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Seamobile Teacher Guide NATURAL H I STORY MUSEUM O F L O S A N G E L E S C O U N T Y E DUCATION D IVISION with generous support from the Maxwell H. Gluck Foundation Seamobile Teacher Guide = core activities = materials found in Seamobile teaching kit Contents 1. Introductions What is the Seamobile? 3 5 Introduction The Los Angeles Tides 2. Investigating Another World How have humans learned about the oceans? 6 7 6. Life Beneath the Waves Background Activity: What’s Up Down There? How do plants and animals survive in these watery environments? 34 36 42 7. Making Sense of It All How can scientific data help us better understand what is happening in a marine habitat? 3. The Marine Environment What are the physical conditions of the oceans? 9 10 Background Activity: That Sinking Feeling 4. Finding Your Way How do we know where we are and where we’re going? 12 14 17 22 Background Activity: Map Building Activity: Getting Your Bearings Activity: How Far? How Long? 5. Classifying Creatures How can we identify plants and animals based on physical characteristics? 25 26 29 32 Background Activity: Odds and Ends Activity: A Key to California Marine Shells Activity: Invent a Key for Echinoderms Developed and Edited by: Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Education Division Art Department February 2001 2 Background Activity: Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink Quick Info: About Squid 43 44 52 Background Activity: Completing the Seamobile Career Focus: Oceanography 8. Caring for an Ocean Planet How do we affect the health of our land and oceans? 53 55 58 59 60 Background Activity: Gone Fishing Quick Info: About Fishing Activity: Too Much of a Good Thing? Activity: What a Mess! Appendix 65 66 67 68 A Measurements and Conversions B Glossary C For More Information… D Echinoderm Photos Special Thanks to: California Department of Fish and Game, Monterey Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute Moss Landing Marine Laboratories National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration National Marine Fisheries Service West Coast National Undersea Research Center United States Navy Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Introduction What is the Seamobile? When we visit the beach, we often appreciate the cool waves, the fresh ocean breezes and the warm sand beneath our feet. But what is happening below the waves, in the places that we can’t see from above? Through the resources of the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County and the generosity of the Maxwell H. Gluck Foundation, students can use the Seamobile to explore the ocean depths and take a closer look at the effects that humans have on ocean habitats. Introduction The interior of the Seamobile recreates a scientific research submersible where students embark on a simulated dive beneath the ocean off the coast of Southern California. On board, they take the role of scientists, investigating the plants and animals of the local marine environment and collecting data to better understand what is happening there. The activities included in this Teacher Guide were created to meet the recommendations of the National Science Education Standards. They were written and developed by museum educators and classroom teachers with the intention of providing interdisciplinary lessons for grades six through eight that could be easily adapted to a variety of learning environments. How To Use This Guide The Seamobile Teacher Guide was designed to provide teachers with ideas and suggestions of how the Seamobile experience might be incorporated into a unit on marine biology or a pre-existing curriculum dealing with life science, ecology, or even aspects of physical science. Furthermore, the student activities conducted on board the Seamobile, as well as those presented here, reflect an emphasis on science process skills including classification, data collection, data interpretation and hypothesis-making. The Guide has been organized into six topic areas. Topic Ocean Exploration Physical Conditions Navigation Organization and Classification Marine Ecosystems Data Interpretation Environmental Issues Chapter Investigating the Ocean The Marine Environment Finding Your Way Classifying Creatures Life Beneath the Waves Making Sense of It All Caring for an Ocean Planet Background information, for teachers or students, has been included in each of these chapters to provide additional context. An appendix also includes a glossary, background on measurement conversions, and a list of useful library and web resources. As part of the introduction, we have also included a page from a mock newspaper, “The Los Angeles Tides” which can be used to introduce the Seamobile, and the importance of marine research. Each of the activities described here has been designated as best for pre-visit (before students enter the Seamobile) or post-visit (after the Seamobile session.) Several activities could be used in either situation. Pay close attention to the core activities, as these pre-visit activities have been found to be most effective in preparing students for their Seamobile “voyage”. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County The core activities are designated by a sea star and include: Finding Your Bearings Odds and Ends A Key to California Marine Shells 3 Introduction Activities requiring teaching kit materials are designated by a treasure chest. Several of the activities recommended for pre-visit require additional materials provided in the Seamobile Teaching Kit. Activities requiring these special materials are designated with a treasure chest icon. Some of these kit-based activities, including Odds and Ends and Invent a Key for Echinoderms, require materials which can be prepared by the teacher even without the Teaching Kit. Connections with other disciplines or areas of study have also been identified for each activity. In addition, Activity Time provides an estimated time to assist with lesson planning. Process Skills Each of the activities included in this guide has also been classified according to the science process skills it promotes. Eight different process skills, based on recommendations from the Science Framework for California Public Schools (1990), were identified, as described below. Observing involves using the senses to construct a view of the world and how it works. Communicating involves relaying accurate information through language or symbols. Comparing involves examining similarities and differences. Ordering involves looking for patterns of sequence. Sequences can be linear or cyclical. Categorizing involves creating groups or classifications based on common characteristics Relating involves identifying interactions and cause-and effect events. Inferring involves making meaning from concepts that are distant in time, space or scale. Applying involves putting scientific knowledge to use in a new situation. Assessment The Seamobile Curriculum does not include sample tests. Instead, we suggest alternate forms of assessment aimed at identifying student misconceptions and determining progress in student understanding. In most cases, students already have some preconceptions of a new topic or area of study, having gathered ideas from experience in the world around them. Unfortunately, these preconceptions may be inaccurate, and are often difficult to adjust or dispel altogether. One way to identify misconceptions is simply by asking. At the start of the unit, tell students to fold a piece of paper in half longways, then open to create two columns. Choose a topic, such as “The Ocean Environment” or “Marine Animals” and ask students to write this title at the very top of their page. Next, ask students to label the first column “What I Know Now” and the second “What I Want to Know.” Students should then write what they already know about the topic in the first column. Any questions they might have about the topic should be written in the second column. Encourage students to write down what they think, even if they are not completely sure. These lists can be used to identify some of the misconceptions that students may have and consequently help with choosing activities which address these misconceptions or questions. An assessment based on this activity might involve redistributing these papers at the end of the unit and asking students to choose several of the original statements to either correct or expand upon. This assessment provides the teacher with a real sense of what knowledge was incorporated by the student during the unit of study. Another assessment might involve asking students to create a poster which describes, on one side, what they used to think, and on the other side, what they understand now. 4 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County The Los Angele s Tides Today Ocean Mystery Baffles Local Sc ientists What is impact ing the underwater envi ronment in the local waters off Southern Califor nia? That’s what local scie ntists would like to know. The area under investigat ion reaches from the Sant a Barbara area south, past Santa Monica and L ong Beach Harbor, to Coron a Del Mar in Orange County. A preliminar y exam ination of the area suggests a dramatic change in plant and animal populations. In some cases, large numbers of dead fish have been spot ted washed Agency) has aske up on shore. In d researchers other areas, The proposed inve fr om the Natur tourists stigation al History will and other Museu not end with the ga fishermen have m of Los Ang thering eles of data, ho reported Cou wever. The new nty to assist significantly few in this inform er catches. ation, including marine investig Scientists have videos at io n with and se not yet its st diment samples ate-of-the-art unde been able to pi , must rwater be ex npoint the ve amined closel hicle, the Seam causes for the y in obile. This orde die- off, but r to uncover research vessel speculate that cl ues co nt ains a about th any number large on-board ese marine habi of natural or ta laboratory The ts. man-made an observations th d can carr y causes may have at the up to 20 rese led to this sc archers make ientists to the oc environmental can be ean floor used crisis. for ex to develop a hypo “Suspects” incl te nd ed thesis periods of (o ude a toxic r educated gu time. It is also chemical spill, es s) about equipped wha storm drain t is going on with five Remot runoff, large ca in el the y Operated unde rgo ships, Ve rwater enviro hicles (ROVs) tourists and even nm ent. . These By El Niño. understanding ROVs are sm what is aller robot ca using the plant an vessels that can A Unique d animal extend the po pulations to ch eyes and hand Underwater Veh an ge, we s of the can icle develop ways on-board scient The NOAA (N to tr y ists using an ational vide d correct the pr o cameras an Oceanic and A ob le ms. d other tmospheric data collection equipment. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Introduction Los Angeles Tides 35 cents 5 Investigating Another World Background Investigating Another World How have humans learned about the oceans? Background Ocean exploration is complicated. Humans can’t breathe oxygen from water like fish do. Nor can they hold their breath very long, as whales and other marine mammals can. A snorkel allows a diver to breathe surface air from a tube, but below a depth of two feet, the pressure from the surrounding water makes it impossible to inhale air from the surface, no matter how big the tube is. Yet these obstacles did not stop early ocean explorers from finding different ways to explore the underwater world. Diving In 1530, the invention of the diving bell, a cauldron or bucket that traps air when inverted, made it possible for divers to stay underwater for long periods of time. By the late 1890’s, a forerunner of modern SCUBA (Self-Contained Underwater Breathing Apparatus) equipment had been designed. The apparatus consisted of a steel tank of compressed air with valves and hoses connected to a mouthpiece used by the diver. Throughout the 20th century, other scientists and explorers like Jacques Cousteau improved greatly on the original design. Undersea Vehicles Over the past 400 years, underwater vessels have developed along two major lines – submarines and manned submersibles. Submarines, typically designed for military use, have complex systems, require large crews and have no viewports. The advantages of these vessels are their high speed and ability to stay under for long periods of time. Manned submersibles are designed with much better maneuverability and viewports for observation capability. Most submersibles are battery operated, however, which limits their speed and underwater endurance. To conserve power, most submersibles require a mother ship or tow vessel to bring them to and from the study sites. Submersibles have been used to make many biological and archaeological discoveries. Today, remotely operated vehicles (ROVs) have largely replaced manned submersibles for deep-water exploration. ROVs are small machines, tethered from a surface ship or a manned submersible, that consist mainly of motorized thrusters, cameras and lights. They are operated remotely from above using heavy-duty fiber optic cables. ROVs can go into tight, deep spaces where submersibles can’t; they are also cheaper to operate than submersibles. The Seamobile simulates a submersible, although it is considerably larger than a typical vessel. Submersibles typically hold 1-3 passengers—the Seamobile holds over 20! On board, student research teams send an ROV to investigate a particular habitat within the local undersea environment. 6 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Part A: Beginning Ocean Inquiry 1. Begin this project by asking students about some of the basic requirements for living creatures in our environment. List the items as they are mentioned, guiding the discussion slightly to include things like heat, shelter, light, and food. Then ask students whether or not these things are available 3 feet underwater. How about 30 feet? 300 feet? 3000 feet? Students should begin to discover how conditions for life become more limited as we travel deeper into the ocean. (Leave this “basic requirements” list on the board for now.) 2. Next, ask students to take a piece of paper and fold it in half lengthwise, creating two columns. Ask students to write “Deep Sea Environment” at the top of the left side; then ask them to list short descriptions of what the underwater environment is like in that column. Descriptions should be brief at this point; “dark”, “very cold”, “rocky floor” would be acceptable descriptions. After a few minutes, ask students to share their ideas and create a master “What is the environment like?” list on the board. If some of the points from the master list are debated by students, indicate those with a question mark. The list is just a prompt—students will be able to verify whether these descriptions are accurate later in the project. As you complete the list, you may ask students to compare this new list with the first list. Are the basic requirements for life (as you’ve listed them earlier) available in the deep sea? Materials nylon clothesline rope kite string paper clips cardboard or cardstock old magazines, markers, colored pencils, etc. Additional Resources In order to complete their investigation, students will require access to library and/or Internet resources. Activity time 3. Ask students to write “Questions about the Deep Sea” at the top of the right side of their paper. Direct students to make a list of five or more questions they have about underwater ocean survival. A list of sample questions is included here. What lives in the deep sea? How do plants survive under water? How do fish (or crustaceans or mollusks, etc.) survive in the deep sea? How deep can marine mammals dive? What do humans need to survive under water? What problems do humans have when diving in deep waters? What was the first device that allowed humans to breathe under water? Where is the deepest part of the ocean and how was it discovered? What is the depth of the ocean around Southern California? How cold does it get in deep waters? How do animals survive here? How do animals survive without light in the deep sea? 4. Group students in teams of 2 to 4. Ask each team to use the questions they’ve just developed to create a master list of 4 questions that they would like to investigate as a group. 5. Collect these team lists and select one or two questions from each list for students to investigate. By choosing the questions, the investigations can be guided somewhat, eliminating excessive overlap of topics between groups and allowing for topics best matched for student abilities. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 2-4 days Process skills Communicating Comparing Relating Connections Language Arts Using Library/Internet Resources What’s Up Down There?pre-visit, post-visit Working in teams, students will investigate the difficulties of surviving in the ocean deep and discover how organisms (including humans) have adapted to an unfriendly environment. Investigating Another World What’s Up Down There? 7 What’s Up Down There? Part B: The Investigation Teacher Tip: Prior to the start of this project, you should determine the format for the final presentation. A brief oral presentation (5 minutes) or a short paper (1-2 pages) would probably be sufficient. Teacher Tip: You might consider asking students to convert all depth measurements to metric units. 6. Each team will be researching one (or two) of the questions that they’ve generated using library resources and/or the Internet. They will then present their findings to the class in a pre-designated format. 7. In addition to the formal research presentation described above, each team will be required to create a depth card based on their research. The card is a visual display that shows how a particular depth is related to each team’s research. Each depth card should include a) an image of some kind (drawing, painting, magazine cut-out), b) a one-sentence description, and c) a relevant depth reading. For example, if a group’s question was “Why are there so many living things near deep sea vents?”, the depth marker might include a drawing of deep sea vents, a sentence describing what a deep sea vent is, and a depth measurement of “3000m”. See sample above. 8 8. The card can be made of any material (cardboard, paper, etc.) Encourage students to be creative, reminding them of any size restrictions. These markers will be hung for display, and should have a place where string can be attached for hanging. 9. To complete their display, students will measure and cut a piece of string that is proportional to the depth indicated on their card. In the sea vent example above, a scale of 1 inch = 100 meters would result in a string length of 30 inches. You might ask the class to determine what would be a useful scale. A paper clip for hanging should be tied to the other end of the string. Be sure that the entire class uses the same length scale. 10. To complete the project, student teams will present their findings to the class. The depth cards, with the various string lengths, should then be attached to the clothesline that is stretching across a wall or across a corner of the classroom. When finished, the “depth line” will provide a unique reference and display of the group investigations. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County What are the physical conditions of the oceans? Background Physical Features of the Ocean The ocean is spread over 139 million square miles, or 71% of the Earth’s surface. This is equivalent to the surface area of 410 Californias! It occupies a volume of 329 million cubic miles and weighs in at 155 billion billion tons. The average depth is 12,541 feet or about 2.4 miles and the deepest part of the ocean, located in the South Pacific near the Philippine Islands, is the Mariana Trench. The bottom of the Trench lies 36,163 feet (almost seven miles) below the surface. Obstacles to Marine Exploration The ocean is a harsh environment that is difficult to explore. Unlike fish, which pull oxygen from the water through their gills, humans must bring air with them underwater. This is just part of the problem; there are several other conditions that hinder our ability to explore the ocean. Light. As light moves through the water, it is scattered and absorbed. In the open ocean, light can only penetrate about 100 meters, while in coastal waters, only to about 40 meters. Even in the clearest tropical waters, sunlight can not penetrate beyond 200 meters. If humans want to explore the deep ocean, they must bring their light with them. Temperature. Solar energy is the most important source of heat for the ocean. However, the warmth of the sun’s rays can not reach past 250 meters. Eighty percent of the Earth’s water is in this deep zone, where the temperature ranges from –1˚ to 3˚C (30.5˚ - 37.5˚F). Although ocean water at these depths may reach temperatures below freezing, the water does not solidify. The salts dissolved in the water interfere with the freezing process, allowing ocean water to dip below the freezing point of pure water. The Marine Environment Background The Marine Environment Pressure. Pressure is defined as force acting on an area. At sea level, there are 14.7 pounds of air pushing on every square inch of your body (14.7 pounds per square inch or psi). Humans are well adapted to live at this pressure. Under water, pressure increases at a constant rate of 14.7 psi every 10 meters. Greater depths mean greater pressure, since there is more water pushing from all sides. Without special equipment, our bodies would collapse under this high pressure. Corrosion. Corrosion occurs when a metal reacts with oxygen, typically in the presence of water. For many metals, like aluminum, this corrosion leaves an unreactive layer on the surface, which actually protects the metal from further reaction. Iron is an exception. Iron oxide (or rust) flakes away from the metal, exposing the metal underneath to the same process. To make matters worse, salts in the ocean water further accelerate the corrosion process. A protective coating such as oil, porcelain or paint can be put over the metal to prevent corrosion, but this is good only if the coating remains watertight at all points. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 9 The Marine Environment That Sinking Feeling pre-visit, post-visit 10 That Sinking Feeling Students will make observations of liquids with different densities and explore how this property is related to sinking, floating and ocean currents. Introduction A student has two similar cubes, one made of wood and one made of lead. Which has more mass? Materials 1-2 liters of warm water (w/ red food color) 1-2 liters warm salt water (w/ yellow food color and non-iodized salt) 1-2 liters cold water (w/ green food color) Because the lead is more dense, meaning it has more mass per volume, the lead cube would have a greater mass. Density, which is related to how tightly packed particles are within a piece of matter, is often a confusing concept, since its measurement depends on two factors, mass and volume. An easy way to compare object densities is by checking to see whether they sink or float. Objects that sink are more dense that the liquid they are in; objects that float are less dense. Ocean water has different densities in different places. Warmer water is less dense than colder water. But frozen water is less dense than liquid water. (Water is unusual in this way!) The amount of salt can affect density, too. Saltier water is more dense than less salty water. 1-2 liters cold salt water (w/ blue food color and non-iodized salt) blue ice cubes (w/ blue food color) clear glasses or beakers plastic spoons Note: Amounts will vary depending on whether these are presented as demonstrations or group investigations. Changes in the density of water caused by temperature and salinity (the amount of salt) are the primary cause of ocean currents. Ocean water at the surface warms and evaporates, leaving salts behind. This makes the water at the surface extra salty and more dense. As this water sinks to the bottom, less salty water is pushed to the surface, where evaporation begins and the cycle continues. Here are two short activities that will help students to understand some practical implications of varying water density. These can be conducted as small group activities or class demonstrations, followed by discussion. Activity time 35 minutes (Part A) 15 minutes (Part B) Process skills Observing Predicting Ordering Relating Inferring Connections Physical Science Math Teacher Tip: If possible, use non-iodized or kosher salt to create the salt solutions. Epsom salts work as well. Use food coloring to color each of the types of water—this will make it easier to keep track of which is which. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 1. Give each student team containers of warm and cold fresh water, as well as warm and cold salt water. Each team should also have several clear glasses or beakers and some plastic spoons. 2. Challenge students to add the different waters to the beaker in such a way that four separate layers can be seen. As students begin to develop and test their hypotheses, remind them to keep notes of what works and what doesn’t. Students should wait to dump out their “mistakes,” as their observations may help them to correct their initial guess. 3. Ask each team to report their findings (What order worked best?) and explain what this tells them about the densities of these four liquids. Additional questions for discussion: What happens to salty water when it is added to fresh water? How could water at the ocean surface become saltier than the water beneath it? Do you think water in the ocean might get into separate layers by itself? How? Teacher Tip: You might show students how the liquids can be added carefully to each other (by spoonful, over the back of a spoon, dripping it down the side of the glass, etc.) Investigation B: Ice Inquiry 1. Ask each student (or team) to fold a piece of paper into thirds and then write the following headings: PREDICTION, EXPLANATION, OBSERVATION. 2. Give each student team a clear glass of warm water and then ask them to record (under PREDICTION) what they think will happen if an ice cube of colored water was added to the glass. Encourage students to be specific about what they will see. Once they’ve described their prediction, they should then try to explain why they think this will happen and record this under EXPLANATION. 3. Give each team a colored ice cube (food coloring in water, then frozen). Students should carefully observe what actually happens for a few minutes after the cube is added, and then record their findings under OBSERVATION. That Sinking Feeling Procedure Investigation A : Salty, Fresh, Hot or Cold? Helpful Hint: The correct layering should be (from bottom to top): cold salt water, cold water, warm salt water, warm water. Note that depending on the concentration of salt in the solutions, the middle layers (cold water and warm salt water) may be reversed. 4. Discuss. Did the prediction match the observation? What information was the first explanation based on? How might you change your explanation? How does density figure into these observations? Explain to the students that currents in the ocean are caused by moving water, sometimes pushed by wind, but mainly caused by differences in density. Extension You might consider asking students to calculate the densities of the different solutions. Using a balance and a measuring cup or graduated cylinder, students can measure mass and volume. (When finding the mass of a liquid, remind students to subtract the mass of the empty container from the measured mass of liquid and container.) Mass is usually measured in grams and volume in milliliters. This results in a unit of grams per milliliter or g/mL for density. Density = Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Mass Volume 11 Finding Your Way Background 12 Finding Your Way How do we know where we are and where we’re going? Background Beginnings of Navigation Almost anyone can travel without getting lost, as long as they know where they are, where they want to go and the path between. On land, a person can use landmarks and physical descriptions: “Take the path uphill to the big rock that looks like a bear. Find the three trees growing from one stump and walk past it until you can see the waterfall.” This method doesn’t work well on the ocean: “Turn left at the third wave, and go until you see the big fish with the red stripes. Turn right and go until you reach England.” The earliest sailors probably kept close to shore, using the land’s physical features as landmarks to steer by. This worked well for short voyages, since food, water, and shelter were always close by. Of course, this approach worked only when sailing during the day, and made for very long trips. As sailors made maps of their travels, it became evident that some places could be reached faster by sailing in a straight line, rather than hugging the shore. But this would mean leaving sight of land and any recognizable landmarks. Some of the early methods used for navigating across open waters involved using the sun, moon, and stars. People had long been travelling on land, getting from place to place by traveling in directions in some relationship to these celestial bodies. With the invention of the compass, people could find their direction even when they couldn’t clearly see the sky, day or night. These methods were applied to ocean travel; if a sailor knew another port was west of his home port, all he had to do was follow the path of the sun or his compass. Unfortunately, winds and currents further complicated this process, as they could easily and subtly alter the heading and leave the traveler lost. Through generations of experience, many early coastal cultures became familiar enough with their local currents and winds to actually be able to navigate by them over moderate distances away from shore. Long distance voyages and trips to little known areas, on the other hand, were still problems. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County The concepts of longitude and latitude have been used now for roughly 2000 years. Lines of latitude run around the globe and measure the degrees north or south of the equator. The equator is given a value of zero (0). Lines of longitude run up and down the globe and measure the degrees east or west of a line called the prime meridian, which passes through the original location of the Royal Observatory at Greenwich, near London, England. The prime meridian is given the value of zero (0) degrees. When the latitude and longitude are given, the precise location of a point can be located on an imaginary geographic grid. When latitude and longitude are given on a map, latitude is always written first. Degrees of latitude and longitude are further divided into minutes and seconds. There are sixty minutes in one degree, and sixty seconds in one minute. One of the earliest tools used to aid mariners in determining latitude was the astrolabe. This instrument consisted of a metal disk, graduated in degrees, with a moveable sight. The astrolabe was held vertical by a plumb bob, and the navigator (with the help of two other people) adjusted the sight until it was in line with a star. The degree measurement was then looked up on charts and tables, which gave the latitude of the ship. Modifications of this instrument by scientists, including Sir Isaac Newton, led to the development of a new device called a sextant. The basic design of the sextant has remained virtually unchanged for over 200 years. Determining longitude was a bit more difficult. Many attempts were made at finding ways to determine longitude while at sea, but none were very successful. In 1735, John Harrison developed the chronometer—an extremely accurate timepiece that was used to maintain a time reference to the prime meridian. This instrument allowed navigators to compare local time to time at the prime meridian. The time difference between the navigator’s present position and the prime meridian told them their position. At last, a simple and reliable method of determining longitude! It was now possible to accurately determine position anywhere on the ocean provided you had good charts and tables, and an accurate chronometer. Sailors navigated well into the 20th century using these techniques until the advent of more sophisticated electronic and radio methods. New Technologies Today, radio beacon towers are located all along our coastlines, constantly sending out powerful identification signals. These signals can be picked up by sea vessels as far as several hundred miles away. The Radio Direction Finder (or RDF) on board a ship can be tuned to receive these broadcast signals. The beacon’s I.D. signal, in Morse code, allows the navigator to look on a map and find the radio beacon that is sending that particular signal. The RDF is also used to determine the direction or heading from which the signal is being sent. A second radio beacon signal is then needed to pinpoint the exact location of the vessel. This entire process is known as triangulation. (See the activity Getting Your Bearings for more information.) Finding Your Way Latitude and Longitude The Global Positioning System (GPS) is a satellite-based radio navigation system developed in the 1970’s by the Department of Defense. GPS allows land, sea and airborne users to locate their three-dimensional position any time, anywhere in the world. The GPS uses an array of satellites continuously sending highfrequency radio signals; at any given time from any point on earth, there are six or more GPS satellites orbiting above you. GPS receivers, many of which are smaller than a paperback book, are used to pick up these signals. These satellite signals contain information about the exact position and clock reading on board. The GPS unit compares the signal departure times and arrival times, and the time delay is used to calculate the distance between the satellite and the receiver. The GPS determines the distances from three or more satellites and uses this information to find the closest possible location of the user, usually within a few feet. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 13 Finding Your Way Map Building pre-visit Materials large wall map* sets of activity pieces with map coordinates* tape Map Building worksheets Rulers (one per student) *materials found in Seamobile Teaching Kit Activity time 40 minutes Process skills Communicating Comparing Ordering Connections Math Geography Map Building Students will develop their own map based on their knowledge of latitude and longitude and discover the many things that make up an ocean ecosystem. Procedure students should locate the proper positions of their pieces on the map worksheet. 1. Review the concepts of geographic grids, latitude, and longitude. 2. Explain to the students that over the years, the Seamobile research area has been mapped by many different people for different reasons. Before we can study the area, one concise map must be developed so that we know where everything is. It will be the students’ jobs to piece together the information from the previous investigators. 5. Each team representative will place their team’s map pieces on the wall map using tape. In many cases, students can confirm the location of their map piece by looking on the large map for a similar symbol. 6. Discuss what their pieces represent and why these various things are found in our oceans. Extension 3. Divide students into teams and distribute one set of four map pieces to each team. Each piece represents an ocean feature (kelp forest, shipwreck, sewage drain, etc.) In addition, each team (or student) should receive a map worksheet depicting the area surrounding the San Pedro Channel. 4. Using the latitude and longitude coordinates on the back of each individual map piece, 14 Many of the features described in this activity have symbols which are used on ocean maps. It is important to understand that there is more than one symbol that might be used for a feature, and that some features may not be marked on a particular map. The list of symbols on the following page can be used to doublecheck latitude and longitude readings on the wall map at the end of the Map Building activity. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 15 Map Building Student Worksheet Based on NOAA chart 18740 Scale: 1:234,270 Seamobile Study Area Common Nautical Chart Symbols Map Building Chart Symbols 16 Shipwreck Sewer line Radio beacon Kelp bed Oil/gas platform Lighthouse Fish haven Dump site Buoy SOURCE: Chart No. 1, United States of America, Nautical Chart Symbols, Abbreviations and Terms, 1990; Department of Commerce, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; and Department of Defense, Defense Mapping Agency. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Finding Your Way Getting Your Bearings In this activity, the Seamobile has scouted five possible study locations and has taken radio beacon readings at each of these locations. Using triangulation, the students will plot the location of the Seamobile and the five study sites. Then they will plot headings from the Seamobile to each location. Procedure 1. Divide the class into teams of 3 or 4 and distribute materials to each team. Introduce the concept of triangulation and discuss the use of radio beacons and corresponding compass headings to determine location. Distribute the “Student Information Sheet” and data table for this activity 2. Locate the Seamobile on the chart through triangulation. Use the given radio beacon (RB) readings as compass headings to plot. For example, if radio beacon one (RB1) is 90, this translates into a compass reading of 90 degrees. Follow the steps as described on the Student Information sheet. Materials laminated desk map* (one per team) parallel ruler* (one per team) overhead marking pen* (one per team) Getting Your Bearings worksheet *materials found in Seamobile Teaching Kit Activity time 60 - 90 minutes Process skills Communicating Comparing Ordering Connections Geometry Geography 3. It is helpful to work through the triangulation method for the Seamobile location step-by-step with the entire class. Teaching Tip: You may 4. Once students have identified the location of the Seamobile, they should proceed to identify the locations of each of the study sites, using the radio beacon readings in the data table for each site. wish to use an overhead transparency to help demonstrate triangulation to the entire class first. 5. After the study sites have been located, the students can determine the compass heading from the Seamobile to each study site. Again, you should work through the first heading (for site A) with the entire class. Follow the steps described in the Student Information sheet. Teaching Tip: A quick 6. Remind the students that because they are using a circle of 360 degrees to define their direction, they don’t need to add a direction indicator (like S or NE). These direction designations are redundant for this method. 7. Ask students to double-check their locations by using the latitude and longitude readings from the answer key. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County check to see if students were able to correctly identify the location of the Seamobile is to look for a nearby depth reading of 204 fathoms on their map. If the intersection of the bearing lines is within a quarter diameter of this point, students are on the right track! Finding Your Bearings pre-visit There are various ways to determine your position in the open ocean. One method is to use a Radio Direction Finder (RDF). Radio signal transmitters (beacons) are located along coastlines and send signals that can be picked up by the RDF device on ships at sea. The radio signal can then be used to determine the compass bearing from the radio beacon to the ship. By determining the bearings from two different radio beacons, navigators can determine their ship’s position by examining where the bearing “lines” intersect. This method of pinpointing the location of an object based on two different bearings is called triangulation. Finding Your Way Introduction Getting Your Bearings pre-visit Students will use rulers and an understanding of compass readings to identify the location of five possible Seamobile study sites through a process of triangulation. Students will then determine headings to each of these sites. 17 Student Information Sheet Getting Your Bearings The triangulation process described below will help you find the location of sites on ocean and help you figure out what direction you need to travel to get there. Getting Your Bearings Student Information Sheet 1 RB1 To locate a site: 1. Locate the two radio beacons (RB1 and RB2) and the compass rosette on your map. 0 270 90 RB2 180 2. Begin by looking at one radio beacon reading (RB1) and marking the heading on the compass using the overhead marking pen. Use the parallel ruler to draw a straight line connecting your heading mark and the center of the compass. 2 RB1 0 270 90 RB2 180 3. Place the bottom edge of the parallel ruler along the compass line you just drew. While holding the bottom of the ruler in place, move the top half of the parallel ruler up until the ruler edge touches the center point of RB1. Use the marking pen to draw a line on the map along the top edge of the ruler. Be sure to hold the ruler so that it does not slide. 4. Remove the ruler—you have just recorded your first radio beacon heading! This tells you that the location is somewhere along that line. To pinpoint the site even more, you’ll need another heading (like RB2). 3 RB1 0 270 90 RB2 180 4 RB1 0 270 90 RB2 180 18 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Student Information Sheet Continued 5a RB1 0 270 90 RB2 180 6. Circle the point of intersection and label it. Repeat these steps to find the other sites. 5b RB1 0 To find the heading: 7. Place the top edge of the parallel ruler so that it connects the Seamobile location (SM) and a study site. While holding the top part of the ruler in place, lower the bottom half of the ruler edge until it touches the center of the compass rosette. Draw a line along the lower edge of the ruler, passing through both sides of the compass rosette. 270 90 RB2 180 6 RB1 SM ø 0 8. To choose the correct compass reading, look at the direction you would take to get to the site from SM. If you are heading north, choose the compass reading on the north (top) side of the compass; if you are heading south, choose the south (bottom) reading. Record your heading on the data sheet. 270 Getting Your Bearings Student Information Sheet 5. Repeat steps 2 through 4 for RB2. The line you draw in step 4 this time should intersect the first line. If not, try these steps again. 90 RB2 180 9. Repeat these steps to find headings for the other sites. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 19 Student Data Sheet Getting Your Bearings Record the headings for each site. Getting Your Bearings Student Data Sheet SITE RB1 RB2 Seamobile 79º 212º site A 72º 130º site B 118º 200º site C 340º 240º site D 80º 124º site E 110º 173º Heading to site from Seamobile Mark the approximate location of each study site on the map below. eles g n A Los es erd V os Pal h eac B g Lon ch Bea t r po New RB1 San Ped ro C han nel Cat alin a Is lan d 20 RB2 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County SITE RB1 RB2 Seamobile 79º 212º site A 72º 130º site B 118º site C Heading to site from Seamobile latitude longitude 33º 32’ 118º 12’ 245º 33º 26’ 118º 27’ 200º 10º 33º 42’ 118º 10’ 340º 240º 83º 33º 34’ 118º 52’ site D 80º 124º 262º 33º 29’ 118º 35’ site E 110º 173º 322º 33º 44’ 118º 23’ Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Getting Your Bearings Answer Key Answer Key Getting Your Bearings 21 Finding Your Way How Far? How Long? pre-visit How Far? How Long? pre-visit Finding Your Way How Far? How Long? 22 Students will determine how far their ROV has to travel from the Seamobile to their study site, and how long it will take to reach the site. Introduction On the Seamobile, students send their ROVs (Remotely Operated Vehicles) out to their study sites to collect data. In this activity students will determine, using maps and rulers, how far away the site really is. Using these measurements, they will also calculate how long it would take an actual ROV to reach the destination. Materials laminated desk map with location of Seamobile and study sites marked* (one per team) ruler with inch markings (one per team) How Far? Worksheet (one per student) *materials found in Seamobile Teaching Kit Activity time 30-40 minutes Process skills Communicating Relating Connections Procedure 1. This activity works well as a follow-up to the Getting Your Bearings activity, where the study sites have already been located and marked on the maps by the students. You can also begin by asking students to find the study sites by using latitude and longitude readings, as provided in the answer key for Getting Your Bearings. 2. Distribute materials and student worksheet. 3. Once distance has been measured and converted (1 inch = 3 Nautical miles), students should determine how long an ROV traveling at 4 knots (4 nautical miles per hour) would take to get there. 4. A more familiar measurement of speed for students may be miles per hour. To convert knots into miles per hour, multiply the number of knots by 1.15 (knots x 1.15 = miles per hour). You could also have the then convert miles per hour to Kilometers per hour, which is the measurement of speed that most modern scientists use (1 mph = 1.6 Kph). Algebra Helpful Hint: One nautical Sample calculation: mile equals 6076 feet, while one standard mile equals 5280 feet. Nautical miles are the distance of one minute of arc on the Earth’s surface. There are 60 nautical miles in each degree of latitude. If your site is 6 inches away from the Seamobile on the map: Teaching Tip: For students completing the activity using their triangulation results, you can probably expect an error of ± 0.5 hours for the calculated travel times since results will be based on the accuracy of the original triangulation. You might consider using the distances in inches from the key and go from there. 18 nautical miles = 4.5 hours 4 nautical miles/hour (travel time to site) 6 inches x 3 nautical miles/inch = 18 nautical miles (distance to site) Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Student Worksheet How Far? How Long? Answer the following questions. Be sure to show how you got the answer. 1.What is the distance (in nautical miles) from the Seamobile to your study site? Useful Conversions: 2. What will be the travel time (in hours) for the ROV to get to your study site if it travels at a speed of 4 knots (nautical miles per hour)? 1 inch = 3 nautical miles (for the large desk maps) 1 knot = 1.15 m.p.h. 1 nautical mile = 1.15 miles 1 m.p.h. = 1.6 km per hour Formulas: 3. What is the speed of the ROV in miles per hour (m.p.h.)? Speed = Distance Time Time = Distance Speed Distance = Time x Speed How Far? How Long? Student Worksheet Now that you have located your study site, you will need to determine how far the it is from the Seamobile, and how long it will take your Remotely Operated Vehicle (ROV) to travel from the Seamobile to the study site. 4. What is the speed of the ROV in kilometers per hour (Km/hr)? 5. What is the distance in “land miles” from the Seamobile to your study site? Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 23 Answer Key How Far? How Long? How Far? How Long? Answer Key How Far? How Long? Teacher Key Site Letter Map Distance (in Inches) Distance (nautical miles) Distance (land miles) Travel Time for ROV A 4.5 inches 13.5 Nm 15.5 miles 3.4 hours B 3.5 inches 10.5 Nm 12 miles 2.6 hours C 5.25 inches 15.75 Nm 17.9 miles 3.9 hours D 6 inches 18 Nm 20.7 miles 4.5 hours E 4.75 inches 14.25 Nm 16.4 miles 3.6 hours ROV SPEED 24 knots miles per hour Kilometers per hour 4 4.6 7.4 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Classifying Creatures How can we identify plants and animals based on physical characteristics? Below is an example of how scientists classify the striped dolphin, showing the pattern of groups within groups more general KINGDOM: Animalia Cell structure differentiates animals from other types of living things such as plants and bacteria. PHYLUM: Chordata The animal has a spinal chord. SUBPHYLUM: Vertebrata CLASS: Mammalia ORDER: Cetacea FAMILY: Delphinidae The spinal chord has backbones, or vertebrae, protecting it. These vertebrates have hair and females produce milk to feed their young. These marine mammals have front flippers and a dorsal fin, but no hind limbs. Members of the dolphin family include all oceanic dolphins. Size and details of skull and tooth shape distinguish delphinids from other cetaceans. GENUS: Stenella SPECIES: coeruleoalba A system of binomial nomenclature, accepted by scientists worldwide, assigns two Latin names for each organism. The first name is the genus name, given to groups of closely related species. The second part is the species name, given to a group of organisms that can interbreed and produce more organisms. This system is similar to a person having a first and last name. Therefore, using the example above, scientists know the striped dolphin as Stenella coeruleoalba, or S. coeruleoalba, for short. When the organism’s scientific name is written, the genus name is always capitalized and written first and both words are always italicized. Many organisms have common names. But sometimes things can get confusing when people from different regions use different names. For example, what one scientist calls the Striped, another might call the Whitebelly dolphin, however, if the name Stenella coeruleoalba were used, both people would understand which species of dolphin they were discussing. Development of a common classification system allows scientists all over the world to work together more easily as they decode nature’s secrets. more specific Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 25 Classifying Creatures Background In order to better describe nature, biologists have developed a way of classifying living things into groups. These groups, and groups within groups, arrange organisms according to similarities and can help us understand how species may have evolved. This taxonomy of groups ranges from the most general (kingdom) to the most specific (species). Classifying Creatures Background Background Odds and Ends Students are introduced to a common method of classification used by scientists-the dichotomous key. They will use this method to “identify” a collection of everyday objects. Introduction Classifying Creatures Dichotomy: Division into two parts, groups or classes. Scientists use keys to help identify and classify plants and animals. By organizing specimens based on similar characteristics, scientists can better understand how these species might be related to each other on an evolutionary level. Keys can come in many different formats— some are used to identify organisms into larger categories, such as kingdoms or phyla, and others are used to distinguish among closely related species. A dichotomous key presents the user with a series of positive/negative statements relating to distinct characteristics of the specimen. (“The animal has a backbone.”, “The animal does not have a backbone.”) These statements are sometimes referred to as couplets. Notice that the couplet is essentially an either/or choice. The specimen is correctly identified when one makes the appropriate choice for each set of characteristics in a series of consecutive steps, similar to a flow chart. Odds and Ends pre-visit Materials Bag of odds and ends* (one per team) (Each bag of odds and ends contains: small metal paperclip, large metal paperclip, plastic coated paperclip, wooden clothespin (w/out metal spring), party toothpick w/ plastic fringe, small sponge, metal jack (colored), rubber garden hose washer, penny, plastic straw (cut to 3”), pencil-top eraser) This activity introduces students to the use of a dichotomous key using everyday items. The goal of this activity is NOT to try to identify these objects, but rather to use a key correctly. Procedure Discuss with students different ways of grouping objects. Ask why it is important to group objects. You might Introduce dichotomous keys as one way of grouping and identifying things. Introduce the term “dichotomy” and show how this is important in this kind of classification scheme. Example: The people in this room could first be grouped into categories of eye color. One couplet for this might be: People who have brown eyes. People who don’t have brown eyes. Odds and Ends worksheet *materials found in Seamobile Teaching Kit Activity time 30 minutes Process skills Comparing Ordering Categorizing 2. Divide the students into teams of two or three and give each team a bag of odds and ends and the worksheet Odds and Ends. 3. Students should choose one item from the bag and follow the key in order to “identify” the object. After making the appropriate choice in each couplet, the team will then follow the directions on the right hand side of the key until they have identified the object with a particular letter. Students can write the object name next to the appropriate letter on their worksheet, or copy this information into a notebook. Teaching Tip: Students often “switch” their items as they proceed through the key, choosing an item that matches the positive statement. That is, a student classifying a paperclip, after the statement “Object not made of metal”, might drop the paperclip and pick up a toothpick, since it makes that statement true. Ask students to close their bag after choosing an item. The bag should remain closed until the group has completely finished identifying that object. 26 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Student Worksheet Odds and Ends For this activity, you will use a dichotomous key to sort some everyday objects. 1. Choose one item to start with. 2. Begin by reading the first set of choices, called a couplet. After discussing the two choices within the first couplet with your team, decide which statement in the pair most closely describes the item you are trying to identify. 3. Next, follow the directions on the right hand side of the key. For example, in couplet number 1 if you decide that the object was metal, you would continue on to couplet number 7; if you decide that the object is not metal, you would continue on to couplet number 2. 4. Continue to work until your team has identified all 11 objects. 5. After you have identified all the objects, check your answers with the teacher’s answer sheet. choices 1. Object made of metal Object not made of metal directions Go to couplet 7 Go to couplet 2 2. Wood Not wood Go to 3 Go to 4 3. Plastic tip No plastic tip Object a Object b 4. Rubber Not rubber Go to 5 Go to 6 5. Pointed Not pointed Object c Object d 6. Rectangular shape Tube shape Object e Object f 7. Painted Not painted Go to 8 Go to 9 8. Flat Not flat Object g Object h 9. Object copper color Object silver color Object i Go to 10 10. Greater than 3 cm Less than 3 cm Object j Object k Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Odds and Ends Student Worksheet How to Use This Key 27 Odds and Ends Answer Key Odds and Ends Answer Key 28 Answer Key Odds and Ends Object Object Object Object Object Object Object Object Object Object Object a b c d e f g h i j k tooth pick clothes pin eraser rubber washer sponge plastic straw painted paper clip jack penny large paper clip small paper clip Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County A Key to California Marine Shells Students will use a dichotomous key to identify a collection of shells from local marine animals. 2. Give each team of students a set of unidentified marine shells, from the Teaching Kit. 3. The student worksheet describes how the key should be used. When students have finished identifying the shells, they may check their answers on the answer sheet provided. Materials Set of marine shells* (one per student team) Extension Ask students to create a simple diagram that shows how they grouped the shells. Remind the students to describe the characteristics at each branch point. (See sample below.) A Key to California Marine Shells worksheet *materials found in Seamobile Teaching Kit Activity time 30 minutes Process skills Observing Comparing Ordering Categorizing shells two parts ? one continuous part round or circular clam Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County ? ? Classifuying Creatures 1. Divide the students into teams of two or three. A Key to California Marine Shells pre-visit Procedure 29 Student Worksheet A Key to California Marine Shells This dichotomous key will allow you to identify 8 shells from southern California. Follow the directions below to correctly identify each species. A Key to California Marine Shells Student Worksheet 30 How to Use This Key 1. Choose one shell to start with. 2. Begin with the first set of choices, called a couplet. 3. After discussing the two choices in the first couplet with your partner, decide which characteristics in the pair most closely resemble the shell you are identifying. 4. Next, follow the directions on the right hand side of the key. For example, in couplet number 1 if you choose that “the shell has one part”, you would continue on to couplet number 3; if you choose that “the shell has two parts”, you would continue on to couplet number 2. 5. After you have identified each shell, check your answers on the answer key. Pair Couplets Directions 1. Shell has two hinged parts Shell has one continuous part Go to couplet 2 Go to couplet 3 2. Each shell is teardrop shaped or oblong Each shell is round or circular Mussel Clam 3. Shell has one hole or opening Shell has more than one opening 4 7 4. Shell is 6 cm or smaller Shell is 6 cm or larger 5 6 5. Shell is purple-gray Shell is brown-orange Olive snail Chestnut cowry 6. Total length of shell is 8 cm or smaller Total length of shell is 8 cm or larger Wavy top turban snail Kellet’s whelk 7. Shell has four or more small holes on top Shell does not have four or more small holes on top Abalone Keyhole limpet Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Mussel clam olive snail chestnut cowry (olivella) Kellet’s whelk abalone Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County keyhole limpet A Key to California Marine Shells Answer Key Answer Key A Key to California Marine Shells wavy top turban snail 31 Invent A Key for Echinoderms Students will make observations and use their understanding of classification to create a dichotomous key which will help distinguish several echinoderms. Introduction Echinoderm is taken from a Latin term that means “spiny skin.” These animals live underwater and include sea stars, sand dollars, sea cucumbers, sea urchins and brittle stars. Classifying Creatures Procedure Invent a Key for Echinoderms pre-visit 32 1. If you have not already completed the activity Odds and Ends, consider using some of the same introductory discussion recommended for that activity. 2. Divide the class into teams of 2 to 4. Give each group an Echinoderm Photo set and a worksheet. 3. Students can begin by examining the cards and thinking about different characteristics they might use to group the objects (body shape, color, number of arms, etc.) Materials Set of 8 Echinoderm Photos* (one per team) Invent a Key worksheet *materials found in Seamobile Teaching Kit Activity time 40 minutes Process skills Observing Communicating Comparing Ordering Categorizing 4. Once the students have had a chance to think about grouping, ask teams to devise a dichotomous key for their echinoderms on the worksheet provided. Remind them that they will write couplets, which basically provide a choice between two options. Example: Animal has a shell. Animal does not have a shell. 6. Encourage students to follow one branch of classification to its completion, rather than looking back at the whole set of photos all at one time. 7. Once students have completed their key, ask each team to present their classification scheme to the class. As they describe their choices, ask other students to consider how their dichotomous key was different. Alternatively, you may ask groups to exchange keys and see if they can classify the pictures using the other team’s key. Alternative assignment Some students may be able to organize their key better in a more graphic mode. Consider asking students to choose which mode (written text or branching diagram) they prefer. If students choose to create a branching diagram, remind them to describe the characteristics at each branch point. Teaching Tip: A master set of echinoderm photos is also available at the end of this guide. These may be scanned or copied to produce transparencies or extra sets, especially if the Seamobile Teaching Kits are unavailable. Teaching Tip: There is no one right answer for this activity. Each group will interpret their observations differently. Assessment should be based on student explanation and the effectiveness of their choice of couplets. Extensions 1. After students have created their own keys, you might share with them the actual names of these echinoderms. Notice that some are actually the same species, even though they look quite different. species A B C D E F G H common name purple sea urchin bat star sunflower star brittle star brittle star sea star sea cucumber sea cucumber scientific name (Strongylocentrotus purpuratus) (Patiria miniata) (Pycnopodia helianthoides) (Ophiothrix spiculata) (Ophioderma panamense) (Pisaster giganteus) (Paristichopus parvimensis) (Paristichopus parvimensis) 2. Ask students to create a classification system for more common “species” such as snack foods, writing utensils or types of shoes worn by students in the class. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Student Worksheet Invent a Key for Echinoderms Use the spaces below to write couplets which group the echinoderms (on the picture cards) into smaller categories. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Invent a Key for Echinoderms Student Worksheet 1. 8. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 33 Life Beneath The Waves How do plants and animals survive in these watery environments? Background Life Beneath the Waves Background 34 The oceans are the largest repositories of life on the planet, ranging from the largest whales and sharks to the tiniest plankton and bacteria. Although there are a greater number of species of animals living on land (due primarily to the vast number of insect species), the diversity of life is much greater in the oceans compared to the land. In fact, 14 of the 32 animal phyla identified by scientists are exclusively marine! Marine Adaptations Just like land plants and animals, marine plants and animals have adaptations such as specialized body parts and unique behaviors that help them to survive (and procreate) within their environment. When a plant or animal is adapted to its environment, it has characteristics that help it survive in its environment. When looking closely at adaptations we study characteristics such as the mouthparts, shape, color, methods of locomotion and defense strategies. Furthermore, just as plants and animals living on land are found in a wide variety of habitats such as desert, forest or mountain, marine animals are likewise adapted to a wide variety of ocean habitats, such as kelp forest, continental shelf, and rocky bottom. The following sections compare three of these habitats: the kelp forest, the sandy bottom, and the abyssal plane. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County is the kelp forest. These undersea forests, typically found in cooler waters at depths less than 120 feet, are home to over 800 different marine species, all of which depend on the kelp to provide shelter, food and protection. Marine organisms populate the kelp forest from holdfast at the bottom all the way to the water surface, just as organisms in a rainforest populate that habitat from forest floor to canopy. found in the shallow coastal waters from the shore to the edge of the continental shelf. The sand swept from the shore by ocean currents makes vast stretches of these underwater deserts. These somewhat featureless habitats do not provide much shelter or protection for their inhabitants, and many creatures there protect themselves by burrowing in the soft sandy seabed. When looking at some of the fish in this habitat, we can see similar coloration patterns. Some of the fish may have stripes, such as the salema, and others may have spots, like the kelp bass. Markings like these that tend to break up the outline of the individual or to make other easily recognizable features less prominent and less recognizable to predators are called disruptive coloration. Despite the lack of shelter, many animals have adapted to this desert-like habitat. The California halibut is an example of an animal well adapted to the sandy bottom habitat. The mottled, spotty brown coloration of these flatfish allows them to blend quite well with the sandy floor. Having their eyes on one side of their head also helps the California halibut spot predators more easily. The eelpout is another animal that has adapted to living on the sandy bottom. This fish protects itself from predators by burrowing deep into the sand, leaving only its head exposed. Other animals, such as kelpfish, use camouflage to protect themselves. The body of a kelpfish looks almost exactly like a blade of kelp, in both shape and color. Juveniles can change color quickly from green to brown. Adult males are usually a brown or olive green color. The patterns on their bodies also imitate the dark and light patterns of the kelp blades. Kelpfish behavior is also a part of their adaptation. They hang in the water next to the stipe amid the kelp blades, oriented in the same direction as the blades, and move their bodies in the same rhythm as the blades do as they sway in the water. The kelp itself has several adaptations for living in its environment. Air bladders, small gas-filled sacs along the stipe (or stem), help to hold the kelp blades up in the water, allowing for maximum sun exposure. The blades are the only part of the structure that are able to create nutrients for the plant using photosynthesis. The kelp also has an anchoring structure called a holdfast. The holdfast is not a tangle of roots, but a series of finger-like projections whose only job is to grip the bottom substrate by tangling around the rocks, so that the kelp does not float away. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Abyssal Plane. The ocean below 3,300 ft is completely dark and extremely cold with a pressure almost 100 times greater than the pressure at sea level. Who or what could survive in such a harsh environment? Although this habitat is less studied due to the extreme conditions, scientists have observed many amazing animal adaptations in the abyss. Life Beneath the Waves Kelp Forest. One of richest ecosystems on Earth Sandy Bottom. The sandy bottom habitat can be In a place with no light, there can be no plants. So unlike other marine habitats, the bottom of the food chain consists exclusively of detritus, particles from decaying plants or animals and animal waste falling from shallower waters. Another unique feature of this deep-sea habitat is an unusual adaptation shared by many of the animals—bioluminescence, or the ability to produce light. Scientists suspect that the light generated by these organisms is used for finding food, mates, and/or protection. Animals such as the anglerfish have a long “fishing pole” structure with a bioluminescent tip (called an esca) that dangles above their mouth. This feature helps lure the anglerfish’s dinner. The bioluminescence is also vital to the reproduction of many of these deep sea animals, often using the light to identify potential mates. 35 Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink Through squid dissection, students will examine some of the unique features which have allowed squid to adapt and thrive in Southern California waters and throughout the world. Students will identify the internal and external anatomy of the squid. To avoid being wasteful, the activity ends with a Calamari Cookoff! Life Beneath the Waves Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink post-visit 36 Introduction One of the main objectives of this activity is to introduce students to dissection, an important part of science discovery that can help us better understand how life works. It is important for students to see the role that dissection plays and develop a sense of responsibility and respect for the animal that they are using as a learning tool. After the students finish their dissection, the impact of squid in their daily lives should be discussed. Squid are an important food item to many people throughout the world. With this in mind, the students have the opportunity to prepare and cook their squid at the end of the lesson. Materials for dissection fresh or frozen whole squid (Loligo opalescens) available at a fish market or grocery store (one per student or team) clean dissection scissors or basic student scissors (one per student or team) paper plates paper towels newspapers Squid Anatomy worksheets Materials for food preparation portable fryer and oil containers for milk and flour mallet (for tenderizing) seasoned flour (such as Dixie Fry) buttermilk cocktail sauce (optional) Activity time 40-50 minutes Process skills Observing Communicating Comparing Relating Teaching Tip: Depending Dissection Procedure 1. Begin the activity by asking students what they know about squid. Encourage questions, possibly making a list on the board that you may be able to answer as you continue through the dissection. Possible questions (relating to anatomy) might include: How does it eat? What does it eat? How does it swim? How does it “steer”? How does it protect itself? Is it male or female? How can you tell? Consider giving students a copy of the information sheet, About Squid. 2. Using one squid for demonstration, and the worksheet Squid: External Anatomy, begin to discuss the external anatomy and relate the features to the way the squid functions in its marine environment. Important features include the arms and tentacles, for hunting and mobility; the fins, for stabilizing and turning the squid while swimming; and the chromatophores, which can change color to aid in finding a mate, or in warning other squid. 3. Provide each student, or pair of students, with a squid on a paper plate. Use newspapers to cover the area where they are working. 4. Ask students identify the external anatomy of the squid. Make sure they count the number of arms and tentacles. Have the students pull back the arms to locate the beak. As they identify the features, they can fill in the spaces on their external anatomy worksheet. 5. After the students have had the opportunity to explore the external anatomy, they are ready to begin the dissection. Instruct the students to position the squid on the plate with the siphon facing up. 6. Distribute scissors. (These are the easiest tools to work with; scalpels are not necessary and can be dangerous.) Ask students to make one long cut from the bottom of the mantle, above the siphon, to the tip of the mantle next to the fins. Be sure to instruct the students to lift up with their scissors when cutting so as not to cut into the internal organs of the squid. on the class, you may wish to demonstrate the entire dissection for the class before asking them to do it. A video camera or flexcam attached to a monitor could make this even more effective. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 8. When the students have located all of the internal organs, they can remove the arms and internal organs from the mantle. Students should pick up the squid by the arms and while holding the mantle in the other hand, pull to separate the arms from the mantle. If done properly, the arms and internal organs will all come off in one piece. Students may notice a thin shell-like pen inside the mantle. They can pull the pen out of the mantle. (They may need to snip it out using scissors.) 9. While the students are dissecting the squid, consider asking some questions to encourage discussion about the squid. Where does the squid fit into the marine food web? What adaptations does the squid have that allow it to survive? Can you think of other animals that play a similar role in other ecosystems? Have you ever used a squid for food or as fish bait? Calimari Cook-Off 10. Have the students remove the fins by grasping the mantle in one hand and the fins in the other and pulling to remove the fins. Then have the students clean the mantle by removing any of the excess skin. 11. When the mantle is clean, have the students cut the mantle into strips. Once the strips are cut, have the students tenderize the squid by pounding it a few times with a clean block or meat hammer. Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink 7. Spread the mantle open and have the students identify the internal anatomy using the Squid: Internal Anatomy worksheet. Begin with locating the feathery gills and following those to their base to locate the hearts. Challenge students to find the liver, ink sac, and siphon. 12. The students should first coat the squid strips with buttermilk, and then roll them in the seasoned flour mix. The teacher can then drop them carefully into the preheated deepfryer, and let them cook until they curl up and float to the top of the oil, approximately 1 minute. The cooking should be done by an adult to prevent burns or other injuries. 13. Garnish with cocktail sauce and enjoy! Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 37 External Anatomy Squid Dissection FIN These help squid change direction when swimming. Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink External Anatomy 38 CHROMATOPHORES These spots change size to change the squid’s color for camouflage or possibly communication. MANTLE This is the main part of the squid’s body—all of the organs are inside. PEN EYE Squid have well developed eyes that allow them to see almost as well as people! The squid is related to other “shelled” animals like clams and snails. The pen is all that is left of the shell the squid’s ancestors once had. SUCTION CUPS ARM The suction cups help the squid to hold onto food. Squid have 8 arms covered suction cups. TENTACLE The tentacles are longer than the arms and have suction cups only at the tips. These are used to pass food to the shorter arms and then to the mouth. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink Student Worksheet Student Worksheet Squid Dissection: External Anatomy Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 39 Internal Anatomy Squid Dissection NIDAMENTAL GLAND Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink Internal Anatomy 40 This is a female reproductive organ. It provides a protective coating for the eggs. CECUM This is part of the digestive system. Processed food is absorbed into the blood here. GILLS HEARTS These are used for blood circulation. LIVER This helps with digestion. These are used to absorb oxygen from the water. INK SAC The squid releases ink from this gland in times of danger, which is then pushed through the siphon. SIPHON This tube squirts out water so that the squid moves like a jet airplane. BRAIN BEAK The squid’s brain is highly developed for an invertebrate. The squid mouth parts resemble a bird’s beak! Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Squid Dissection: From Pen to Ink Student Worksheet Student Worksheet Squid Dissection: Internal Anatomy Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 41 About Squid Quick Info: About Squid The squid is one of the most highly developed invertebrates. Some of the animal’s structures illustrate the ways in which the squid has adapted to life in the ocean. Its streamlined body and “jet propulsion” which occurs as the squid squeezes water out of its body through its siphon, make the squid a fast, active predator. This animal also has a very good defense mechanism. Squid have ten arms, which are wrapped around the head. Eight are short and heavy, and lined with suction cups. The ninth and tenth are twice the length of the others, and are called tentacles. Suction cups are only on the flat pads at the end of the tentacles. All mollusks have a soft body with a special covering called the mantle, which encloses all of the body organs such as heart, stomach and gills. Squid are an important part of the ocean food web. Squid are gaining popularity as a food source for humans around the world. Overfishing is a growing concern because there are no regulations on squid harvesting. Squid produce a dark ink that they use to escape from predators. When a squid is startled, the ink is released through the anus, and the cloud of inky water confuses the predator while the squid swims away. Southern California squid populations spawn mainly in the winter (December to March). Squid are seined (netted) commercially at their spawning grounds. About 6,000 metric tons are taken yearly for human food and bait. 42 Squid can be as small as a thumbnail, or as large as a house. The giant squid, Architeuthis, can measure 60 ft. in length and weigh three tons! Squid feed on small crustaceans, fish, marine worms, and even their own kind! They use their tentacles to quickly catch their prey, which is pulled in by the arms and down to the radula, or beak, which uses a tongue-like action to get food to the mouth so it can be swallowed whole. Squid are a major food source for many fishes, birds and marine mammals. After mating, a female squid will produce 10-50 elongated egg strings, which contain hundreds of eggs each. In many species, the parents will soon die after leaving the spawning ground. The egg strings are attached to the ocean floor, are left to develop on their own, and hatch approximately ten days later. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County How can scientific data help us better understand what is happening in a marine habitat? Background What are transects and what can they tell us? Transects are simple ways of estimating population density, or the number of organisms living in a given area. There are various methods of conducting transects (such as random sampling and line transects), but they all follow a similar pattern. First, a small representative section of the study area is chosen. Then, smaller sample areas, referred to as plots, are established. In a line transect, these plots could be either touching or intersecting the line. The shapes of the plots are usually circles or squares of equal size. Each plot is then examined, and the numbers of individuals of the target species are counted. The total numbers for all plots are then averaged, giving you an average density for the area of your plot. This can then be used to determine the average population density of your entire target area. What does population density tell us about habitat health? In general, an increase in population density of a given species indicates that the area is favorable to that particular species. If the density of all organisms increases, or remains stable over time, this would indicate a relatively healthy habitat—one that is able to maintain a large population. However, an increase of one population with decreases in others may indicate problems with the habitat. It may indicate that one species is intensely predatory on other species, or that changes in the habitat favor one species over another. If all species populations decrease over time, this would tend to indicate major problems with the habitat. These problems could be natural, such as a depletion of resources due to overpopulation or disease breakout in the area. Of course, the problems also could be man made, such as pollution or overharvesting. Making Sense of It All Background Making Sense of It All How can we interpret the data? There are many difficulties in interpreting species density data, especially with animals. The major problem is that, in most cases, animals tend to move. The assumption is that they will move into or out of other plots, and the average will remain pretty much the same. The fact is, though, that animals rarely move in a uniform manner, and the numbers may vary greatly from sample to sample. Two ways researchers can try to account for this error are (1) using large area sample plots, and/or (2) using many plots along the transect. This way, moving animals will be more likely to stay in a sample area, or move into another sample area. Seasons must also to be taken into account, since many organisms will show natural seasonal fluctuations. Samples taken in spring may have completely different numbers from those taken in late summer. Other issues that could confuse the interpretation of these data would include natural population changes due to predators and disease, or predation by migratory species. Miscounting or misidentification of species could also drastically alter the totals. The best way to solve most of these difficulties is to take many frequent samples. Yet, this introduces new difficulties; namely lack of time, money, and experienced researchers. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 43 NOTE: THIS ACTIVITY SHOULD ONLY BE CONDUCTED AFTER THE SEAMOBILE VISIT! Completing the Seamobile Investigation Students can complete their Seamobile Investigation by making a hypothesis using the data they have collected and supplemental information. Making Sense of It All Introduction Completing the Seamobile Investigation post-visit 44 This activity is designed to allow students to complete the Seamobile investigation following their visit to the truck. As the program is designed for a range of student grades and abilities, there are occasions when student teams are unable to complete the entire Seamobile program in the allotted time. This activity provides the necessary background (for students and teachers) for students to complete their investigation. Materials Data Summaries handout (at least one per team) Research Questions worksheet (optional) In the Seamobile, student teams collect data from one of five different study sites. A computer database provides details for some of the key species at their each site. Once they’ve learned about these key species, they examine video still frames of their study site to count the animals or plants found in the area. They then compare this data to previous data collected ten years before. In most cases, students discover that the numbers are different compared to ten years ago. Students are asked to think about what might be causing these numbers to change over time. The mission ends with the students making a hypotheses relating to the changes in species populations, based on what they’ve seen and the data collected. Activity time Procedure varies 1. Because each student team works at a different pace, some teams will be further along (or finished) compared to others. First establish where the students are in the investigation. This will give you an idea of how much more time you will need to complete the program. Process skills Communicating Relating Inferring 2. Distribute the Data Summary page appropriate for each group’s study site. (All groups do not need information from all sites.) Encourage students to read through this information and think about what this data tells them about their site. 3. In some cases, the species count taken by the group may not match the present species count listed in the data summaries. Advise students to use the data they collected on the Seamobile when answering their questions. 4. Each student should have returned from the Seamobile with a “Researcher’s Notebook.” Near the end of the notebook are three research questions. Ask students to complete these, based on the data they’ve collected and information from the data summaries. These questions are also found on the Research Questions worksheet. 5. Once students have answered questions, ask each group to present their findings, based on the research questions. By the end of each presentation, students should provide a possible reason for the changes going on in the habitat at their study site. 6. You may refer to the Possible Hypotheses page to wrap up the investigation. It includes a list of possible explanations for the changes observed and recorded by students at each of the Seamobile study sites. Understanding the interactions of plants and animals with their environment is a complex and difficult process. The hypotheses described for each site are probably the most reasonable, given the data available. However, students should understand that there may be additional factors which are impacting these sites and that better predictions would require additional research. Extensions 1. Ask students to create a poster presentation of their findings. Their poster might depict the interrelationships between the species in the habitat, as well as their hypothesis that accounts for the changes in populations in the habitat. 2. You might consider using this activity with classes that HAVE NOT participated in the Seamobile. The data sheets here provide much of the data necessary for students to begin to understand how we study habitats and make hypotheses regarding what may be impacting those sites. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Student Worksheet Completing the Seamobile Investigation 2. What kinds of environmental problems might be affecting the plants and animals living in the habitat you’ve studied? There may be different problems for different species—try to mention as many as you can. 3. Based on all the data your team has collected, make a hypothesis (an educated guess) that explains what is causing changes at your study site. Be specific in your explanation. Use your notes to help you. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Completing the Seamobile Investigation Student Worksheet 1. Describe any changes that have occurred at your study site over the past ten years. Think about how the area may have changed and how the numbers and types of species living there may be different. 45 45 Completing the Seamobile Investigation Data Summary 1 46 Data Summary Station 1 Habitat Kelp Forest Study Species garibaldi, giant kelp, kelp bass, salema, senorita Site Description This site is located off the coast of Catalina Island, a popular tourist area surrounded by miles of kelp forests. These undersea forests provide habitats to over 800 different marine species. The kelp provides both food and protection to many different types of marine animals, from the ocean floor to the water’s surface. Kelp is helpful to humans and is harvested for use in products such as ice cream, toothpaste, and some medicines. Transect Count Data species señorita present count 34 previous data (10 years ago) Species Impact 53 Senoritas use the kelp forest to hide from predators. As cleaners, they also rely on the other fish living in the kelp for food. Salemas can hide among the kelp blades as protection from predators. If the kelp forest was not there, salemas would be easy prey. salema 44 66 kelp bass 7 22 Since kelp bass prefer to live where there is some sort of structure (kelp forests, oil platforms, pilings, etc.), removing that structure may cause the fish to move to a different habitat. garibaldi 22 27 Garibaldi were once threatened by human over-collection. However, they are now protected by state law, making it illegal to catch or spear any garibaldi. Garibaldi depend on the animals that live within the kelp forest for their food. Without the kelp, they would be forced to look elsewhere for food. giant kelp 33 65 The giant kelp creates a unique habitat for many marine species. Destruction of the kelp forest would force the animals to leave the area in search of a new habitat, if available. Scientists are often unable to figure out the exact causes for the disappearance of a kelp forest. Perhaps it is caused by severe winter storms with strong waves that pull kelp up by its holdfasts. It may be the warm water temperatures caused by El Niño causing kelp to wilt and die. Sewage and pollution can also destroy a kelp forest by covering rocks with slime or sludge, which preventing new kelp from attaching. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Habitat Study Species Site Description Continental Slope basket star, fish-eating star, lingcod, rockfish, white anemone This site, near Catalina Island, is a deep water habitat. The mixing currents at this location create nutrient-rich water full of food for the marine life. Lots of food means lots of fish in the area, too. The large number of fish brings many fishermen (and boats) to the area during the fishing season. Commercial fishing and tourism also occur in this area. Transect Count Data species present count previous data (10 years ago) Species Impact Rockfish are a favorite sports fish. Rockfish do not migrate and many spend their adult life in one area, making easy targets for the fishermen. rockfish 7 55 basket star 10 15 lingcod 1 12 Lingcod are prized for food and are also very popular with fishermen. Off Southern California, commercial fishermen will also catch large numbers of these fish in gill and trawl nets. white anemone 17 25 White anemones are not commonly collected by people for any reason. They reproduce quickly, so the few that are collected are rapidly replaced. However, the weights of trawl nets can damage or kill anemones as the nets are dragged across the bottom to catch fish. fish-eating star 6 8 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Basket stars are rarely caught by fisherman for food. Deep water trawl nets used to catch bottom fish can accidentally catch, move, injure or even kill basket stars as the net drags along the bottom. The fish-eating star is not collected commercially for any reason, but collection methods for other animals, such as trawl nets that drag along the bottom, may disturb their habitat. Because the deep sea is difficult to study and this sea star is uncommon, it is difficult to accurately determine what factors might threaten this animal’s survival. Completing the Seamobile Investigation Data Summary 2 Data Summary Station 2 47 3 Completing the Seamobile Investigation Data Summary 48 Data Summary Station 3 Rocky Bottom Habitat Study Species moray eel, opaleye, red sea urchin, southern sea palm, warty sea cucumber Site Description This site is located off the coast of Palos Verdes, near the largest sewage treatment plant in Los Angeles County. Before pollution control was improved, this plant collected and discharged pesticides and other chemicals from local industries into the ocean. Oil, debris and other waste are still washed into the ocean from streets and parking lots during storms. Runoff during heavy rains can also cause the treatment plant to overflow, forcing incompletely treated sewage into the ocean. Transect Count Data Species present count previous data (10 years ago) red sea urchin 2 7 warty sea cucumber 3 4 opaleye 14 25 moray eel 1 1 southern sea palm 8 23 Species Impact If the food source of the red sea urchin is not readily available in an area, the urchin population may be in danger since they are not as mobile as other marine animals and can not easily relocate to another habitat. Some bottom feeders like the warty sea cucumber have become tolerant of pollutants in the ocean sediments where they eat and live. However, if poisons collect in the tissues of the cucumber, there may be problems for animals that try to eat it. Opaleye feed primarily on kelp, but will also eat some small invertebrates. Toxins may accumulate in these fish if they eat contaminated invertebrates. Also, polluted areas that cannot support a healthy kelp bed severely affect the number of opaleye. Moray eels reproduce in the warmer waters of Baja, Mexico and become permanent residents of the southern California waters once they mature. Once they are settled into their new habitat and become part of the local food web, they may be accumulating toxins in their bodies from the food they eat. Like plants on land, the southern sea palm provides both food and shelter to marine animals. Some coastal runoff, like oil and pesticides, may be poisonous to the sea palms. In other cases, materials from sewage discharges and stormwater runoff may cause local waters to become more cloudy, blocking the amount of sunlight that gets to the sea palms. Without enough light, these plants cannot survive. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Habitat Study Species Site Description Sandy Bottom California spiny lobster, halibut, horn shark, Kellet’s whelk, blackbelly eelpout This site is located at the entrance to the Los Angeles/Long Beach Harbor. The harbor is one of the world’s largest with very heavy traffic. Shipping lanes are designated in and out of the harbor, much like driving lanes, to control the flow of the ships. To make sure that the ships can enter the harbor, the ocean bottom is frequently dredged, or dug up, to make a clear passage. Dredging severely disturbs the harbor’s sandy bottom. Transect Count Data Species present count previous data (10 years ago) horn shark 3 5 halibut 1 12 blackbelly eelpout 1 6 California spiny lobster 1 12 Kellet’s whelk 10 7 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Species Impact Horn sharks are “bottom dwellers.” Disturbing the ocean floor may impact or destroy the other animals like clams and snails that the horn shark comes to feed on. This may force the shark to look elsewhere for its meals. Halibut are also bottom dwellers, spending most of their time on the sandy bottom in relatively shallow waters off the California coast. Changes to the ocean bottom, such as dredging, can cause problems for halibut by destroying their habitat or displacing the animals that the halibut feeds on. Blackbelly eelpouts often protect themselves by burying into the ocean bottom to hide from predators. However, trawl nets that drag the ocean bottom commonly catch eelpouts. Other changes to the ocean floor, such as dredging or dumping, may disturb or even bury these fish. California spiny lobsters often search the sandy bottom areas for food at night. Algae and most of the other food sources for the lobster live on the ocean bottom and are sensitive to changes that might disturb the area. If no food source is available, the lobsters will move to other areas to hunt. Often found on shallow bottom areas, Kellet’s whelks are scavengers. Fishing vessels in coastal areas often dump their waste fish parts and accidental kills back into the ocean before docking in the harbor. This trail of decaying and injured animals on the ocean floor can be very attractive to the whelks. With few predators and plenty of food, their population can grow very quickly. Completing the Seamobile Investigation Data Summary 4 Data Summary Station 4 49 5 Completing the Seamobile Investigation Data Summary 50 Data Summary Station 5 Continental shelf Habitat Study Species box crab, spiny brittle star, sunflower star, giant Pacific octopus, hagfish This deep water site is located off the coast of Orange County near Corona Del Mar. About five years ago, a ship spilled its cargo of copper powder near this site. Copper is a heavy metal and is known to be particularly toxic to many marine organisms. The powder eventually settled to the bottom, and has become part of the ocean floor sediment. Site Description Transect Count Data Species present count previous data (10 years ago) hagfish 1 2 box crab 18 36 sunflower star 4 6 spiny brittle star giant Pacific octopus 16 1 40 6 Species Impact Little is known regarding natural threats to hagfish. Like many bottom dwellers, box crabs are sensitive to pollution from runoff or accidental spills which accumulates on the ocean floor. Some heavy metals, like copper, may actually interfere with the crab’s ability to use oxygen. Sunflower stars are not particularly sensitive to pollution themselves and are not impacted by human harvesting. As long as their food source of brittle stars, sea urchins and other invertebrates is available, sunflower stars will survive. Scientists have discovered that the number of some species of brittle stars drops significantly in polluted waters. As you move further and further away from the polluted area, these brittle star populations begin to increase. The exact reason of how the pollution affects the brittle stars is not clear—scientists are still studying this problem. The giant Pacific octopus is collected commercially as a source of food for humans. Their survival also depends on the health of their ocean habitat. Chemical pollution, from dumping or accidental spills, often settles to the sea floor, where it accumulates in the bodies of the marine animals, like clams and lobsters (and even octopus). These poisonous chemicals may kill these animals, or simply make them poisonous to other animals that eat them. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Site 1 Kelp Forest HABITAT DESTRUCTION These undersea forests located near Catalina Island provide habitats to over 800 different marine species. Destruction of the kelp, whether caused by man or nature, forces these animals to relocate and find shelter and food in other areas. (Students need not speculate the cause of the kelp loss—rather just understand its impact on the habitat.) part of the ocean sediment. The site is also located near a County water pollution control plant wastewater from over 4 million people a day is treated and released into the ocean. These forms of pollution may be responsible for poisoning local species or killing their sources of food or shelter (e.g. southern sea palm) through water or sediment contamination. Site 4 Sandy Bottom HARBOR OPERATIONS Site 2 Continental Slope OVERFISHING This location, on the west end of Catalina Island, is an area of mixing currents and deep water upwelling, creating and maintaining nutrient rich water. The high level of nutrients means there is much food in the area for fish. In this case, lots of fish means lots of fishing. During the fishing season, large numbers of boats and sportsfishermen can be found in this area. Commercial fishing also takes place in the area, involving large gill nets (nets that catch fish by entangling their gills) and trawl nets (nets towed behind boats, often moving on or near the bottom of the channel). Excessive fishing may significantly alter this community. Site 3 Rocky Bottom COASTAL RUNOFF The site is located off the coast of Palos Verdes, an area known for old deposits of pesticides like DDT and significant surface runoff. Years ago, pesticide manufacturers dumped chemical waste into the ocean and it has now become This site is located at the entrance to the Los Angeles Harbor. This area is subject to dredging operations which maintain clear passage for ships entering and leaving the harbor. Dredging severely disturbs the sandy bottom environment. Also, an unusually high number of dead and decaying fish litter the ocean bottom, possibly due to these dredging operations or the actions of commercial fishermen dumping their fish waste parts or unwanted catch before entering the harbor. This may be contributing to an increase in the number of scavenging species (like the Kellet’s whelk). Site 5 Continental Shelf COPPER SPILL This deep water site is located off the coast near an area where a ship spilled its cargo of copper power nearly five years ago. Copper is known to be particularly toxic to many marine organisms and since the powder eventually settled on the ocean floor, bottom dwellers would have been extremely susceptible to this pollution. Organisms not directly affected by the copper might be affected by the loss of a food source which was poisoned by the heavy metal. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 51 Possible Hypotheses for Habitat Changes Below is a list of possible explanations for the changes observed and recorded by students at each of the Seamobile study sites. Understanding the interactions of plants and animals with their environment is a complex and difficult process. The hypotheses described below for each site are probably the most reasonable, given the data available. However, students should understand that there may be additional factors which are impacting these sites and that better predictions would require additional research. Completing the Seamobile Investigation Possible Hypotheses Possible Hypotheses Making Sense of It All Career Focus: Oceanography 52 Career Focus: Oceanography Oceanography (or Marine Science) is the scientific study of the physical and biological components of the Earth’s oceans. This field of study draws on several disciplines, integrating biology, geology, physics, chemistry, and engineering as they relate to understanding the ocean. Marine biology, one of the main branches of oceanography, involves the study of ocean plants and animals and the interrelationships between them and their environment. Marine biologists may also focus on the effects of pollution and human intervention on the organisms living in the ocean. Marine Geologists map the ocean floor, study shoreline problems, examine plate tectonics and seafloor spreading, and analyze characteristics of seafloor sediments. Physical Oceanographers study wave dynamics, tides and currents, ocean/atmosphere interactions, water density, temperature, and underwater acoustics and sound transmission. Chemical Oceanographers are concerned with the chemistry of seawater, its major salts, and its many trace elements. These scientists also study the ocean’s dissolved solids and gasses and the relationships of these conditions to the geology and biology of the ocean as a whole. Marine Engineers design and build oil platforms, ships, harbors, and other structures. Students interested in an oceanography career typically enroll in a variety of science and math classes in college, including biology, chemistry, physics and geology. Although all marine scientists specialize in one area of research, they must also be familiar with other marine science disciplines to appreciate and make connections between them. Marine science contributes to our awareness and appreciation of the interconnection of all natural environments. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County How do we affect the health of our land and oceans? Background The Seamobile provides students a glimpse into a complex ecosystem located a short distance from their school yard. One of the goals of the Seamobile experience is to help promote care and concern for the ocean environments by introducing students to the plants and animals that live there. By bringing children an awareness of the wildlife and relationships in nature, and reinforcing the skills to make thoughtful decisions, we can help them understand their roles and responsibilities in the world around them. What environmental problems do we face in California? Water Pollution. Coastal pollution takes many forms: sewage overflows, chemical dumping, and solid waste are just a few. These problems do affect our recreational use of the seashore, but more importantly, they impact the entire marine ecosystem. Dolphins, seals and marine birds become entangled in plastic netting or six-pack rings. Other marine animals mistake plastic bags for food, leading to plastic-filled stomachs and starvation. It seems that our naive use of the sea as a dumping ground has jeopardized the lives of thousands of unique creatures. Coastal Runoff. The oil that is in the ocean is caused primarily by runoff from the land, rather than large tanker accidents. Each year, 240 million gallons of used motor oil is dumped down drains, poured into dirt, or concealed in trash that goes into landfills. There is also an increase of paint, cleaning fluids and pesticides that are being inadvertently washed into storm drains, which run into the ocean. Oil in the water clogs feathers and fur. It keeps plants from photosynthesizing, due to the dark layer it leaves on the surface of the water. The pesticide DDT settles to the bottom of the ocean and can affect the ocean floor environment for years. Caring for an Ocean Planet Caring for an Ocean Planet Overharvesting. The oceans of the world provide an important source of food to many people. Unfortunately, we are exceeding the maximum amount of fishes we can safely take from the oceans. This means a decrease in the numbers of fish available and a decrease in the average size of fishes left. Shrimps and orange roughy are just two of many marine species being threatened by our ever increasing appetite for seafood. Many of the species that are overharvested cannot recover from such severe depletion. Fish are unable to reproduce before they are cought and young may be taken before they are mature, In addition, the fishing methods used for many marine animals may severely disturb their ocean habitats, or result in the inadvertent collection of other marine species. Changes in Land Use. Who has the right to use the land? The use of private and public lands are being debated as people scramble for more open space. Loss of wilderness areas on land and at sea, means a change in the local ecosystem and a loss of biological diversity. In many cases we are forced to choose between the welfare and livelihood of those who would benefit from the new land use and loss of an entire animal species. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 53 Caring for an Ocean Planet What can we do? Although these environmental issues seem to broadcast imminent doom, it is important that students realize that each of them can make a difference in important ways. If everyone does a just a small part and learns how to better care for their environment and natural resources, the effects can be large. Here are some simple things that we can do. Conserve Energy. Using more electricity typically means burning more fossil fuels, which means depleting nonrenewable resources, possibly increasing demand for additional offshore oil drilling and contributing to air pollution. Help cut down on energy consumption. Put on a sweater instead of turning up the thermostat. Walk to the grocery store only two blocks away instead of driving. Turn off lights and appliances when you leave the room. It’s that simple! Put Trash in its Place. What happens to trash that doesn’t make it into the garbage can? It doesn’t just disappear, although it may seem like it does. Much of the litter we drop, as well as the oil and grease on our roads, ends up in our sewers or drainage channels, where it makes its way to the ocean. A plastic potato chip bag dropped in the San Fernando Valley can end up in the stomach of a dolphin off the coast of Malibu. Even our actions on land 30 miles from the coast can adversely impact habitats at sea! Conserve Water. Fresh water is something we often take for granted, but most of our fresh water in Southern California is imported. (Much of the local groundwater has been contaminated by industry over the past sixty years.) Aqueducts bring water from Northern and Central California, as well as the Colorado River. Los Angelenos’ high demand for water is having a negative affect on natural habitats in these areas and may impact the future of these water sources. Taking baths instead of showers, installing “low-flow” toilets, and washing full loads of laundry can all help reduce water consumption. Also remember that Los Angeles is a naturally dry area, consisting of chaparral and desert habitats. A luxurious green and constantly-watered lawn could be replaced with drought-resistant plants and landscaping. Otherwise, grass-covered lawns can be watered during evening hours when evaporation is slowest, allowing more water to soak in. What happens to the future of the Earth, and all the living things on it, depends on what we do today. It is our responsibility to see (and help others see) how our actions, large and small, bad and good, can impact our world. As John Muir said, “When we tug on one thing in the universe, we find it attached to everything else.” 54 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Gone Fishing Students will model old and new fishing technology and examine the effects that the different methods have on fish populations and biodiversity. In this activity, students will go “fishing” with different levels of technology and see what effect it has on the fish population in the ecosystem. Procedure 1. Divide the students into teams of two and distribute materials to each team. The teacher will place about 15 candies (representing fish) in each bowl. Students should record the total number of “fish” in the “Old Method” section of the data table. Remind them that they shouldn’t eat their fish (although they may get to at the end of the activity.) 2. One person in each team will represent the ocean ecosystem and hold the bowl. The other student will represent the fisherman (or woman) that will fish from the ocean and will have the tweezers (or chopsticks) and the empty cup. 3. Students (fishers) have 30 seconds to move as many fish as they can from the ocean into the collection cup using the tweezers. Students should record the number of fish caught and the number of fish still remaining in the ocean using the data sheet provided. 4. Replace one half the number of fish that are remaining in each team’s ocean ecosystem. For example: if there are 10 fish left in the bowl, the teacher would add 5 additional fish, as the fish would have had some time to mate and produce offspring. Students should record the new total of fish, including the new additions. 6. Inform the fishermen that there have been some developments in fishing technology. The spoon method has been invented; the tweezers (or chopsticks) method is outdated. The fishermen will now have 30 seconds to take as many fish as possible using the spoon. Remind students to record their beginning population before fishing in the section marked “New Method”. When time is called, students should complete the data table as before. 7. As before, replace one half the number of fish that are remaining in each team’s ocean. If there are no fish remaining in the bowl, the students do not get any additional fish because they have depleted all of the population and there are no fish left to breed. 8. Continue the exercise once more with the spoon, record data, then have students answer the questions on their data sheet. Materials small paper bowl (one per team) tweezers or chopsticks (one per team) plastic spoon (one per team) paper cup (one per team) large bag of M&Ms™ or similar candies Gone Fishing Worksheets Activity time 20-30 minutes Process skills Communicating Comparing Relating Teaching Tip: If you tell Extension 5. Ask students to go fishing one more time. Students should again record the number of fish caught and number of fish remaining. Allow the fish to reproduce by adding more candies as before. Students should record their final fish population on the data sheet. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Proceed with the experiment the same way, but tell the fishers that the only fish that they want to catch are the brown ones. However, once a fish of any color is caught, it must be removed and can’t be thrown back. When the students have completed this variation, ask them to consider the following questions. your students ahead of time what will happen to their populations when no fish are left, chances are this activity may cost you a lot of M&M’s™. Let the teams weigh the consequences themselves. Caring for an Ocean Planet Not long ago, fishing in the ocean was a slow and tedious task, with relatively few fish being brought in with every voyage. Today, technology has made it possible for fishing vessels to take in thousands of fish in a relatively short amount of time. While this benefits the fishing industry in the short term, it may cause fish populations to quickly decrease to the point where they can not recover. If one species is removed from the ecosystem, the imbalance is felt up and down the food chain, with other populations either growing out of control because nothing is eating them, or dying because they have nothing to eat. Entire ecosystems can begin to die out when there is less variety of life, or biodiversity, in the area. Gone Fishing pre-visit, post visit Introduction How easy is it to just pick out just one type of fish? Does it matter which method you use? What if you couldn’t see the fish at all? Would you be more likely to pull up a fish or another animal that you couldn’t use? What do you think happens to those unwanted fish? How might this affect the biodiversity of the area? 55 Student Worksheet Gone Fishing Complete the data tables below. Be sure to count and record the total “fish” population before each catch. Gone Fishing Student Worksheet-Data Old Method 1st catch 2nd catch Beginning Fish Population number of fish caught number of fish remaining number of new fish Final Fish Population New Method 1st catch 2nd catch Beginning Fish Population number of fish caught number of fish remaining number of new fish Final Fish Population 56 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Student Worksheet Gone Fishing 2. Why didn’t the fish population go back to the original number after every turn? 3. What problems do you think this new method of fishing might cause the food chain in the area? 4. How would the new technology affect the ecosystem as a whole? 5. What do you think happened to the commercial fishermen’s profits immediately after they started using the new technology? Gone Fishing Student Worksheet-Questions 1. What happened as the fishing technology improved? 6. What do you think will happen to the commercial fishermen’s profits in the following years? Explain. 7. How do you think this problem could have been prevented? 8. What might a regular consumer do to help with the problem of overfishing? Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 57 About Fishing Quick Info: In the past sixty years, the fishing industry has changed dramatically. New technologies that enable fishermen to significantly increase their catch have been introduced to the fishing community. With these new methods and new nets, fishermen are taking millions more fish per year from the oceans. Listed below are some of the fishing methods that are being used in the oceans today. Trawl Nets Funnel shaped nets that are dragged behind boats. These nets act as a scoop for any fish, shrimp or other marine animal. Dead, unwanted fish are thrown back into the water after the net is brought up to the boat. About Fishing Gill Nets Vertical walls of netting designed to let fish of a certain size swim part way through, only to get stuck in the netting by their gills. Thousands of unwanted fish get caught and die in gill nets every day. Purse-Seine Nets Nets that encircle entire schools of Angling/Sports Fishing Fish are caught one at a time using poles and bait or lures. If large groups of anglers fish in a small area over a long period of time, the fish populations can significantly decline. In most cases, however, sports fishing has a much smaller impact on an ecosystem than large scale commercial fishing. fish, then close at the bottom like a pouch to prevent fish from escaping. Hundreds of thousands of fish are caught at one time. Dolphins are often caught in this type of net and drown when they are unable to come up for air. In the 1990’s, consumers became aware of this method of fishing and boycotted tuna that was caught in this way. Most United States tuna companies stopped using purse-seine nets because of this, and the boycott ended successfully. Consumers that are well informed are the best defense against the problem of overfishing. If consumers chose to eat only fish that were caught by responsible fishing methods, the fishing industry could be forced to change their practices. Eating only hatchery-raised fish is another thing that consumers can do to ensure that the ocean fish populations remain stable. 58 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Too Much of a Good Thing? Students will learn the impact of overenriching the marine environment with nutrients that are by-products of human activity. When too many nutrients are introduced to the marine environment, single-celled plants, called phytoplankton, bloom or become too abundant. The presence of the increased number of phytoplankton causes the water to change color and blocks the sunlight from the deeper beds of plant life that provide food and shelter for many marine animals. These plants can die when light is reduced. Also when the large quantities of phytoplankton die and sink to the bottom, the process of decay consumes oxygen from the water. This affects other marine life. Procedure 1. Fill each jar with 750 ml of water. 2. Add 10 mg of fertilizer to the first jar and 25 mg of fertilizer to the second jar. 3. Add 10 mg of fertilizer to the third jar and cover it completely with aluminum foil. This is the control sample for light. It will be used later for comparison. 4. Don’t add anything to the water in the fourth beaker. This is the control for fertilizer. This sample will also be useful for comparison. 5. Label and date the jars and place them near a good light source, either in a sunny window or in strong artificial light. Do not put them in a cold place. 6. Students should record observations of the jars every day or two and note any changes they see. The algae should begin to grow in the jars with fertilizer in about ten days while the non-fertilized jar (#4) should stay fairly clear. 7. There are two variables being manipulated in this experiment: amount of fertilizer and amount of light. As the experiment progresses, ask students to answer the following questions. How does the amount of fertilizer affect algae growth? What evidence supports your conclusion? How does the amount of light affect algae growth? What evidence supports this conclusion? Based on your observations, why might too much algae growth be harmful? Extensions 1. After completing the above experiment, ask students to test the acidity of the water in the jars using litmus or other paper indicator. Then add 1/4 to 1/2 cup of vinegar to each and test acidity again. The vinegar here simulates acid rain or acidic runoff. Allow students to observe and record their findings for several days. The water should become very clear as the acid kills all the algae in the water. Challenge students to think about how they might reduce the acidity of the water and whether or not the algae would be able to grow again. 2. Obtain some Elodea from a tropical fish store and add to the first two beakers. (Elodea is a type of fresh water underwater plant.) Ask students to predict what will happen to the plant after a few days or weeks and then observe and record its growth. The Elodea will be competing with the algae for resources. Initially it should do well, but eventually it will die because of the increased algae growth. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Materials four equal size clear jars or bottles of one liter or more water with algae from a freshwater pond, stream or aquarium commercial plant fertilizer good light source Activity time 2-3 weeks Process skills Observing Communicating Relating Inferring Caring for an Ocean Planet Nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus are essential for life, but too many nutrients can cause the marine environment to get out of balance. Nitrogen and phosphorus occur naturally in the water, soil and air, but are also found in human sewage, animal manure and plant fertilizer. Sewage treatment plants dump partially treated human waste into the ocean, and water running off from the surface of the land carries fertilizers and other pollutants to the streams and rivers that feed into the ocean. Too Much of a Good Thing? post-visit Introduction 59 Caring for an Ocean Planet What a Mess! Students devise methods for “cleaning up” a simulated oil spill and compare their procedures to actual procedures used for real spills. Introduction Materials What a Mess! post-visit for each student team: a foil pan or plastic container, approximately 9"x9"x2", filled with water 2 straws piece of yarn (18") paper towels small spray bottle filled with water and dish soap 2 paper cups eye dropper or disposable pipet cooking oil (4 tablespoons per team, plus refills) Activity time 45-90 minutes Process skills Observing Communicating Comparing Relating Inferring Connections Physical Science Engineering 60 Although water and oil don’t mix, oil spills are quite difficult to clean up. There are several different methods used today, each appropriate for different situations. Containment booms are placed around oil floating on the surface of the water to keep the oil from spreading. Chemical dispersants are used to break up floating oil and make it sink to the bottom of the ocean. Skimming is essentially vacuuming the oil from the surface of the water. Oil absorbent towels and other materials are used to remove oil, especially on contaminated shorelines. Finally, bioremediation is sometimes used, where microorganisms that feed on the oil are introduced to the spill in order to “eat it away.” Part A. Testing Procedure 1. Set up the “oil spills” prior to class time by adding about 1.5” to 2” of water to each team’s pan, followed by about 4 tablespoons of cooking oil. 2. Introduce the challenge: “What is the best way to remove the oil from the water?” Then state the ground rules: A) Water cannot be dumped or siphoned out of the container. B) Only the materials provided can be used. C) Each attempt must be recorded on a data sheet. (Don’t introduce the idea of oil spills yet— simply let the students attempt to complete the task.) 3. Distribute a copy of the data sheet provided to each student. For each method they attempt, the team must describe what materials were used and how they cleaned the oil. Encourage students to stick with one procedure until they have cleaned their water, or at least until they have a feel for how effective their method is. 4. Once they have derived one procedure, ask the team to go back and try again, this time with different tools. You may need to add more oil to their water supply, or in some cases, completely refill their container. Each team should come up with 2 or 3 ways to clean their water. 5. Once students have completed their investigations, ask students to rank their methods for cleaning in two separate categories: most effective (the test that removed the most oil while leaving the water behind) and easiest (the test that required the least amount of time and effort). Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County What a Mess! Part B. Comparing Data 1. Ask each team to make a list of difficulties they had in cleaning their water, considering any of the methods they used. Ask each team to share their findings and create a class list. Try to help clarify each group’s reasons and promote questioning, without necessarily designating right or wrong answers. 2. Inform students that many of the methods they used in cleaning the water are similar to methods used to clean oil spills in the ocean. Ask the teams about their results. Guide discussion using questions like the following: What is the difference between the ‘best’ way and the ‘easiest’ way to clean the oil? Using your ‘easiest’ method, did you take just oil out, or oil with a lot of water? What about your ‘best’ method? Which method would be most expensive? When cleaning up an actual oil spill, how do you think people decide which method(s) to use? 3. Distribute the handout “Disaster in the North Pacific!” Ask each team to read the scenario and consider which method might be “best” for this situation. Ask each team to draft a one page clean-up proposal for the oil spill, stating which method or combination of methods they would recommend. Each team MUST support their proposed strategy using data from their testing and any other information discussed during class. The scenario in “Disaster in the North Pacific” is fictional, but is based on information from several real situations. 4. Read to the students the information from “Disaster Follow-Up”, including the methods used and the actual results of those actions. Following this, debrief the class, touching on the following points: In order to make informed decisions, scientists often use models to better understand a situation. The more variables there are in any given situation, the more difficult it is to predict outcomes. There is no foolproof way to completely clean up an oil spill. It is a very difficult and unpredictable process. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Teaching Tip: Consider reviewing or introducing the concept of density as a way of helping students understand why oil floats. See “That Sinking Feeling” for suggestions. You might also review the idea of solubility to remind students that oil can’t really mix with water. The phrase “like dissolves like” can be used to indicate how similar liquids can mix (like water and food coloring), but dissimilar liquids (like oil and vinegar) cannot. Some chemicals, like dish soap, can surround oily liquids and make them more soluble in water. 61 Student Worksheet What A Mess! What we used (materials) What we did (procedure) Test 1 What A Mess! Student Worksheet Test 2 Test 3 Which test was the easiest way to remove the oil? Explain. Which test removed the oil the best or was most effective? Explain. 62 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County The Los Angele s Tides Disaster in the North Pacific! October 25, 1991 SITKA, AL ASK A - A large American oil ta nker has collided with a fi shing boat approximately 30 miles West of the Ala skan shore, just north of th e Canadian border. A large hole in the side of the tanker has allowed nearly 100,000 barrels (4,200,000 gallons) of crude oil to esca pe into the Pacific Ocean . The local environmental ag encies and the oil company that owns the tanker seem ed unprepared for this tragedy and now, almost tw o days later, are just starti ng to make will be moving some progress in towards ab in oil conout the loca the coastline tainment and l fishing as early as indu clean-up tom stry, which has orrow. efforts. already suffered losses this year due to the over Alaskans and Luckily, the seas fishing probCanadians lem have been al . Sa ik id e calm so far, and are concerned one man: about “Everyon the spill is th e here relies e impact that still within a 25 on the spill the -mile radius ocean in one could have on of the crashe w ay th or eir local anot d tanker. m her, people an arine and coasta However, with a d anil wildlife mals storm front alike. We’re all populations on the way an ho pi ng in cl uding that the d today’s se oil gets cleaned abirds, otters, strong east/sou up seals, sea befo theast curre it’s too late.” lions, fish, clam rents, the wea Which s and the leav ther service es Alaska and endangered B predicts that th the rest ald Eagles. of e oil slick Pe the world aski ople are also ng : How worried will th ey clean it up? Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County What A Mess ! Los Angeles Tides 25 cents 63 Student Information Sheet What a Mess! What a Mess! Student Information Sheet Disaster Follow-up 64 Disaster Follow-up Cleaning It Up The oil was first corralled into containment booms (the quickest method of containing large amounts of oil) which surrounded the largest oil slicks at the water surface. The oil was then removed from the top of the contained water with skimmers that were pulled behind boats equipped with vacuum-like tubes to suck the oily water up. These quick and easy methods only worked for the largest slicks, however. soaked with oil and became inedible. Over one hundred bald eagles, who nest in the area, were reported to have died the year after the spill. Marine fisheries such as the salmon industry have been hard hit by below-average catches since the spill, though research shows that this is due to both the oil spill and the overfishing of the entire area. The Oil Company has agreed to pay for most of the clean up and research. Ten Years Later Ten years after the oil tanker accident in the waters near the town of Sitka, Alaska, scientists have completed a report of the long-term impacts of the spill. They say that in many ways the ecosystem has proven surprisingly strong, with some plants and animals recovering nicely. The marine mammal populations are finally growing after eight years in decline, and some of the seabirds are breeding normally again. Most species, however, still have a long way to go for recovery, including the bald eagles, The clean-up crews also tried adding a chemical which are still having oil-related problems with dispersant to make the oil mix with the water their eggshells being too thin for their chicks and then sink. Environmental groups protested to develop properly. There is also some oil that this, saying that letting the oil sit on the ocean has been trapped underground that, even now, floor was just as bad for the ecosystem as letting occasionally leaches to the surface to create it stay on the surface. People also feared that new hazards. the chemicals were as harmful to the ocean environment as the oil itself. In all, the plant and animal populations seem to have adjusted themselves in response to the Even after using all of these methods, thousands spill. The scientific studies done on this spill, and of gallons of oil still made it to the shore. Over effectiveness the clean-up methods that were 200 miles of shoreline were affected. Thousands used, have proved helpful by limiting damage in of animals died as oil got into their fur or feathers, more recent spills. Scientists and environmentalists preventing them from keeping warm in the cold agree that a faster response time and more waters. Still more animals died when their food effective removal methods are important goals sources, such as shellfish or marine plants, were for managing future oil spill incidents. Workers went after the smaller patches of oil with sorbents, or special sponge-like towels that soaked the oil off of the water surface. This method was very time consuming, with thousands of people working long days. One crew started burning the oil from the surface of the water in a small area, but smoke from the fires proved toxic and dangerous to other workers and the people living in nearby houses. Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Measurements and Conversions Appendix A Length While inches and feet are the measurements of length (or depth) commonly used in the United States, other countries and most scientists use units of centimeters and meters. One meter equals 3.281 feet. To translate meters into feet, multiply the number of meters by 3.281. Example: For 100 meters F = 100 x 3.281 F = 328.1 ft Other Useful Length Conversions: To translate feet to meters, simply divide by 3.281. Example: For 1000 feet 1in = 1 mile = 1 mile = 1km = 1m = M = 1000 / 3.281 M = 304.8 m Temperature There are several different scales used for measuring temperature. In the United States, Fahrenheit degrees are used in everyday life. In most other countries, Celsius degrees are used. The Celsius scale is commonly used by scientists around the world, including scientists in the United States. The boiling point and freezing point of water are often used as reference points when measuring temperature. On the Fahrenheit scale: 32˚F is the freezing point of water; 212˚F is the boiling point of water. To convert Celsius into Fahrenheit: multiply the number of degrees Celsius by 9⁄5 or 1.8 and then add 32. On the Celsius scale: 0˚C is the freezing point of water; 100˚C is the boiling point of water. Example: For 100˚C F = (100 x 1.8) + 32 F = 180 + 32 F = 212˚F 2.54 cm 5280 ft 1.61 km 1000 m 100 cm Appendix A Measurements and Conversions An important part of collecting data is making measurements. Throughout the Seamobile program, students will be measuring different quantities, including depth, temperature and pressure. A description of these measurements and common conversions is included below. Pressure The particles of air around us are constantly bumping into things. The force of these “bumps” is called pressure. At sea level, the pressure caused by air is about 14.7 pounds per square inch (psi). That is, there is almost 15 pounds pushing on every square inch of area. Another unit used to measure pressure is the atmosphere (atm). One atmosphere is equal to 14.7 psi. To convert atmospheres to pounds per square inch, simply multiply atmospheres by 14.7. Example: For 5 atm P = 5 x 14.7 P = 73.5 psi As you go deeper in the ocean, pressure increases in the amount of one atmosphere ( or 14.7 psi) for every 10 meters (32.8 feet) you descend. To find the pressure in pounds per square inch (psi), divide the depth in meters by 10, multiply by 14.7 and then add 14.7 to the total. (The additional 14.7 psi accounts for atmospheric pressure.) Example: For 50 meters P P P P = = = = (50/10 x 14.7) + 14.7 (5 x 14.7) + 14.7 73.5 + 14.7 88.2 psi Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 65 Randy Harwood Glossary Appendix B Glossary Glossary Appendix B algae Plant-like organisms that live mostly in water. Can exist as exoskeleton Hard outer covering of some invertebrates. single-celled free swimmers or as multicellular seaweed. gas bladder Small gas-filled floats that help a plant or animal aphotic zone Area of the ocean to which sunlight never reaches; float in the water. Gas bladders hold kelp blades toward the surface also called the dark zone. where they receive sunlight. They also help fish swim upright. Arthropods Invertebrates that have a hard exoskeleton and invertebrate Animal that does not have a backbone. Mammals Warm-blooded vertebrates that have hair and jointed legs. bioluminescence Production of light by a living organism. camouflage Ability to blend into the surroundings by means of body coloration, patterns, and shape. carapace Part of an exoskeleton that covers the head and thorax (chest) of some arthropods. Also, a sea turtle shell. cartilage Tough, elastic connective and supportive tissue found in many animals. Some fish, like sharks, have an entire skeleton made of cartilage. cartilaginous Made of cartilage. Cephalopods Class of marine mollusks; including octopuses, squids, and nautiluses. chromatophores Skin cells containing pigment. Allows some animals, like squid, to change color. Cnidarians Soft invertebrates with tentacles that have stinging cells. produce milk. Mollusks Invertebrates with soft bodies. Often protected by shells. marine snow Another name for detritus; used to describe matter drifting down from the surface. natural history Detailed description of a species and its lifestyle. operculum Cover for the opening of the shells of gastropods (like snails) and, a plate covering the gills of bony fish. overfishing Taking too many fish and seriously depleting its numbers, potentially affecting the future existence of that species. overharvesting Taking too many plants or animals for human use, depleting the numbers and impacting the future of the species. photic zone Area of the ocean through which sunlight penetrates. photosynthesis Process which occurs in green plants where light energy is used to create food. phytoplankton Microscopic plants that float near the compound eyes Single eye structure containing several light-sensing units. ocean’s surface. continental shelf Gradually sloping area of land that begins and sea lions. at the shore and continues under the ocean. continental slope Steeply sloping area of land located beneath the ocean. Crustaceans Mostly aquatic class of animals that includes shrimp, lobsters, crabs, barnacles and others. colonial animal Animal in which many small individuals grow together, making one large body. detritus Small bits of matter, such as decaying plant and animal parts, and animal waste. Provides food for some animals living in the deep, lightless regions of the sea. dichotomous Dividing or branching into two parts; in a dichotomous key, two questions are asked about an item in order to help classify it. dorsal refers to the back of an organism, such as the dorsal fin of a fish Pinniped Group of marine mammals that contains seals preopercle Cover over the smaller gill opening of bony fish. radula File-like structure in mollusks used to tear up food and bring it into the mouth of an animal. ROV “Remotely Operated Vehicle” runoff Rainfall that is not absorbed by the ground and flows into the ocean; usually carries with it pollutants like oil, fertilizers and other materials. scavenger Animal that feeds on dead plants or animals. sediment Material that settles to the ocean bottom such as dirt, dead microorganisms and pollutants. stipe Stem-like part of seaweed. vertebrate Animal that has a backbone. siphonophore Colonial animal related to the jellies; they can grow to be over 50 feet long. Echinoderms Invertebrates with spiny skin, often in a star shape. zooplankton Microscopic animals that float in the ocean. 66 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Books Love, R. M. Probably More Than You Want to Know About the Fishes of the Pacific Coast. Santa Barbara, CA: Really Big Press, 1991. ISBN 0-9628725-4-7 Macquitty, M. Eyewitness Books Ocean. London: Dorling Kindersley, 1995. ISBN 0-679-87331-7 Monterey Bay Aquarium Sea Searcher’s Handbook. Boulder, CO: Roberts Rinehart Publishers, 1996. ISBN 1-878244-15-9 Appendix C For More Information Here are some other places where you (and your students) can find more information about marine biology and ocean exploration, as well as ideas for more ocean-themed activities. Niesen, T. M. Marine Biology Coloring Book. Oakville, CA: Coloring Concepts, Inc., 1982. ISBN 0-06-460303-2 Nye, B. Bill Nye the Science Guy’s Big Blue Ocean. New York: Hyperion Books for Children, 1999. ISBN 0-7868-4221-0 Parker, S. Eyewitness Books Fish. London: Dorling Kindersley, 1990. ISBN 0-679-80439-0 Parker, S. Eyewitness Books Seashore. London: Dorling Kindersley, 1989. ISBN 0-394-82254-4 Web Sites California Department of Fish and Game www.dfg.ca.gov Environmental Protection Agency www.epa.gov Long Beach Aquarium of the Pacific www.aquariumofpacific.org National Wildlife Organization www.nwf.org/education Oceanlink http://oceanlink.island.net UCLA Ocean Discovery Center www.odc.ucla.edu USC Sea Grant Program www.usc.edu/org/seagrant Monterey Bay Aquarium www.mbayaq.org Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County www.nhm.org Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 67 Resources For More Information Appendix C Echinoderm Photos Appendix D The eight photos on the following pages can be used with the activity Invent a Key for Echinoderms. Although the images are included in the Seamobile Teaching Kit that is provided to teachers prior to the Seamobile visit, these prints can copied and used with other classes when the teaching trunks are unavailable. Appendix D Echinoderm Photos Each team of students will require one complete set of photos, species A through H. Todd Winner Randy Harwood 68 A B Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Appendix D Echinoderm Photos Randy Harwood D Randy Harwood C 69 Randy Harwood Appendix D Echinoderm Photos Rick Moffit F Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County 70 E Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County Appendix D Echinoderm Photos Todd Winner H Randy Harwood G 71 Additional Notes Additional Notes 72 Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County