Ontario Teachers' Manuals: Nature Study Part 20
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It will be found helpful, both for increasing interest in the observations and for fixing the facts in memory, to study an animal by comparing its habits, qualities, and physical peculiarities with those of another animal which is somewhat similar. Where differences are discovered, explanations of the differences should be developed in such a way that a tendency may be cultivated for interpreting the adaptation of structure to use and of life habits to surrounding conditions.
CAT AND DOG
Compare the movement of a cat when approaching its prey with the movement of the dog when chasing a squirrel.
Account for the difference.
The natural habit of the cat is to hunt alone and rely upon stealth, while dogs hunt in packs and tire their prey by running and by terrifying noises.
Other differences and their explanations, which the pupils should be led to discover are:
The dog is a more useful animal to man than is the cat.
The cat's body is longer and more slender, and this gives it greater suppleness in crawling and leaping.
The cat's eye is larger and the pupil is especially large at night, to enable it to see.
The cat's whiskers are longer; they help in guiding it at night.
The cat's tongue is rougher; it uses it for cleaning bones.
The pads on the cat's feet are softer, so that it can move more silently in stealing upon its prey.
The cat's claws are sharper, because it uses them for seizing its prey, while the dog seizes its prey with its teeth.
The dog is more faithful to its master because it is a more sociable animal. In its natural state every dog is faithful to the pack and to the leader; the cat is not a social animal, but is by nature solitary and independent.
The dog's sense of smell is keener than that of the cat, but its sense of hearing is less acute. Account for these differences from the animals' habits of hunting. Why does the cat bring home living animals to her kittens, while the dog buries dead animals? The cat trains the kittens to approach by stealth and then to pounce on the right spot.
Wild animals related to the dog bury the "kill" which is too large to be eaten at one meal.
EXPERIMENTS FOR a.s.sISTING IN THE STUDY OF THE CAT
1. Gently scratch with a pin at some distance from where a cat is lying.
What do the movements of the cat indicate?
2. Put a fish in water and watch a cat trying to get it.
3. Sprinkle water on a cat's fur and find out why she dislikes being wetted.
4. Attach a ball to a string and move it near a cat. Describe the movements, as stalking, springing, seizing, retreating.
5. Put some catnip in a room out of reach of the cat and observe the movements of the animal.
Nearly all children make pets of the house cat, and although the cat is a domestic animal of thieving propensities and an enemy of birds, yet it would be unwise to teach the younger children any enmity toward her.
The establishment of sympathy with animal life, the humanizing effect upon child nature of having a kitty for a playfellow, will offset many times over the amount of depredation of which she may be guilty.
COMPARISON OF THE HORSE AND COW
a.s.sign problems for the pupils to solve by observations made upon the animals in the field or farmyard.
1. What features of build give to the horse greater speed than the cow?
2. Compare the movements of the heads of the horse and cow while cropping gra.s.s. Account for the difference.
3. How has nature fitted the cow and the horse respectively, for defence?
4. Which end of the body does the horse raise first when it is getting up? Which end of its body does the cow raise first? Account for the difference.
_To the teacher._--The horse is the swifter and more graceful runner because the body is less bulky and the legs are longer and straighter.
In cropping gra.s.s the cow pushes its nose forward and breaks the gra.s.s off, a process which is made necessary because the cow has no upper front teeth. The strong, sharp horns, short, powerful neck, and heavy shoulders are an efficient equipment for the cow's method of defence, while the long, strong legs and powerful hindquarters of the horse enable it to deal terrific blows with its hard hoofs. The horse rises upon its forelegs before raising the rear of its body, while the cow raises its hindquarters first.
THE SQUIRREL
FIELD EXERCISES
~Problems~:
Is it true that squirrels have little roads along the ground?
Does the squirrel come down a tree head foremost, or tail foremost?
Are a squirrel's feet close together or wide apart when it is climbing?
How many kinds of feeling can a squirrel express by its voice?
How does a squirrel open a nut?
Examine a squirrel's tracks in the snow; which foot-prints are in front?
Try to gain the confidence of a squirrel by never chasing it and by placing some favourite food for it.
CLa.s.s-ROOM LESSON
A tame squirrel is very desirable for concrete study.
Describe the shape, size, and colour.
Find out how the legs and feet are fitted for climbing and leaping.
Compare the length of the tail with that of the body. Of what use is the tail in cold weather? Of what use is the tail in leaping?
Examine the teeth and find out how they are fitted for opening nuts; gnawing wood.
_To the teacher._--The legs of the squirrel are short so that it can press its body close to the tree when climbing. The claws are strong and sharp and the hindquarters are very strong, and are, in consequence, well fitted for leaping. The tail of the squirrel is very long and bushy and serves as a fur for keeping the squirrel's nose warm in winter. The tail is also used for balancing the body when the animal is leaping from bough to bough.
The front teeth of the squirrel are very large and strong and are shaped like chisels.
Ontario Teachers' Manuals: Nature Study Part 20
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