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Additional Search Results 1 - 4 of 4 for Bluebirds
1.   Teacher's guide - Lesson 7
Teacher's Guide Bugs, Beavers, Birch Trees, and Bluebirds GRADE LEVEL: K-4 SUBJECTS: Science, Art, Math, Language Arts SKILLS: observing, gathering information, reading, communication OBJECTIVE: Students will learn that in the forest, and in all of nature, there are millions of living things and that each one has a unique role to play. BACKGROUND: How many...

2.   What Do Trees Do for Dinner?
...e is available near the school, it is easy for the class to make real maple syrup. Detailed instructions can be found in Project Learning Tree from the National Forest Council, 1993. VOCABULARY: chlorophyll, photosynthesis, phloem, xylem, carbon dioxide Next lesson - Bugs, Beavers, Birch Trees, and Bluebirds Back to the Main Page

3.   Birds of a feather, an interdisciplinary unit: Math/Science wing
...ould observe the bird feeders over a period of five minutes and make a frequency table of the bird species observed. In our geographic area species will probably include cardinals, mourning doves, nuthatches, wrens, sparrows, finches, goldfinch, and hummingbirds. Other species might include robins, bluebirds, mockingbirds, and indigo buntings, but these are primarily insect eaters. Students will need some practice in identifying bird species. Teachers will want to be familiar with eating and migration habits of local birds. Basically all you need to know is what kinds of birds will be present in your ar...

4.   The Isle of Tam « Terrain for Schools Curriculum Guide, Spring 2001 « Ecology Center
...on jutting oak limbs to scan landscape for their prey. Sapsuckers and acorn woodpeckers drill for oak sap. Plain titmice tear apart oak galls (abnormal growths) to consume the insects within. Black-headed grosbeaks and acorn woodpeckers consume oak catkins during spring. During the winter, western bluebirds, phainopeplas, and cedar waxwings eat berries from the mistletoe, a plant that grows high in the oak canopies. The Dusky-footed woodrat and black bear rely upon acorns, as do raccoons, squirrels, gophers, mice, and mule deer. Open oak woodlands also support relatively high densities of lizard- and r...


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