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Zoologist/Wildlife Biologist

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AVG. SALARY

$75,490

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EDUCATION

Bachelor's degree

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JOB OUTLOOK

Decreasing

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Plants and animals are grouped according to their likeness with others. For example, humans and cows are both classified as mammals because they are warm-blooded, have body hair and give birth to live young. As the likenesses increase between animals, they are classified and grouped accordingly.

"Zoologists have to have well-developed reading and writing skills because they need to be able to get their point across in papers and with other scientists," says Leanna Warman, a zoologist. "Zoologists are also required to teach, so they must be good communicators."

You are a zoologist concerned with the classification of a weasel that has been brought into your lab. You know that the weasel is a carnivore. The weasel has claws and sharp nails, so you know that it is in the suborder Fissipedia.

You have narrowed down four families in the suborder Fissipedia that the weasel could belong to. Read the description of the weasel and decide which family it belongs to.

The weasel:

  • elongated body
  • small head
  • short legs
  • dark brown tail
  • thick dark brown fur
  • prefers to be solitary
  • flesh-eater
  • has well-developed glands
  • claws cannot retract

Families to choose from:

Family Procyonidae:

  • sharp claws and nails
  • ringed tails
  • walk pattern is plantigrade -- usually leaving small tracks in the form of five small toe-prints

Family Hyaenidae:

  • doglike appearance with big heads, strong molars
  • thick necks
  • backbone slopes from front legs to back legs
  • live in herds

Family Mustelidae:

  • mostly flesh-eaters
  • very thick fur
  • short legs with five toes on each foot
  • well-developed glands
  • on each side of the upper jaw, there is one molar

Family Felidae:

  • sharp claws
  • retractable claws
  • high reproductive rates
  • walk is digitigrade

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

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