. So we have three categories based on what animals
00:03:29
eat. Herbivore, carnivore, and omnivore. The first herbivore. An herbivore is an animal that only
00:03:37
eats plants. So an herbivore could be a panda or a zebra. They only eat plants. They don't eat
00:03:49
meat. They don't eat other animals. Next are carnivores. Carnivores only eat meat. So a
00:03:59
carnivore can be a lion or a crocodile. Carnivores don't eat plants. The last category are omnivores.
00:04:08
Omnivores eat both plants and meat.
00:04:19
An omnivore is a frog or us humans.
00:04:24
Humans are omnivores because we eat plants, like vegetables, and we also eat meat, like beef or chicken or fish.
00:04:30
Next, we can separate animals into categories based on how they have their babies.
00:04:42
There are two different categories, viviparous and oviparous.
00:04:49
So a viviparous animal has their babies inside them.
00:04:54
So humans and other mammals are viviparous.
00:04:58
They always have their babies inside them.
00:05:03
Oviparous animals have babies in an egg.
00:05:06
so they hatch an egg like a bird or chicken they hatch or they lay an egg and the egg hatches
00:05:08
and that's where the baby comes from so remember viviparous inside and oviparous in an egg okay
00:05:16
so remember how we separated different vertebrates into different categories let's talk about the
00:05:25
characteristics of one type of vertebrate, birds. So we talked about how humans, as mammals,
00:05:32
we have hair. So we have hair on our head, we have hair on our body. Birds don't have fur.
00:05:40
They don't have hair. Instead, on their bodies, they have feathers. This makes them lighter and
00:05:48
easier to fly. They also have wings so that they can fly. Humans don't have wings. Instead of a
00:05:55
mouth like humans have, birds have a beak. They have a beak and this makes it easier for them to
00:06:03
crack nuts and seeds to eat and also pick worms out of the ground depending on what type of bird
00:06:10
it is and what type of food they eat. Birds are oviparous so they lay eggs. They don't have their
00:06:16
babies inside. They lay an egg, the egg hatches, and then they have their baby.
00:06:23
Birds also have a tail. Humans don't have a tail. Birds have a tail and this makes
00:06:29
flying much easier for them. Okay, so that's enough animals for today. See you
00:06:36
later!
00:06:41
- Idioma/s:
- Idioma/s subtítulos:
- Autor/es:
- Kianna
- Subido por:
- Carmen Maria T.
- Licencia:
- Dominio público
- Visualizaciones:
- 128
- Fecha:
- 14 de enero de 2021 - 15:43
- Visibilidad:
- Público
- Centro:
- CP INF-PRI VALDERREY
- Duración:
- 06′ 42″
- Relación de aspecto:
- 1.78:1
- Resolución:
- 1920x1080 píxeles
- Tamaño:
- 728.53 MBytes