Difference between revisions of "AY Honors/Animal Camouflage"
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Revision as of 01:54, 9 February 2021
Animal Camouflage | |
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Nature | |
Skill Level 123 | |
Approval authority North American Division | Year of Introduction 2015 |
See also |
AY Honors/Animal Camouflage/Overview
The most challenging requirement of this honor is probably this:
4. Do three of the following projects:
- a. Create a game based on animal camouflage and play it with a group.
- b. Write and tell a children’s story with an animal camouflage theme.
- c. Create a poster or display showing at least four different environments with animals that might be camouflaged in each.
- d. Create a display of pictures you have taken or drawn of 5 different animals in camouflage.
- e. Spend a minimum of ½ hour observing an animal which uses camouflage (in its natural setting, if possible) and write a report on your observations.
- f. Create a children’s book with illustrations about animal camouflage.
- g. Participate in a panel discussion about the use of animal camouflage giving specific examples and details and type of hiding it uses.
- h. Create a scale model creative animal and habitat showing how it can hide in nature.
- i. Make a scrapbook of the four animal camouflage types (see #3) and pictures of five animals in each of those types.
- j. Using multi-media, create a presentation about animal camouflage.
- k. Create your own project (submit it for approval from your Club Director before starting).
1. Define the following terms as related to animals hiding in nature.
- a. Camouflage
- b. Adaptation
2. Explain the purpose of animal camouflage.
3. Describe and give an example of each of the following types of animal camouflage:
- a. Concealing coloration
- b. Disguise
- c. Mimicry
- d. Disruptive coloration
4. Do three of the following projects:
- a. Create a game based on animal camouflage and play it with a group.
- b. Write and tell a children’s story with an animal camouflage theme.
- c. Create a poster or display showing at least four different environments with animals that might be camouflaged in each.
- d. Create a display of pictures you have taken or drawn of 5 different animals in camouflage.
- e. Spend a minimum of ½ hour observing an animal which uses camouflage (in its natural setting, if possible) and write a report on your observations.
- f. Create a children’s book with illustrations about animal camouflage.
- g. Participate in a panel discussion about the use of animal camouflage giving specific examples and details and type of hiding it uses.
- h. Create a scale model creative animal and habitat showing how it can hide in nature.
- i. Make a scrapbook of the four animal camouflage types (see #3) and pictures of five animals in each of those types.
- j. Using multi-media, create a presentation about animal camouflage.
- k. Create your own project (submit it for approval from your Club Director before starting).
5. Discover how Satan uses disguise to deceive people and Jesus’ plan of redemption. Include the following passages in your discussion. Portray your findings in a skit, play or puppet show.
- a. Genesis 3 (Temptation in the Garden)
- b. Chapters 2 & 3 in Patriarchs and Prophets
1
1a
The method of concealing by making it appear to be a part of the natural surroundings by color or shape in the animal’s body. Camouflage works for both predator and prey: to avoid being found and eaten or to keep from being seen by prey until too late. The sea horse’s body mimics the shape, colors and texture of the coral in its habitat. A slender stick insect looks just like a tall blade of grass or twig, leafy sea dragon looks just like seaweed, leaf insect looks like a dying leaf, The tiger swallowtail caterpillar has two eyespots on its wings that makes it look like a snake’s head. The snowshoe hare changes colors with the seasons and the octopus and gecko change colors with their surroundings.
1b
Adaptation is how animals adjust to their surroundings so they can find food, escape danger, defend themselves and their young, or adjust their bodies to hot or cold temperatures or loss of habitat. Adaptation includes the ability of an animal to hide itself from predator and prey because of behavioral or physical characteristics of an animal example: holding still like a log so an alligator is not spotted, the opossum playing dead, the armadillo that rolls up into a ball, having a tail that breaks off as in the gecko, having a tail look like it’s head as in the rubber boa. Long legs and sharp beaks of birds, the Mountain goat’s foot, the Camel’s ability to go without water for long periods. Adaptation can also refer to color changes from season to season as in the snowshoe hare and the arctic fox. Adaptation is the ability to store food within their bodies like bears do for hibernation, the fur on a fox’s tail is thick in winter to provide extra warmth and prevent it from freezing, Blubber on Walrus. Body parts such as the large ears of the Fennec Fox allow heat to escape its body and help it stay cool; the darkling beetle tilts its body forward and allows the dew droplets on its back to fall into its mouth. Adaptation to dark such as bats, moles, and fish that live deep in the ocean.
2
Camouflage protects the animal from predators and helps predators to hunt without being seen. Camouflage is a way to protect the young animals from being seen so they might grow up.
3
3a
Concealing coloration is an animal's ability to use color to hide its presence by visually blending into its surroundings.
- Deer: deer species are often two toned, with a lighter underside that helps them blend into the landscape. It is often hard to spot a deer that is not moving.
- Sharks and dolphins: some species are dark on top and light on the bottom. From the top the shark blends with the dark water, but viewed from the bottom the shark does not contrast so much with the light filtering down from the sun. This helps them reduce being spotted by predator and prey.
- Snowshoe Hare: they turn white during the winter to blend in with the snow.
- Octopi:
- Chameleon: they adapt their color to the surrounding background.
3b
Animals looking like or imitating other animals that their enemies would overlook or never eat. This can be easily confused with concealing coloration because, though the animal does blend in with its background, there is more to it than that. In disguise camouflage, the animal has the shape and color of something else. The Leafy Sea Dragon avoids notice by camouflaging itself as a piece of seaweed. The Javanese leaf insect is an amazing imitation of a real leaf. The Thorn bugs look like thorns on a rose plant. The Stick insect looks like a stick.
3c
In mimicry camouflage, an animal looks like some other animal as a form of protection.
- Jumping Spider
- Clearwing Moth
- Cockroach
- King snake
3d
In disruptive coloration, spots, strips or even patches are used to conceal an animal’s presence.
- Zebra
- Tiger
- Fawn
4
This honor offers a wide variety of ways to explore the topic independently in various learning styles that different Pathfinders will enjoy. Encourage creativity and digging deeper for the how and why of different animal camouflage strategies. We suggest looking at the Advanced Honor for additional ideas and information that can be included to make your projects more interesting.
4a
4b
Get a requirement done for the Christian Storytelling honor while you do this. Also see the last requirement for a good idea to incorporate a spiritual message into the story.
4c
4d
These should be your pictures, perhaps taken during the zoo visit or out in nature, not some photos you found on the internet.
4e
While this is ideally done in a natural environment, you will be able to observe many animals, reptiles and other creatires that use camouflage by visiting a zoo. While at the zoo you can take pictures, video, and gather useful information for completing several of the other optional projects in this honor.
If you are planning to visit a zoo or aquarium, be aware that there are various honors that have requirements which can be met by visiting a zoo or aquarium. Individuals can work on multiple honors in one visit, or parts of your group may work on different honors during the same visit.
Here is a list of honors which have requirements that can be met by visiting a zoo or aquarium:
4f
For a very professional looking book you could use a photobook creation website. Put your book together and then order it. What a nice keepsake of your honor completion.
4g
This option is only meaningful if you prepare ahead of time. No one wants to listen to an uninformed person on an 'expert' panel. One way to do this is assign a broad habitat (desert, jungle, plains) for each panel member to research, then have a moderator ask questions about types of camo and classes of animals. The panel members each then discuss examples of how that type of camouflage is used in the assigned habitat or how various animals have been designed to fit into the environment. It is perfectly acceptable and perhaps preferred to prewrite the questions and give them to the panel members before they do the research. Panel members might prepare photos to project or display (fulfilling other options too) during the discussion.
4h
4i
Some Pathfinders combine this requirement with the Scrapbooking honor requirements helping to earn two honors at once for the project.
4j
This is a great opportunity to complete one of the requirements in the Computers - Advanced honor. You might use photos you took during a zoo visit.
4k
The project should require effort at least equal to the other options. A small website or several good blog posts might be a good example.
5
5a
5b
You can read chapter 2 online here and chapter 3 here, or get the book in any SDA church or school library.
You might want to work on the Christian Drama or Puppetry honor while doing this requirement. The spiritual topic is also excellent to work in to the children's story and some of the other optional projects above.
References
Content on this wiki is generated by people like you, and no one has created a lesson plan for this honor yet. You could do that and make the world a better place.
See AY Honors/Model Lesson Plan if you need ideas for creating one.
- Pages using DynamicPageList3 parser function
- AY Honors/Zoo visit
- Adventist Youth Honors Answer Book/Do at home
- AY Honors/Lesson Plans
- AY Honors/Needs Lesson Plan
- AY Honors/Honors with an Advanced Option
- Has insignia image
- AY Honors/Honor landing
- AY Honors/Nature
- AY Honors/Introduced in 2015
- AY Honors/Skill Level 1
- AY Honors/Approved by North American Division