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Transcript
Meanwood Valley Urban Farm
1
Full Day Life Cycles (links with QCA 5B)
Introduction
QCA Objectives:To learn that:
flowering plants reproduce,
that seeds can be dispersed in a variety of ways,
to consider conditions affect germination and plan how to test them
that insects pollinate some flowers
to make careful observations of fruits and seeds,
that many fruits and seeds provide food for animals and humans
You will need:
Two sets of worksheets (seeds and poster)
Lots of plastic bags to collect seeds/pods
Pencils
Habitat boards for extinction game
Pictures of Animals for extinction game
Sticky labels for plant names
Plant pots
What are we going to find out about today?
Morning: Fruits and seeds-how they are dispersed (scattered) and
whether they are edible. Seed planting-the conditions needed for a seed
to germinate (sprout and grow)
Afternoon: Farm tour. Looking at animals and their young. Why animals
need to reproduce. Reasons why animals die out (become extinct).
Nature Walk (info can be given during walk)
What are seeds, nuts and fruits? Why do plants make them?
Seeds are the embryos (early stage of the development of a plant) of the
mother plant.
Plants grow them in order to reproduce (produce more plants). In the
same way that animals reproduce and have young which grow into adults,
plants grow from seeds that grow into adult plants. In flowering plants,
seeds are made by transferring pollen from one plant to another. The
pollen fertilises the ovum (female part of the plant) and the seed begins
Meanwood Valley Urban Farm
2
to grow inside it. Fruits are the ripened ovary of a flowering plant,
containing one or more seeds, nuts are dried up, hardened fruits and
contain one seed.
How do flowering plants make seeds?
Brightly coloured flowering plants attract insects (like bees) who want to
reach their nectar. The bees fly into the flower and then become covered
in pollen. When the bee flies to another flower of the same type, it
pollinates it as the pollen falls off its fur. Sneaky!
How do plants disperse their seeds?
Show examples, point to seeds.
Plants are very clever and can disperse (scatter) their seeds in different
ways. The plant wants its seeds scattered over a large area so that as
many new plants as possible will grow.
What are the different ways plants disperse seeds?
Seeds can be dispersed by the wind:
The types of seeds that do this are light (think of poppy seeds), or
feathery (old man’s beard) and are shaken out of the plant by the wind;
other plants are aerodynamic- they are shaped so that they will fly
through the air (helicopters-the seeds pods from sycamore trees for
example). A few seeds have expulsive spores that explode so the seeds
bounce out over the ground; some plants bear fruits that are edible
(apples, plums, blackberries). Animals (and humans) eat them and the
seeds are spread when the animal digests the fruit and the seeds are
pooed out! Some fruits are hooked, sticky or spiked and latch on to the
fur of animals or the feathers of birds and are carried along.
We will be planting some seeds today. What are the conditions
needed for a seed to germinate successfully?
Soil, water, light, warmth, safety from predators
Explain that children will walk around the garden and nature reserve in
small groups to collect different seeds. Discuss walking safely, respecting
the plants, taking seeds carefully- only need one person to collect in each
group. Hand out containers, split children in to groups-each with a leader.
Meet back in Education room. Hand out worksheets, sellotape, scissors.
Children work in the same groups trying to match the seeds/fruits they
have found with the picture of the mother plant.
Meanwood Valley Urban Farm
3
Seed Game
Give one child a bean bag and get them to spread their arms like a tree.
The bean bag represents their seed. Their seed becomes ripe and drops
from the tree. Another child stands where the seed lands, and becomes a
tree, picks up the seed and drops it, whereupon the next child becomes a
tree where the seed lands, and so on and so forth until you run out of
children.
Try wind pollinated and dispersed by animals
Next: Seed planting. Each child will be given a seed to plant. Discuss
different types of seeds. Children write the name of their plant and their
own name on the pot.
Afternoon session-animals and their young
QCA objectives:
 that adults have young and these grow into adults which in turn
produce young
 That human young are dependent on adults for a relatively long
period
 That if living things did not reproduce they would eventually die
out
We are thinking about both plant and animal reproduction today.
What kind of young animals would you expect to see at Meanwood
Valley Urban Farm?
Piglets, lambs, chickens, rabbits, kids
What happens to animals if they do not reproduce?
Animals can become extinct (like dodos). Animals that are on the verge of
extinction (tigers, black rhinos, giant pandas) are called endangered
How can humans help to save animals from extinction?
Conservationists try to stop this happening by taking a particular species
from its natural habitat-away from hunters and predators and
encouraging it to breed. At this farm there are many rare breeds of
animals (Soay sheep, Gloucester Old Spot Pigs, Dexter Cows) that are no
longer bred for humans to eat. Places like our farm ensure that these
breeds do not become extinct.
How can we be safe when we are looking at and handling animals?
Meanwood Valley Urban Farm
4
No running, quiet, don’t put hands in eyes or mouth after handling, wash
hands after walk.
Ask children to get into groups as before, walk around farm looking at the
different animals and their young
Meet back in Education room
Which animals did you see?
Do you know how long the piglets will stay with their mother the sow?
3 months.
How long are children looked after by their parents?
At least 16 years!
How long do human babies need to develop before they are born?
9 months. A long time compared to other animals. Give examples.
Chickens-3 weeks
The extinction game
This game shows how animals die out if they lose their habitat – the
lifecycle can no longer continue. Hide six pictures of each animal around
the picnic area. The children have to find the animals and stick them on
the habitat picture which has four squares on it. This leaves two of each
animal without a square. Collect the pictures from the children and
explain for each animal that there used to be habitat for these extra
animals but the stream got polluted/the forest was chopped down for
timber/the bamboo was removed for farming/the pond was filled in
because the farmer needed more space in his field. As you are doing this,
rip up the nice pictures of the fluffy animals. Loss of habitat –
Endangered Animals - Extinction