The Philadelphia Zoo - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

The Philadelphia Zoo

Description:

Weighs up to 2,800 pounds . Neck is extremely long. Have two ... Gorillas have no tail. Gorillas range from 4.6-5.6 ft tall. Gorillas are mostly plant eating. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:48
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: PTB8
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The Philadelphia Zoo


1
The Philadelphia Zoo
  • A VIRTUAL FIELD TRIP

2
African Plains Animals
  • These animals all come from the plains of Africa
  • Antelope
  • Baboon
  • Cheetah
  • Gazelle
  • Giraffe
  • Rhinoceros
  • Zebra

3
Giraffe
  • Tallest land animal
  • Up to 19 feet tall
  • Weighs up to 2,800 pounds .
  • Neck is extremely long.
  • Have two short horns
  • Can see long distances.
  • Can run up to 35 mph
  • Eat mostly leaves, twigs and bark
  • Can go for days without water.

4
Zebra
  • Can run up to 40 mph
  • Live about 28 years. Zebras are closely related
    to horses and donkeys.
  • Live in large family groups which are led by
    females.
  • Distinctive white stripes on a black background.
  • Have hoofed feet.
  • Are over 4 feet tall and weigh over 600 pounds
  • Large eyes and ears
  • Eat grasses

5
Baboon
  • Largest type of monkey.
  • Noisy and ferocious
  • Lives in groups called
  • troops
  • Have a large, muscular
  • body
  • Gray to brown fur.
  • Weigh from 30 to 100
  • pounds
  • Eat both plants and meat.
  • When threatened it will run away or bark
    loudly and bare its large teeth.

6
Sable Antelope
  • Have hooves and horns.
  • Are swift runners and can also jump very well.
  • Can bounce with all four legs held in a stiff
    position
  • Have large eyes and ears
  • Eat plants
  • Swallow food whole, not chewing it initially.
    Later, they regurgitate a cud and chew it
    thoroughly.

7
Cheetah
  • The fastest land animal can run up to 65 miles
    per hour
  • Shy and are not very sociable with each other.
  • Live for about 8 years in the wild
  • Are a rich, tawny brown with dark spots.
  • Male are up to 7 feet long, and weigh up to 125
    pounds.
  • Have a long tail that lets them make very abrupt
    turns.
  • Meat-eaters

8
  • Kangaroo
  • Emu

9
Kangaroo
  • Can hop up to 40 miles per hour and go over 30
    feet in one hop.
  • Live about 6 years in the wild and up to 20 in
    captivity.
  • Are active at night.
  • Range in size from 2 pounds up to 6 ft and 300
    pounds.
  • Soft, woolly fur can be blue, grey, red, black,
    yellow or brown
  • Females have a pouch in which the young live
  • Plant-eaters eat grass, leaves, and roots.
  • They swallow their food without chewing it
  • Need little water they can go for months without
    drinking, and they dig their own water wells.

10
Emu
  • A large, flightless bird
  • Is very fast it can run up to 30 mph.
  • Swim very well. This huge bird lives in flocks.
  • Life span is 10-20 years.
  • Grow to be about 6 feet tall and weigh about 110
    pounds.
  • Are primarily plant-eaters.
  • Swallow small stones which stay in the gizzard
    and help grind up food.

11
Big Cat Falls
  • Lions
  • Tigers
  • Jaguars
  • Snow Leopards

12
Snow Leopard
  • Fast runners, good swimmers and excellent tree
    climbers..
  • Live up to 21 years in captivity.
  • Grow to be about 3.5-5.5 feet long the tail is
    2-3 feet long. Adults weigh from 65 to 175
    pounds. Males are larger than females.
  • Are meat-eaters.
  • They hunt mostly at night.

13
Tiger
  • Large, striped cat.
  • Can live to about 18 years in captivity
  • Mostly solitary, but sometimes travel in groups
    of 3 or 4.
  • Male tigers are up to 10 ft) long females are up
    to 9 ft long. The tail is about 3 feet long.
  • The fur is usually orange-brown with black
    stripes. The fur on the belly is white with black
    stripes.
  • Long, sharp teeth in powerful jaws.
  • A meat-eater.

14
Lions
  • Large cats that live on grassy plains (savannas)
    in Africa and a some grasslands of India.
  • Golden-colored
  • Grow to be up to 6 feet long and weigh up to 420
    pounds.
  • Live for about 15 years in the wild.
  • Live in groups, called "prides."
  • The females do most of the hunting
  • Lions are more active at night.
  • Hunt large animals.

15
Jaguar
  • Live in rain forests, swamps, deserts, and
    shrubby areas from South and Central America.
  • They are very good swimmers.
  • Grow to be about 4-6 feet long the tail is 2-3
    feet long.
  • Bigger than leopards,
  • Are meat-eaters
  • They hunt mostly at night.

16
Bear Country
  • Black Bear
  • Polar Bear

17
Polar Bear
  • Large, meat-eating bears
  • Are powerful swimmers who hunt seals in the
    water.
  • Polar bears can run in bursts up to 25 mph.
  • Are up to 10 feet long and weigh about 1,700
    pounds
  • Polar Bears have two types of fur. They have
    thick, woolly fur close to the skin that keeps
    them warm. They also have hollow guard hairs that
    stick up and protect the bears from getting wet.
  • Polar Bears have black skin. They also have a
    thick layer of fat (up to 4 inches thick) under
    the skin that helps keep them warm.
  • Polar Bears live in icy Arctic areas of Alaska,
    Canada, Greenland, Norway, and Russia. They spend
    much of their time swimming in frigid seas.
  • Polar Bears are meat-eaters
  • Stomach can hold up to 150 pounds.
  • Polar bears don't drink water.

18
Black Bear
  • Are large, mostly harmless bears that live mostly
    in forests, but also in swamps and desert scrub.
    These solitary mammals are found across North
    America.
  • Up to 6 feet long and weigh up to 300 pounds.
  • Their long, thick fur ranges in color from black
    to brown.
  • They are flat-footed. The front claws are longer
    than the rear claws.
  • Black Bears are good swimmers and can also climb
    trees. They have a good sense of smell but have
    poor eyesight.
  • Two to three cubs are born during the winter
    while the mother hibernates. Cubs stay with the
    mother for about one year.
  • Eat plants, leaves, fruits, berries, nuts, roots,
    honey, insects, and other small mammals.

19
Birds
20
Pachyderm House
  • Elephants
  • Rhinoceros
  • Hippopotamus

21
Elephant
  • The largest living land animal.
  • Live in family groups headed by a female (called
    a cow). Males (called bulls) occasionally join
    the group.
  • Elephants are excellent swimmers.
  • About 10 feet tall, and weigh roughly 6 tons.
  • Have tusks (large, pointed ivory teeth).
  • They have wrinkled, gray-brown skin that is
    almost hairless.
  • Have large ears that are shaped like the
    continent of Africa.
  • Breathe through two nostrils at the end of their
    trunk. The trunk is also used to get water and
    food.
  • Elephants eat roots, grasses, leaves, fruit, and
    bark. They use their tusks and trunk to get food.
    They spend most of their time eating.
  • Bulls can eat up to 300-600 pounds of food each
    day.

22
Rhinoceros
  • A large, fast moving mammal
  • Thick skin and one or two nose horns.
  • Horn(s) are made from a hairlike substance that
    grows throughout the rhino's life. If the horn is
    broken off, it will grow back. They can grow from
    1 to 3 inches each year. The longest-known rhino
    horn was over 5 feet long!
  • Are from 3 1/2 feet to 6 1/2 tall at the
    shoulder
  • Weigh from 2,400 to 5,000 pounds.
  • Are plant-eaters who graze on grass and other
    plant material.

23
Hippopotamus
  • Have a life span of 40 years.
  • Are plant-eaters who spend most of the day
    resting in water.
  • Can stay underwater for up to 5 to 6 minutes.
  • They are most active at night
  • About 4.5 feet high at the shoulder and about 13
    feet.
  • It has an almost hairless body, a huge mouth and
    canine teeth up that are to 28 inches long.
  • Weigh up to 10,000 pounds.
  • The enormous mouth can open 4 feet wide.
  • Have unusual pores on their body which exude a
    thick, oily, pink sweat.
  • Baby hippos weigh 60-110 pounds at birth.

24
Primate Reserve
  • Gorilla
  • Orangutan

Philadelphia Zoo
25
Orangutan
  • Large, intelligent, apes.
  • Live in trees and swing from branch to branch
    using their arms.
  • Have a large, bulky body, a large head, a thick
    neck, very long, strong arms, short, bowed legs,
    and no tail.
  • They are mostly covered with long reddish-brown
    hair.
  • Hands are very much like ours
  • They vary from 2.6 - 4.5 ft tall.
  • Eat both plants and animals but eat mostly
    plants.
  • They drink water that has collected in the holes
    between tree branches

26
Gorilla
  • Large, quiet, shy apes that live in Africa.
  • Live in small groups of 6-7 individuals,
    including one silverback (adult male), a few
    females, and their young.
  • Have very long arms (the arms are longer than the
    legs), and a short, bulky body with a wide chest.
  • They are covered with brownish hair on most of
    their body
  • Have a very large head with a bulging forehead, a
    crest on top (larger on males), tiny ears, and
    small, dark-brown eyes.
  • Gorillas have no tail.
  • Gorillas range from 4.6-5.6 ft tall.
  • Gorillas are mostly plant eating.
  • An average adult male eats about 50 pounds of
    food a day.
  • They rarely drink water.

27
Reptile and Amphibian House
  • Crocodile
  • Tortoise

28
Tortoise
  • Are reptiles.
  • Have a hard shell protecting their body.
  • Some live on land, others spend most of their
    lives in the seas, returning to the shore only to
    reproduce.
  • Hatch from eggs there is no parental care.
  • Many turtles can retract their head, 4 limbs, and
    tail into the shell for protection.
  • They have a beak but no teeth, and no external
    ears, just two small holes on the sides of the
    head.

29
Crocodile
  • A large, very rare, shy reptile.
  • It has a long, tapered, triangular-shaped snout.
  • Swim very well, mainly using their tails, but
    also using their webbed feet.
  • They live along the coast of Florida, Central
    America, and parts of South America.
  • Are gray-green, dark olive, or grayish-brown on
    their back which has ridged, bony scales. The
    belly is yellow to white and has smooth scales.
  • They grow up to 15 feet long.
  • The fourth tooth on either side of the lower jaw
    is exposed.
  • They have 66 teeth.
  • Are meat-eaters. They eat fish and other animals
    that they find in or near the water, including
    turtles, snakes, crustaceans (like crabs), small
    mammals, and birds.
  • They hunt mostly at night.

30
Happy Hunting!!!
  • How many of these animals can you find on your
    trip?
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com