Reading Essentials Grade 5 Answer Key

Chapter 1Cells and Kingdoms

Lesson 1Cells

Read a Photo: Unicellular and Multicellular Organisms

The frog is multicellular (as is the inset photo of frog cells). (p. 3)

Read a Diagram: Plant Cell

chloroplast, cell wall (p. 6)

Quick Check

1. cell (p. 3)

2. another cell (p. 3)

3. unicellular (p. 3)

4. multicellular (p.3)

5. Possible answers: controls what enters and leaves cell; protects the cell; gives the cell shape (p. 5)

6. supports cell parts (p. 5)

7. controls cell’s actions (p. 5)

8. break down food and release energy for the cell to use (p. 5)

9. b

10. c

11. a

Lesson 2Classifying Life

Read a Chart: Classification of Horses

Kingdom (p. 9)

Read a Graph: Number of Animal Species

Arthropods (p. 11)

Quick Check

12. phylum (p. 9)

13. class (p. 9)

14. species (p. 9)

15. Possible answers: humans, cats, dogs, mice, snakes (p. 11)

16. Possible answers: clams, snails, sea stars (p. 11)

17. Possible answer: plants: cell wall (p. 13)

18. Possible answer: plants: make food (p. 13)

19. Possible answer: fungi: cell wall (p. 13)

20. Possible answer: fungi: must get food from other organisms (p. 13)

21. Bacteria can cause disease. (p. 14)

22. Bacteria help break down food that we eat. (p. 14)

23. virus (p. 15)


Lesson 3Plants

Read a Diagram: Soft and Woody Stems

xylem (p. 19)

Read a Diagram: Transport in Plants

the roots (p. 21)

Quick Check

24. Students should check all. (p. 17)

25. Students should check gymnosperms and angiosperms only. (p. 17)

26. Students should check seedless only. (p. 17)

27. Students should check angiosperms only. (p. 17)

28. grows deep in ground (p. 18)

29. doesn’t touch the ground (p. 18)

30. woody (p. 19)

31. soft (p. 19)

32. sunlight, water, and carbon dioxide (p. 21)

33. They eat plants and get the energy that is stored in the plants. (p. 23)

Lesson 4Classifying Animals

Read a Photo: Arthropods

ladybug (the photo on the right) (p. 27)

Read a Photo: Birds and Reptiles

The bird uses wings to move. The reptile uses legs. (p. 29)

Quick Check

34. Possible answers: worms, cnidarians, sponges (or porifera) (p. 25)

35. Possible answers: any snail, clam, or squid (p. 27)

36. Possible answers: sea stars, sea cucumbers (p. 27)

37. Possible answers: any insect, spider, or crab (p. 27)

38. keep warm (p. 29)

39. feathers (p. 29)

40. Possible answers: duck-billed platypus, spiny anteater (p. 31)

41. Possible answers: koala, kangaroo (p. 31)

42. Possible answers: tiger, giraffe, human, dog, elephant, whale (p. 31)


Lesson 5Animal Systems

Read a Diagram: Digestive and Excretory Systems

Esophagus (p. 33)

Read a Diagram: Circulation and Respiration

in the lungs/alveoli (p. 35)

Quick Check

43. protects organs (p. 32)

44. supports the body (p. 32)

45. b

46. a

47. F

48. T


Chapter 1: Vocabulary Review

1. species (p. 38)

2. unicellular (p. 38)

3. organism (p. 38)

4. angiosperm (p. 38)

5. multicellular (p. 38)

6. nonvascular (p. 38)

7. cell (p. 38)

8. xylem (p. 38)

9. organ (p. 38)

10. d (p. 38)

11. b (p. 38)

12. c (p. 38)

13. a (p. 38)

1. tissue (p. 39)

2. chlorophyll (p. 39)

3. organism (p. 39)

4. vascular (p. 39)

5. cell (p. 39)

N Q B I M L S F T U W K C

H V N D M W E S X T R F T

B A V V U Q W T I K I N I

G B A G B D A W Y T I C S

Z E S U C N N H Y K E I S

V N C E L E V L Z Y J L U

T H U K P B L F C C N J E

O I L J X M Q L D M T W Y

L S A A Q T D W E A U P A

A L R S O R G A N I S M C

A R O I C X V W I R C M V

E K D L Y H F J Z W N N L

G A C H L O R O P H Y L L

Summarize

All living things are made of cells. They can be classified into six kingdoms. Plants make their own food through photosynthesis. Animals can be classified based on form, structure, and behavior. In some animals, body systems work together to allow the body to move, get energy, and respond to the world.

Chapter 2Parents and Offspring

Lesson 1Reproduction

Read a Photo: Strawberry Reproduction

The new plant is attached by a runner. (p. 44)

Read a Photo: Variation

Their coloring is not identical to either one of their parents’. (p. 45)

Quick Check

1. sexual (p. 43)

2. asexual (p. 43)

3. splitting, budding, vegetative propagation (p. 44)

4. It allows for differences in species. (p. 45)

Lesson 2Plant Life Cycles

Read a Diagram: Fern Life Cycle

a new fern plant (p. 47)

Read a Chart: Types of Flowers

perfect/incomplete flower (p. 49)

Quick Check

5. Spores are carried by the wind. (p. 46)

6. spores (p. 47)

7. asexual reproduction (p. 47)

8. stamen; pistil (p. 49)

9. bees and other animals, wind (p. 51)

10. embryo, cotyledon, seed coat (p. 52)

11. monocot (p. 53)

12. dicot (p. 53)

13. dicot (p. 53)

14. pine tree (p. 55)

15. angiosperm (p. 55)

Lesson 3Animal Life Cycles

Read a Diagram: Complete and Incomplete Metamorphosis

complete metamorphosis (p. 57)

Read a Photo: Comparing Eggs

frog eggs (p. 59)

Quick Check

16. egg, larva, pupa, adult (p. 57)

17. internal (p. 58)

18. external (p. 58)

19. A reptile embryo gets food from the yolk. (p. 59)

Lesson 4Traits and Heredity

Read a Diagram: Pea Crossing

Any flower with a capital P will have purple flowers (because P is dominant). (p. 62)

Read a Chart: Pedigree Chart

Both sons show the dominate trait. (p. 63)

Quick Check

20. instinct (p. 61)

21. inherited (p. 61)

22. chromosomes (p. 62)

22. lowercase (p. 62)

24. to learn about heredity patterns (p. 63)


Chapter 2: Vocabulary Review

1. b (p. 64)

2. a (p. 64)

3. c (p. 64)

4. d (p. 64)

5. a (p. 64)

6. c (p. 64)

Page 65

Across

4. larva (p. 65)

5. gene (p. 65)

6. instinct (p. 65)

8. embryo (p. 65)

Down

1. pupa (p. 65)

2. pollen (p. 65)

3. heredity (p. 65)

7. nymph (p. 65)

Summarize

All living things come from other living things. The life cycles of plants and animals involve different stages of development. Plants and animals have a number of ways to reproduce and to make sure that their offspring survive. Traits are passed from parents to offspring. Traits control how organisms look and how they act.


Chapter 3Interactions in Ecosystems

Lesson 1Energy Flow in Ecosystems

Read a Photo: Forest Ecosystem

Nonliving things include water, rocks, soil, sunlight, and air. (p. 69)

Read a Diagram: Forest and Salt Marsh Food Web

mouse, bird, fish (p. 72)

Quick Check

1. biotic factors (p. 69)

2. abiotic factors (p. 69)

3. population (p. 69)

4. b (p. 71)

5. c (p. 71)

6. a (p. 71)

7. F (p. 73)

8. T (p. 73)

9. plants (p. 74)

10. In order, top to bottom: 3, 1, 4, 2, 5 (p. 75)

Lesson 2Relationships in Ecosystems

Read a Photo: Hawaiian Honeycreepers

The akiapolaau has a sharp curved beak to pick insects out of bark.

The apapane has a long, thin beak to sip nectar from flowers. (p. 79)

Read a Photo: Ray and Remoras

Possible answers: The ray is giving them a ride, protecting them from predators, and letting them eat scraps of food the ray hunts. (p. 80)

Quick Check

11. Possible answers: food, water, space, rainfall, temperature, soil type, shelter (p. 77)

12. competition (p. 79)

13. niche (p. 79)

14. ants and acacia (p. 80)

15. ray and remoras (p. 80)

16. parasites; harm (p. 81)


Lesson 3Adaptation and Survival

Read a Diagram: Orchid Adaptations

They absorb water from the air. (p. 84)

Read a Photo: Snake Mimicry

They are the same colors. They both have stripes. (p. 87)

Quick Check

17. webbed feet (p. 83)

18. waxy outer covering (p. 83)

19. orchid (p. 85)

20. milkweed (p. 85)

21. water lily (p. 85)

22. oak tree (p. 85)

23. Many desert animals are active at night because temperatures are much cooler at night than during the day. (p. 86)

24. Answers will vary. Sample answer: Pipefish resemble sea grass in its environment. (p. 86)

25. monarch butterfly (p. 87)

26. coral snake (p. 87)

27. worm (p. 87)


Chapter 3: Vocabulary Review

1. ecosystem (p. 88)

2. symbiosis (p. 88)

3. food chain (p. 88)

4. adaptation (p. 88)

5. population (p. 88)

6. community (p. 88)

7. camouflage (p. 88)

R E T A E O L O P K C L L

I I P S Y M B I O S I S R

V E H W E S H S P F M T W

M N S A E N O P U A E S T

D U H O E G S M L G D N O

Y S F O O D C H A I N H N

S X N R A F Q L T I E B W

S E A C R R F E I J W S Z

H D E J L U S Z O P O K B

E X P C O M M U N I T Y R

H B E M Y Q M O B S E A B

A D A P T A T I O N T K J

E C O S Y S T E M E B G R

1. e (p. 89)

2. f (p. 89)

3. c (p. 89)

4. a (p. 89)

5. b (p. 89)

6. d (p. 89)

7. parasitism (p. 89)

8. energy pyramid (p. 89)

9. mimicry (p. 89)

Summarize

An ecosystem is all the living and nonliving things in an environment. Energy flows in an ecosystem through food chains, food webs, and energy pyramids. Organisms in an ecosystem compete for food, space, and other resources. Organisms have adaptations that help them survive in their environments.


Chapter 4Ecosystems and Biomes

Lesson 1Cycles in Ecosystems

Read a Diagram: Water Cycle

evaporation, transpiration (p. 93)

Read a Diagram: Carbon Cycle

People in the house will burn the oil for heat or power. (p. 95)

Quick Check

1. condensation (p. 93)

2. precipitation (p. 93)

3. T (p. 95)

4. F (p. 95)

5. T (p. 95)

6. compost (p. 97)

7. renewable resources (p. 97)

8. nitrogen (p. 97)

9. nonrenewable resources (p. 97)

Lesson 2Changes in Ecosystems

Read a Photo: Beaver Dams

Possible answer: Its dam will create new habitats and food supplies for other animals. (p. 99)

Read a Diagram: Stages of Primary Succession

pioneer community, intermediate community, climax community (p. 103)

Quick Check

10. Possible answer: The reef becomes a new habitat for other organisms.
(p. 99)

11. Possible answer: New habitats are formed. (p. 99)

12. extinct (p. 101)

13. endangered (p. 101)

14. In order, top to bottom: 5, 2, 4, 1, 3 (p. 103)

15. secondary (p. 105)

16. weeds (p. 105)

17. hardwood (p. 105)

18. climax (p. 105)


Lesson 3Biomes

Read a Map: Global Biomes

South America (p. 106)

Read a Photo: Rain Forests

Possible answers: The tropical rainforest has a waterfall and trees full of leaves. The temperate rain forest has more open space, trees with fewer branches, and more plants growing right on other plants. (p. 110)

Quick Check

19. habitats (p. 107)

20. biomes (p. 107)

21. rainfall (p. 107)

22. cold (p. 107)

23. tundra (p. 109)

24. taiga (p. 109)

25. tundra (p. 109)

26. tundra (p. 109)

27. The trees lose their leaves during cool weather. (p. 110)

28. Possible answers: corn, wheat, oats (p. 111)

29. Possible answers: bison, grasshoppers, crickets, butterflies, toads, worms, insects, mice, prairie dogs, snakes, birds (p. 111)

Lesson 4Water Ecosystems

Read a Diagram: Freshwater Zones

open water, shallow water, bottom (p. 115)

Read a Diagram: Ocean Zones

the intertidal zone (p. 116)

Quick Check

30. plankton: diatoms, animal larvae (p. 113)

31. nekton: turtles, fish, whales (p. 113)

32. benthos: oysters, worms, lobsters (p. 113)

33. F (p. 115)

34. T (p. 115)

35. intertidal zone (116)

36. Possible answers: They protect coastal places by soaking up water during storms. The roots and stems of marsh plants trap pollution and keep the ocean clean. Estuaries provide homes to many types of animals. Many ocean organisms use estuaries as breeding grounds. (p. 117)


Chapter 4: Vocabulary Review

Across

2. pioneer species (p. 118)

6. water cycle (p. 118)

7. biome (p. 118)

Down

1. tundra (p. 118)

2. plankton (p. 118)

3. succession (p. 118)

4. taiga (p. 118)

5. benthos (p. 118)

1. c (p. 119)

2. c (p. 119)

3. d (p. 119)

4. a (p. 119)

5. b (p. 119)

6. a (p. 119)

7. d (p. 119)

Summarize

Water, carbon, and nitrogen are cycled through ecosystems. Earth has six major land biomes, or super-ecosystems: tundra, taiga, desert, rain forest, deciduous forest, and grassland. Earth’s water ecosystems include bodies of fresh water, salt water, and mixed water in areas where salt and fresh water bodies meet. Ecosystems can change naturally over time


Chapter 5Our Dynamic Earth

Lesson 1Earth’s Landforms

Read a Diagram: Ocean Features