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Classification of Living Things

Amazingly, new species of plants and animals are being discovered every year. The ASU International Institute for Species Exploration has begun publishing a list of the top 10 new species to attract attention to the sciences of classification and taxonomy. Take a look at the Top 10 New Species for 2008.

The finds from last year include the world’s smallest snake and the world’s longest insect. I can see why we might miss a tiny snake, but an insect 22 inches long? I guess no one noticed because it looks like a stick. A new type of caffeine-free coffee plant was found too.

We humans tend to put things in groups. According to the most recent classification scheme for living things that most scientists use, there are five major groups, or kingdoms: Monera, Protista, Fungi, Plantae and Animalia. This chart explains what is found in each group.

Once the living thing is placed in a group with other similar living things, it is given a scientific name. This is the job of scientists called taxonomists. Because there are so many living things, taxonomists specialize on certain groups, for example beetles or ants.

According to Quentin Wheeler at Arizona State University, more than 50 new life forms are found every day. That means we are going to need scientists to classify living things for a long time to come.

Classification Activity for Children

Sorting is an important precursor for classification.

For young children gather anything that can be sorted and sort by any feature you can think of. My son learned his colors very early because one of his favorite games was sorting all his toys by color. You can sort by soft, shiny, hard, shapes, even by opposites. Have fun!

Later graduate to sorting various toy animals (start with vertebrates) by classes:  fish, birds, reptiles, amphibians and mammals. Add insects and spiders. You may also sort by other characteristics, such as carnivore (meat eater), herbivore (plant eater) or decomposer (eats dead plants). Make a box labeled with each characteristic or simply make heaps on the floor.

The guessing game “twenty questions” also can be modified to act like a classification key. Keys often use similar yes or no questions. Think of an object. Is it living or dead? Is it a plant? Is it a fish? Does it have big eyes?

To explore ways to classify things, have your children build their own classification scheme using objects from around the house. Fill a bag with items such as paper clips, balls, crayons, chalk, coins, pencils, safety pins, etc, etc. Ask them to group the objects. What characteristics did they use? Would the balls and coins go together because they are both round, or did the coins go with the safety pins because they were metal? Name the groups, and then come up with another system.

One of the fun parts of classification is that there aren’t any right answers, just best guesses.

Developing names for unknown living things can be fun too.

So what would you name this?

katydid nymph

Bug of the Week: Bee in Flight

Check out this unique slow motion video of a bee flying. Although the title says it is a bumble bee, it is actually a carpenter bee. Also, if an ad pops up the first time you view, simply close it and it shouldn’t show again.

Isn’t that incredible? Bees actually have four wings, but their wings hook together in flight, giving the appearance of only having 2. When the carpenter bee starts to turn, notice its wings separate on the right side.

Weekend Science Fun: Spider Webs

Summer is a great time to study spider webs. Some webs, such as those of the orb weaver spiders, are incredibly complex and beautiful.

The spider uses its spinnerets to produce the silk. In this video, they suggest that the spider rests so it can switch between non-silky silk and sticky silk production. Note: It has captions, so you can turn off the sound.

Activity:  Make a Spider Web

Gather:

  • Cardstock, poster board or a file folder
  • Yarn
  • Hole punch
  • Small spider clip art (optional)

Next, cut a square out of the cardstock. Make the size appropriate for the age of the children you are working with. Cut out the center of the square, leaving a frame about one inch wide. Cut holes in the frame with a hole punch. Now have the child weave a web by placing yarn through the holes.

For young children, this may be simply a lacing exercise. Encourage older children to create an art project. When they are done, leave a tail of yarn and tie or glue on a spider picture.

spider web activity for kids

For giant fun, place some kitchen chairs in a circle in an open area, hand the kids some skeins of yarn and let them connect the chairs with their own human-sized web. Note:  This project is loads of fun for the kids, but not always that fun to clean up. Be prepared with some scissors.

For more information about spiders, check the spiders category of this blog.

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