Are you sitting down right now? Standing? Hanging upside down from the ceiling like Spiderman?
Whatever you’re doing — whatever position you’re in — you can do it because you, like me, and all other humans, have a support system in your body called a skeletal system.
And one of the most important parts of your skeletal system is your backbone.
Can you put your fingers on the back of your head, and then run them down the back of your neck? Try to continue running them down as far as you can, all the way to the bottom of your back.
That bone you feel is your backbone. It’s also called the spine.
Why is the backbone important?
Well, it is your backbone, or your spine, that covers your spinal cord. The spinal cord is a bundle of nerves that go to and from the brain. The brain and the spinal cord form your central nervous system. It’s your spinal cord that carries signals from your brain to every part of your body, AND from every part of your body to your brain.
Most animals have a central nervous system BUT not all of them have a backbone.
Animals that don’t have backbones are called invertebrates.
Animals that DO have backbones are called vertebrates.
Vertebrates include mammals — like you! — birds, reptiles, amphibians, and fish.
Now, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish and mammals have SOME things in common — like having a backbone — but they also have features that are different from each other.
What do you think are their differences?
Think about how they move…how they look…how they breathe…
How are they the same? And how are they different?
Let’s find out.