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Lottie Peppers

A Tale of Twin Towns - National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science - 0 views

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    This case study presents the fictional tale of two neighboring towns that have recently experienced a growth boom and are now suffering the environmental consequences. The case provides an opportunity to explore a wide variety of anthropogenic causes of natural capital degradation. Students are assigned the role of scientists working for the regional Department of Environmental Resources Management, and it is their job to discover the underlying causes for a wide variety of citizen complaints and to suggest reasonable and cost effective solutions. The case may be assigned as a recap activity after teaching a unit on natural capital degradation. The case includes a PowerPoint presentation as well as three lab activities that are included in the teaching notes. The case would be appropriate for high school or lower level undergraduate ecology or environmental science courses.
Lottie Peppers

Evolution of the Y Chromosome | HHMI's BioInteractive - 2 views

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    The Y chromosome is only one-third the size of the X. Although the Y has a partner in X, only the tips of these chromosomes are able to recombine. Thus, most of the Y chromosome is inherited from father to son in a pattern resembling asexual, not sexual, reproduction. No recombination means no reassortment, so deleterious mutations have no opportunity to be independently selected against. The Y chromosome therefore tends to accumulate changes and deletions faster than the X. Degradation doesn't occur in X chromosomes because during female meiosis, the X has the other X as a full partner in recombination.
Lottie Peppers

Why These Tiny Ocean Creatures Are Eating Plastic | National Geographic - YouTube - 0 views

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    When plastic trash degrades in the ocean, it doesn't just go away: It becomes countless tiny particles, and little creatures called larvaceans sweep it up--and into the food chain.
Lottie Peppers

Reference Links for Key Numbers in Biology - 0 views

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    Reference page cellular facts: cell size, lenth, division, concentration, energy, diffusion, genomic information, and mutation rates.
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