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Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.
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Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Dec 29, 2015

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Esmond Kelley
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Page 1: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

CamouflageAny color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Page 2: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

The following pictures show animals camouflaged in their environments.

They are using one of the following strategies:

1. color—the animal blends in2. patterns—the animal’s pattern makes it

difficult to seeThe technique called “disruptive coloration” uses both

color and patterns to make an animal difficult to see.

3. disguise—the animal looks like some other object, like a leaf

4. mimicry—the animal is acting like another animal to scare off predators

Page 3: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Dead Leaf Bug

Page 4: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Ibis in the desert

Page 5: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Hawk moth—mimics a snake

Page 6: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Tartan hawkfish

Page 7: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Moth

Page 8: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Woodcock bird

Page 9: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Alligator

Page 10: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Owl

Page 11: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Copperhead snake

Page 12: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Tree frog

Page 13: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Zebras…lions are color blind, so all they see are stripes that blend in

with the tall grass!

Page 14: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Butterfly—it has eye spots to mimic a larger, scarier creature.

Page 15: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Artic fox—has summer and winter coats to blend in both seasons!

Page 16: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Granite night lizard

Page 17: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Pacific sand dab

Page 18: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Katydid(disguised to look like a leaf)

Page 19: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Northern walking stick

Page 20: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Cope’s Gray Treefrogs

Page 21: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Goosefish blending into 2 different

environments

Page 22: Camouflage Any color, shape, or pattern that allows a living thing to blend into its environment.

Long Tailed Weasel—summer and winter coats