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Cards (32)

  • Roles of Living Things in The Environment
    • Producer
    • Consumers
    • Decomposers
    • Scavengers
  • Producer
    Living things that can make their own food
  • Producer
    • plants
  • Consumers
    Living things that cannot make their own food
  • Consumers
    • human being
    • animals
    • carnivorous plants
  • Decomposers
    Living things that get food by breaking down dead matter and animal wastes into mineral salts, water, and carbon dioxide
  • Decomposers
    • fungi
    • bacteria
  • Scavengers
    Living things that get food by biting and breaking up dead organism into smaller pieces
  • Scavengers
    • Vultures
  • Food Chain
    Explains which organism eats another organism in the environment. It begins with producer organism.
  • Food Web
    A living thing usually eats more than one type of food. It can also be eaten by more than one type of living thing. So, a living thing can belong to more than one food chain.
  • Classifying living things
    • Herbivore
    • Carnivore
    • Omnivore
  • Herbivore
    Living things that get their energy from plants they eat
  • Herbivore
    • Rabit
    • monkey
  • Carnivore
    Living things that get their energy from animals they eat
  • Carnivore
    • Frog
    • iguana
    • python
    • jaguar
  • Omnivore
    Living things that get their energy from plants and animals they eat
  • Omnivore
    • Fruit bat
    • parrot
  • Competition
    A type of feeding relationship in which one animal and others have to fight for getting the same food, water, space, or other resources
  • Competition
    • Monkey and Fruit Bat
  • Predation
    A type of feeding relationship in which one animal captures and feeds on another animal. The animal that hunts and kills another animal for food is called predator. The animal that is killed and eaten is called the prey.
  • Predation
    • Tiger (predator) and Deer (prey)
  • Parasitism
    A relationship between two species where one, parasite, benefits from the relationship. The other species, host, gets harmed in such a relationship.
  • Parasitism
    • Fleas (parasite) and Monkey (host)
  • Mutualism
    A relationship between two species in which both of them benefit from each other.
  • Mutualism
    • Aphid and Ant
  • Commensalism
    A relationship between two species in which one species benefits while the other neither benefits nor suffers any harm.
  • Commensalism
    • Barnacles and Whales
  • Memasuki Garis Finis dengan Membusungkan Dada
  • Memasuki Garis Finis dengan Terus Berlari
  • TOLAK PELURU
    Cabang
    atletik olahraga yang berbentuk
    gerakan
    menolak atau mendorong suatu
    peluru yang terbuat dari
    logam
    dan
    dilakukan dari bahu dengan satu tangan untuk mencapai jarak sejauh-jauhnya
  • Tujuan tolak peluru adalah untuk mencapai tolakan
    yang sejauh-jauhnya.
    Sesuai
    dengan namanya tolak bukan dilempar, tetapi ditolak atau didorong dengan tangan satu yang diletakkan di pangkal bahu