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Evolution by Natural Selection Natural Selection on Mussel Shell Thickness Students will explore the effects of natural selection on populations with trait variation and without trait variation. Students should have some understanding of evolution due to previous classes and/or the big bang theory (this will be discussed later in a following unit). Each student should have some prior knowledge of species interactions. (Predator and prey, omnivore, herbivore, etc.) NGSS Standard: HS-LS2-6: “Evaluate the claims, evidence, and reasoning that the complex interactions in ecosystems maintain relatively consistent numbers and types of organisms in stable conditions, but changing conditions may result in a new ecosystem” Colorado Standard: 2.2 High School Life Science “The size and persistence of populations depend on their interactions with each other and the abiotic factors in an ecosystem.” Inquiry Question: “How do keystone species maintain balance in ecosystems?” Learning objectives: SWBAT Recall the three requirements for evolution to occur by means of natural selection. 1. Phenotypic variation in a trait is necessary within the population 2. Phenotypes must be heritable within the population 3. Some phenotypes are more fit than others Determine whether evolution occurred through natural selection on a given species or by a different mechanism of evolution. Explain how evolution by natural selection could lead to biodiversity in an environment. Materials Peanuts and almonds: have a 9:1 ration of peanuts to almonds. Students will start with 9 peanuts and 1 almond each but these numbers will double each reproductive cycle of the activity Student worksheet (attached) Paper bag for nuts and plastic bins to put nuts in so they are not on the tables Graph paper Computer lab access to make video project Camera (students will check out a camera from the school and be responsible to return it) Instructional planning Video: misconception https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S1t5_iGN0xE Worksheet: https://www.kbs.msu.edu/images/stories/docs/nuts_student_worksheet.pdf Background: Read aloud to students before the activity or have them popcorn read Background Asian shore crabs (Hemigrapsus sanguineus) are native to the western Pacific Ocean, but since the late 1980s they have been spreading throughout the northern Atlantic coast of the United States. These crabs are tiny, about the size of a penny, but populations of this predator are growing very quickly. Blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) in the northeast US are becoming more resistant to predation by crabs. How is this happening? Within populations of this single species of mussel, some individual mussels have thicker shells than others, so there is phenotypic variation in the trait. This trait, shell thickness, is heritable, meaning that thick-shelled crabs have thick-shelled offspring and thin-shelled crabs have thinshelled offspring. Crabs are exerting selection pressure on this trait, creating a relationship between the trait and their fitness by eating only the thin-shelled mussels. The three requirements for evolution are heritable trait, phenotypic variation in the trait, relationship between trait and fitness. These requirements are all met, so the mussel population is able to evolve in response to predation by the crabs. Evolution is a change in the average trait value in a population over time. Evolution does not happen to an individual; it happens to a population. It cannot happen in less than a single generation, because traits must be passed on to the offspring. Evolution can happen rapidly; “rapid evolution” happens in tens or hundreds of years instead of thousands of years or longer. There are many different examples of rapid evolution, with the most famous being the peppered moth in England during the Industrial Revolution. The moth was originally light colored with dark speckles, but after the heavy coal burning dirtied the buildings and trees, predators could easily pick out light colored moths and populations of the moths shifted to being dark colored with light speckles. Procedure/activity Student Activity Engage Students make a KWL in their scientific notebook about evolution and natural selection. Students share their responses with a partner and write one of their thoughts on the board Explore Students complete lab with almond and peanuts. Students who are allergic to nuts should observe only, but still fill in the data sheet. Students will not be eating the nuts, but placing them in a paper bag to simulate that they have been eaten. Teacher Activity Ask students to make a KWL about evolution and natural selection. Teacher walks around and asks students what they know and want to know about the topic. Asks students to put a statement on the board about evolution or natural selection then reads them allowed for the class to hear. Use this to gauge the lesson (If students have misconception use this information to incorporate into a future lesson.) Ask if students have ever heard of Asian shore crabs or blue mussels? Explain background on the situation. (Read the background information to the class.) Explain lab and hand out papers. Students will work in groups of 4. Split them up into groups through counting off 1-4. Tell students they will not be eating the nuts, but placing them in a paper bag to simulate that they have been eaten. Also tell them to keep the nuts in the plastic bins provided. https://www.kbs.msu.edu/images/stories/do cs/nuts_student_worksheet.pdf Explain Elaborate Students go over worksheet as a class and fill in the correct answers if needed. Go over work sheet as a class and give correct answers. Answer any questions that come up. Have students grab the classroom set Ask students about their prior knowledge of science books and look up these topics o Other mechanisms of evolution (genetic drift, bottle necking, etc) o Evolutionary or Selective Pressure Evaluate of these topics and ask them to go deeper by looking up information in their book and writing down their findings in their scientific notebook. o Other mechanisms of evolution (genetic drift, bottle necking, etc) o Evolutionary or Selective Pressure o How evolution is measured and what factors account for evolutionary change o How evolution is measured and what factors account for evolutionary change o Dynamic Environment o Dynamic Environment o Teleological change does not occur o Teleological change does not occur Students will research another example of natural selection in the world. As a group they will then create a video explaining the natural selection they found. The video must include the scientific name of the species involved, cited pictures, the sources they used and how they know this is an example of natural selection. They should research sites like National geographic, Natural History, and Discover magazines. Explain the video project about natural selection and what must be included. The video must include the scientific name of the species involved, cited pictures, the sources they used and how they know this is an example of natural selection. This can be made like a business proposition with a PowerPoint, like a commercial for a news show, or like a music video. Allow students to choose which they would like to make, but they are to stay in their lab group. Rubric attached Assessment Formative: KWL, statements written on the board, Summative: Asks students the difference between natural selection and evolution, Video project Evaluation Rubric for Video Project Performance Level Group Cooperation Documentation Subject Content Video content and organization Introduction Needs Improvement Students needed to be reminded to stay on task frequently. One or two people did all the work. Students argued with one another or left some students out of the process. 0 points There is no documentation. 0 points Subject knowledge is not evident. Information is confusing, incorrect, or flawed. Satisfactory All students contributed a fair share to the project, though some workloads varied. Students had to be reminded occasionally to stay on task. Students made an effort to include all group members in the process. 3 points Most of the elements taken from other sources are documented; however, some documentation may be inaccurate or missing. 3 points Subject knowledge is evident in much of the video. Most information is clear, appropriate, and correct. 0 points The video lacks a central theme. Much of the information is irrelevant to the overall message 5 points Information is connected to a theme. Details are logical and information is relevant throughout most of the video 0 points The introduction does not orient the 3 points The introduction is clear and coherent Excellent All students contributed equally to the video. Students stayed on task at all times. Students worked with each other in a friendly manner. 5 points All elements from other sources are accurately documented and cited properly (MLA format). 5 points Subject knowledge is evident throughout the video. All information is clear, appropriate and correct. 10 points Video includes a clear statement of purpose. Events and messages are presented in a logical order, with relevant information that supports the video’s main ideas. 5 points The introduction is motivating, and viewer to what will follow. Mechanics Production 0 points The text and audio have 4 or more grammar or spelling errors. 0 points Video is of poor quality and is unedited. There are no transitions added or transitions are used so frequently that they detract from the video. There are no graphics. 0 points and evokes moderate interest/response from the viewer. 3 points The text and audio have 1-2 grammar or spelling errors. hooks the viewer from the beginning. 5 points The text and audio have no grammar or spelling errors 3 points 5 points Video is edited. A Video is edited. variety of transitions Video runs are used and most smoothly from shot transitions help tell to shot. A variety of the story. Most of transitions are used video has good to assist in pacing and timing. communicating the Graphics are used main idea. Shots appropriately. and scenes work well together. Graphics explain and reinforce key points in the video. 5 points 10 points Total Project Grade /50 Anticipated misconceptions/alternative conceptions Evolution is not the same as natural selection. Evolution means change and change can happen through the process of natural selection, but they are not the same. Evolution does not happen to an individual; it happens to a population. Accommodations/modifications (Ask ahead of time) Some students may be allergic to nuts so they could complete the task with another sort of food like fruit snacks or candy that is individually wrapped. If any student is so allergic to nuts that being in the same room as them agitates the allergy then do the lab another way. For example, have students use different utensils to simulate beaks of a bird to pick up objects. Vocabulary: Phenotype: Observable or measureable traits that result from a combination of genes and environment (G x E) Genotype: Genetic makeup of an organism Inherited: The genotype is passed on from parent to offspring Fitness: Survival and reproductive success Evolution: The change in allele frequency over at least one generation Natural selection: is the gradual process by which heritable biological traits become either more or less common in a population as a function of the effect of inherited traits on the differential reproductive success of organisms interacting with their environment Names: Date: Don’t Shell Yourself Short Asian Shore Crab: flickr Bas Kers (NL) Mussels: flickr Ingo Meironke Introduction Asian shore crabs (Hemigrapsus sanguineus) are native to the western Pacific Ocean. Since the late 1980s, they have been spreading throughout the northeast coast of the US. Crabs are tiny (about the size of a penny), but populations are growing very quickly. They are generalist predators (eat lots of different prey). Blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) in the northeast US are becoming more resistant to predation by crabs. How is this happening? In this session, we will play a game with nuts simulating crab-mussel interactions. We will gather data from the game, analyze it, and draw conclusions about how an introduced predator could cause quick evolutionary change in only a few generations of the prey species. Definitions Evolution: Natural selection: Phenotype: Genotype: Inherited: Fitness: Methods 1. Divide into groups of 4. Each person in the group gets 9 peanuts in the shell and 1almond. Everybody dumps their nuts into a pile in the middle of the table. This pile is your group’s population. All the mussels (nuts) are the same species, but some have a different phenotype. 2. Data collection: fill out the table below for your population. 3. Generation 1: a. Selection: Everybody removes one nut, shells and eats it, and goes back for more nuts, one at a time. If you can’t shell the nut, return it to the table and take another. Selection continues for 60 seconds. b. Count the number of each type of nut left and write to the left of the x2 in the appropriate box in the data table below. c. Reproduction: Next, add more nuts to double the number of each type. (Example: 5 peanuts are left and 2 almonds are left. After reproduction, you will have 10 peanuts and 4 almonds.) d. Fill out the data table to the right of the x2 with the number of each type of nut after reproduction. 4. Repeat Selection and Reproduction (steps a-d) for generations 2 and 3, filling out the data table for each generation. Results 5. Compile all the groups’ data after 3 generations 6. Line graphs: Plot the class data over time, using the graph paper provided by your teacher. Discussion 7. Did the percent almonds (hard shells) change over time? Why? 8. Which phenotype had a higher fitness? Why? 9. What three things are necessary for evolution to occur? What part of the game each? 10. Did evolution occur? How do you know? 11. How quickly did evolution occur? 12. Did population sizes respond to predation by the crab? 13. Did any of the populations go extinct? Why? 14. The introduction of a new species (in this example, the crabs) can cause new selection pressures. What else could cause new selection pressures? Give an example of each. a. b. c. d. 15. In our game, what would have happened if natural selection was different in some groups? If some populations could ONLY eat almonds and not peanuts, what would have happened? 16. In real life, do you think natural selection is the same in all environments? Why? 17. Explain how natural selection can lead to biodiversity Names: Date: Don’t Shell Yourself Short Asian Shore Crab: flickr Bas Kers (NL) Mussels: flickr Ingo Meironke Introduction Asian shore crabs (Hemigrapsus sanguineus) are native to the western Pacific Ocean. Since the late 1980s, they have been spreading throughout the northeast coast of the US. Crabs are tiny (about the size of a penny), but populations are growing very quickly. They are generalist predators (eat lots of different prey). Blue mussels (Mytilus edulis) in the northeast US are becoming more resistant to predation by crabs. How is this happening? In this session, we will play a game with nuts simulating crab-mussel interactions. We will gather data from the game, analyze it, and draw conclusions about how an introduced predator could cause quick evolutionary change in only a few generations of the prey species. Definitions Evolution: Natural selection: Phenotype: Genotype: Inherited: Fitness: Methods 1. Divide into groups of 4. Each person in the group gets 9 peanuts in the shell and 1almond. Everybody dumps their nuts into a pile in the middle of the table. This pile is your group’s population. All the mussels (nuts) are the same species, but some have a different phenotype. 2. Data collection: fill out the table below for your population. 3. Generation 1: a. Selection: Everybody removes one nut, shells and places the nut in a paper bag this simulates eating the nut for this activity, and goes back for more nuts, one at a time. If you can’t shell the nut, return it to the table and take another. Selection continues for 60 seconds. b. Count the number of each type of nut left and write to the left of the x2 in the appropriate box in the data table below. c. Reproduction: Next, add more nuts to double the number of each type. (Example: 5 peanuts are left and 2 almonds are left. After reproduction, you will have 10 peanuts and 4 almonds.) d. Fill out the data table to the right of the x2 with the number of each type of nut after reproduction. 4. Repeat Selection and Reproduction (steps a-d) for generations 2 and 3, filling out the data table for each generation. Results 5. Compile all the groups’ data after 3 generations 6. Line graphs: Plot the class data over time, using the graph paper provided by your teacher. Discussion 7. Did the percent almonds (hard shells) change over time? Why? 8. Which phenotype had a higher fitness? Why? 9. What three things are necessary for evolution to occur? What part of the game each? 10. Did evolution occur? How do you know? 11. How quickly did evolution occur? 12. Did population sizes respond to predation by the crab? 13. Did any of the populations go extinct? Why? 14. The introduction of a new species (in this example, the crabs) can cause new selection pressures. What else could cause new selection pressures? Give an example of each. a. b. c. d. 15. In our game, what would have happened if natural selection was different in some groups? If some populations could ONLY eat almonds and not peanuts, what would have happened? 16. In real life, do you think natural selection is the same in all environments? Why? 17. Explain how natural selection can lead to biodiversity