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HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? (2 Hours) Addresses NGSS Level of Difficulty: 3 Grade Range: 3-5 OVERVIEW In this activity, students will learn about the importance of balance in an ecosystem. They will simulate population changes over time. Then they will evaluate a local ecosystem and create a report that describes the ecosystem’s health. Topic: Ecosystems: Interactions, Energy, and Dynamics Real-World Science Topics • An exploration of the interdependence of organisms in an ecosystem. • An analysis of how environmental changes can affect an organism’s ability to survive and reproduce. • An evaluation of the health of a local ecosystem. Objective After completing this activity, students should be able to explain how populations in an ecosystem are sustained and kept in check by the availability of resources such as water, food, and shelter, and by predation and disease. Students in Grade 6 should be able to describe how invasive species can impact the biodiversity of a system. NGSS Three-Dimensions 1 Science and Engineering Practices Disciplinary Core Ideas Crosscutting Concepts Analyzing and Interpreting Data • Represent data in tables and/or various graphical displays (bar graphs, pictographs and/or pie charts) to reveal patterns that indicate relationships. • Compare and contrast data collected by different groups in order to discuss similarities and differences in their findings. LS2.C: Ecosystem Dynamics, Functioning, and Resilience • When the environment changes in ways that affect a place’s physical characteristics, temperature, or availability of resources, some organisms survive and reproduce, others move to new locations, yet others move into the transformed environment, and some die. (secondary to 3-LS4-4) • Biodiversity describes the variety of species found in Earth’s terrestrial and oceanic ecosystems. The completeness or integrity of an ecosystem’s biodiversity is often used as a measure of its health. (MS-LS2-5) Stability and Change • Change may occur at different rates. Students learn some systems appear stable, but over long periods of time they will eventually change. • Stability and change in natural or designed systems can be explained by examining changes over time, and considering forces at different scales, including the atomic scale. Changes in one part of a system might cause large changes in another part, systems in dynamic equilibrium are stable due to a balance of feedback mechanisms, and stability might be disturbed by either sudden events or gradual changes that accumulate over time. www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? Background Information How do organisms interact with each other and their physical environment? Organisms grow, reproduce, and maintain their species by obtaining necessary resources through interdependent relationships with other organisms and the environment. How can changing environmental factors affect organisms? Changes in environmental factors such as weather patterns, availability of resources, human impact, and disease can result in the growth or disappearance of populations. What are the characteristics of a healthy ecosystem? Ecosystems are complex, interactive systems that include both living and non-living components. A healthy ecosystem is stable and maintains balance between resources and those that consume them. Key Vocabulary Carnivore– an animal that feeds on the flesh of other animals Consumer– an organism that feeds on other organisms in a food chain Ecosystem– a system formed by the interaction of a community of organisms with their habitat Food chain– transfer of food energy from one organism to another in an ecological community Food web– a group of interrelated food chains in a particular ecological community Herbivore– an animal that feeds on plants Interdependence– when two or more living things are dependent on each other Invasive species– non-native plants and animals that steal nutrients and resources from native organisms Limiting factor– a factor that controls an organism’s population, size, or distribution Omnivore– an organism that eats both plants and animals Producer– an organism that serves as a food source for other animals in a food chain Materials Needed for Activity • 12 plastic chips per student (divide class into thirds and give one-third of the students red chips, one-third blue chips, and one-third green chips) May substitute three types of dry beans • “Forest Food Web handout” - one per student • 1 plastic bag per student • “Ecosystem Evaluation Report “ – one per student • 1 plastic cup per group • 1 red marker per group • 1 food, shelter, and water card set per student • 1 green marker per group • “Simulation Game Directions” –one per group • 1 blue marker per group • Class set of calculators • 3 red crayons/pencils per group • 3 dry erase boards and markers • 3 green crayons/pencils per group • Chart paper • 3 blue crayons/pencils per group • Marker for chart paper • 1 Class Data Chart posted • “ Population Simulation” handout – one per student Teacher Preparation • Prepare the materials for the simulation game. You will need five chips in a plastic bag and one food, shelter, and water card set per student. Put extra red, blue and green chips in separate cups. • Copy the Population Simulation, Forest Food Web, and Ecosystem Evaluation Report handouts for each student. • Copy the Simulation Game Directions handout for each group. 2 www.siemensstemday.com STEPS FOR HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? 1. Warm-up Activity: Assign each table group one of the following terms to discuss and define: producer, consumer, herbivore, carnivore, and omnivore. Circulate to provide support, as needed. Call students up to act out the definitions. For example, you might have two students act out the roles of a shark and a seal to demonstrate the term carnivore. After students have had a chance to demonstrate their understanding of the terms, post the definitions and have student groups compare their definitions to the ones provided. 2. Tell students that today they are going to conduct a simulation. Explain that a simulation is the imitation of a real-world system or process overtime. The purpose of this simulation is to help students predict and describe how the availability of resources can impact an ecosystem. 3. Follow the steps below to facilitate the simulation. • Pass out 5 red chips to one-third of your students, 5 blue chips to one-third of your students, and 5 green chips to the remaining third. Explain that each red chip represents 10 white-tailed deer, each green chip represents 10 white-footed mice, and each green chip represents 10 eastern cotton tailed rabbits. Distribute the extra red, green, or blue chips in cups to each organism group (e.g., deer group receives a cup of red chips). Distribute one food, shelter, and water card set to each student. • Ask students to identify the producers and consumers (producers: plants; consumers: deer, mice, rabbits). Then have them explain if these organisms are herbivores, carnivores, or omnivores. Direct the students’ attention to their cards and ask, “Why do you think food, shelter, and water are important resources for these organisms?” Clarify that these resources meet the organisms’ basic needs. Teacher Note: Animals also need space, but for the purpose of this simulation the focus will be on food, shelter, and water. • Provide a copy of the Population Simulation handout to each student. Have students fill in the name of their organism at the top of the page. Tell students that, during the simulation, they will record their number of organisms in the data table after each round. Explain that they will then work with their group to calculate their organism’s total population size and that the group’s data will be entered into the class data chart. Tell students that each round of the game represents a month. • Post and review the directions for the game. 4. After the first twelve rounds of the simulation, have students reflect in their journals. Have them explain how their population changed over time and describe why they think the changes occurred. Prompt them to think about what happened when the resources their organism needed were and were not available. After they have reflected, explain that some fluctuation in population is normal and that many populations in nature show growth in the spring when there are many births, then continually decrease until the end of winter. Summarize that one of the factors related to population size is the availability of resources. 5. Conduct a modified second version of the simulation. Tell students that disease has eliminated all of the mice and three-fourths rabbits. Collect the chips that represent these organisms. To represent an increase in the availability of resources, flip over two cards from the class set of food, shelter, and water cards at the beginning of each round. Regroup students into two groups representing the two remaining organisms, making sure that each group has a dry erase board and students with chips have calculators. Complete twelve rounds. At the end of each round, have students work together to count the chips and to calculate the total population size for their assigned organism. Use a red, green, and blue marker to add the population totals for all three organisms during months 13-24 to the class graph. At the end of the game, ask students to identify patterns in the data. The idea is for students to determine if the steady supply of resources caused change. At the conclusion of the second simulation, ask students to predict what might happen to the deer and rabbit populations if there continued to be a steady supply of resources. Allow students to share. 3 www.siemensstemday.com STEPS FOR HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? 6. Provide copies of the Forest Food Web handout. Explain that a food web is an interrelated group of food chains. Work together to identify the producers and consumers. Cover different species and ask students to explain what might happen if various species were eliminated. Make sure that students understand that the components of an ecosystem are interdependent and there needs to be a balance for an ecosystem to remain stable and healthy. 7. Have students select and evaluate the health of a local ecosystem. Distribute and review the Ecosystem Evaluation Report handout. Provide access to resources students can use to collect data needed (biodiversity of the system, human impact, weather patterns) to determine the general health of a local ecosystem. Once students have collected their data allow time for them to create a report that communicates their findings. Extension Activity Develop a plan to improve the health of a local ecosystem. Sources http://ecosystems.psu.edu/youth/sftrc/environ-series http://ecosystems.psu.edu/youth/sftrc/deer 4 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? FOOD, SHELTER AND WATER CARD SETS 5 Food Shelter Water Food Shelter Water Food Shelter Water Food Shelter Water Food Shelter Water www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? SIMULATION GAME DIRECTIONS 1. Place your food, water, and shelter cards on your desk face down. 2. At the beginning of each round, flip up one of your resource cards. Once you flip a card, it needs to stay up for the entire round. 3. After each of you has flipped a card, I will flip a resource card from the class deck. 4. Compare your card to the class deck card. If your card matches the class deck card, you will take another chip from the cup. If your card does not match, you will return a chip to the cup. Remember, each chip represents ten organisms. 5. We will play twelve rounds; each round represents one month of the year. 6. At the end of each round, record your individual data on your data chart. Then use the calculator and work with your group to determine and record the total population size/number of deer, mice, or rabbits in the ecosystem. Have one group member write the total on the whiteboard and hold it up until the teacher has recorded the data on the class data chart. 7. At the end of the game, take time to label your graph. Refer to the posted class data chart and graph your organism’s population totals for each month. Draw a solid line to connect the data points. Look for patterns related to how your organism’s population changed. 8. Be prepared to describe how your organism’s population changed overtime. 6 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT Name: Date: Population Simulation Organism: __________________________________________________________ Directions: Record your individual and your group’s data in the table below. Month My Total (Add up your chips) Total Number of Organism (Add up your group’s chips) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 7 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT Name: Date: Population Totals Over Time Population Size Directions: Graph your group’s data. Connect your data points with the appropriate color line. Month Key White-tailed Deer - Red White-footed Mouse - Green Eastern Cotton-tailed Rabbit - Blue 8 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT How did your organism’s population change over time? Look at the class data chart. Graph the population data for the other two organisms in the ecosystem. Use the appropriate colored pencil to connect your data points. 9 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT Forest Food Web 10 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT Class Data Chart Population Totals Month White-tailed Deer White-footed Mouse Eastern Cotton-tailed Rabbit 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 11 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT Population Size Class Graph: Population Totals Month 12 www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT Name: Date: Ecosystem Evaluation Report YOUR CHARGE Today, you will conduct research to help you evaluate stability and health of a local ecosystem. GENERAL INFORMATION LOCATION: County:__________________________________ City:_____________________________________ State:____________________________________ Longitude:____________Latitude:_____________ BIODIVERSITY A food web reflects the living part of an ecosystem and diagrams the transfer of energy as living things eat each other. Draw or paste your ecosystem’s food web below. Label the producers and consumers. Be sure to include the Sun in your drawing and use arrows to show the flow of energy. SIZE: Approximate acreage:_______________________ LANDUSE: urban, rural, agricultural, industrial, residential, recreational, undisturbed All: Mostly: Some: Some: Label the producers and consumers. Which organisms compete for food in your ecosystem? SIZE: Approximate acreage:_______________________ ARTIFICIAL AND NATURAL FEATURES: Artificial Natural Do all of the organisms in your ecosystem have adequate food and water? Explain. Living TYPE OF HABITAT: Terrestrial Habitat wooded open field prairie/plains savannah other:______________ 13 Non-living Once Was Living Aquatic Habitat lake stream wetland ocean other:_______________ www.siemensstemday.com HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? STUDENT HANDOUT POTENTIAL/EXISTING PROBLEMS Have any organisms disappeared (relocation, extinction)? Explain. Identify any threatened or endangered species. Explain their conflict. Have any predators been introduced or eliminated? If so, how is it impacting the system? Have there been any sudden changes in the availability of resources? Are weather patterns a threat? (forest fires, hurricanes, etc.) Are there any problems with pollution or disease? HOW HEALTHY IS YOUR ECOSYSTEM? A healthy ecosystem is made up of native plant and animal populations living in balance with each other and the non-living things. ______Not at all ______Somewhat ______Very Explain why your ranked your ecosystem as not, somewhat, or very healthy. Be sure to support your argument with evidence from your research. 14 www.siemensstemday.com