SCIENCE FORM 2



















Mammals and birds are warm-blooded, which means that they can make their own body heat even when it is cold outside. Whether it is sunny and hot outside or there is a snowstorm and it is very cold, warm-blooded animals have body temperatures that usually stay the same




Cold-blooded animals, like reptiles, amphibians, and fish, become hotter and colder, depending on the the temperature outside. For example, when the sun sets at night, their bodies are cooler because it is less warm outside. When the sun is out, however, their bodies soak up the heat and become warmer



Reproduction (Baby animals!)

Another difference is the way animals give birth to their young (babies)


Amphibians lay thousands and sometimes millions of small, soft eggs, and they lay them in the water! The eggs are jelly-like. 

Amphibian means "double life"... the early part of an amphibian's life is spent in the water, and usually as they get older then they also spend time on land. Think of a tadpole turning into a frog!!


The process amphibians go through is called "metamorphosis". Baby amphibian looks completely different than the adult amphibians!

Birds also lay eggs, with a very hard outer shell. Birds generally lay 1 to 17 eggs at a time


Fish also lay many many eggs - sometimes millions of tiny eggs! They are also laid in the water
 Most baby mammals grow inside their mother until they are born. This is something that makes mammals different, because most other kinds of animals do something else...


Another important characteristic is that mammal babies drink milk from their mothers until they are old enough to eat other food.

You may have seen this with mammals and their babies - including humans,
who are also mammals!

Reptiles usually lay eggs, and the babies then grow inside the egg until they are ready to come out. 
Sometimes reptiles will give birth like mammals, without eggs






WATER AND SOLUTION

NEUTRALISATION
neutralisation is a reaction between acid and alkali to produce salt and water..







AIR PRESSURE

1. Visit this site to learn how spray bottles pump out liquids.
2. Visit this website to find out how to get the egg into a bottle.

kids.earth.nasa.gov/archive/air_pressure/index.html  
www.fatlion.com/science/airpressure.html
www.uwsp.edu/geo/faculty/ritter/geog101/textbook/circulation/air_pressure_p_1.html
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siphon 













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