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Lottie Peppers

From the top of the food chain down: Rewilding our world - George Monbiot - YouTube - 0 views

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    5:27 video, Our planet was once populated by megafauna, big top-of-the-food-chain predators that played their part in balancing our ecosystems. When those megafauna disappear, the result is a "trophic cascade," where every part of the ecosystem reacts to the loss. How can we stay in balance? George Monbiot suggests rewilding: putting wolves, lions and other predators back on top -- with surprising results.
Lottie Peppers

Moth Selection Activity "Missing Moths" - 0 views

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    Introductory Activity in evolution unit; typically adapt to design a moth (no other instructions), select a student predator, attach the moths, let the predator in, repeat twice, then design a moth and model a natural disaster by moving to a different habitat (hallway).
Lottie Peppers

Just the fear of big predators can alter an entire ecosystem | New Scientist - 0 views

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    Predators don't control populations of their prey just by killing them. They also paint what is termed a landscape of fear, inhibiting prey from feeding and turning parts of their habitat into no-go zones. Now it appears that this has far-reaching effects throughout the food web.
Lottie Peppers

Madagascar's Mysterious Fossa - YouTube - 0 views

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    4:22 video Madagascar's top predator is a mysterious cat-like creature called the fossa. But dogs and humans are threatening its very existence. National Geographic's Luke Dollar investigates.
Lottie Peppers

Madagascar's Mysterious Fossa"cat"Blow-Darted for science - 0 views

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    3:14 video November 7, 2011 - Watch as biologist Luke Dollar uses a blowgun to subdue and study Madagascar's top predator, the fossa. The catlike creature "will eat pretty much everything in the forest," but to survive, it'll still need help from conservationists like Dollar, a National Geographic Emerging Explorer.
Lottie Peppers

Team Wild | Games| Education | ARKive - 0 views

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    Conservation science game, predator-prey relationships, habitat protection
lloyshel

Shockwave Activity - 0 views

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    Population simulation involving predator and prey
Lottie Peppers

Butterflies drug ants, turn them into bodyguards | Science/AAAS | News - 0 views

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    New research shows butterflies use nectar to drug unsuspecting ants with mind-altering chemicals. The Japanese oakblue butterfly (Narathura japonica) enlists the help of ants (Pristomyrmex punctatus) to stand guard and protect its growing caterpillars (pictured) from predators such as wasps and spiders.
Lottie Peppers

Endangered Ecosystems: Build a Food Web - 0 views

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    The first activity will have you investigate some of the animals in the Mexican ecosystem.  Figure out who are the predators and who are their prey and build your own food web.
Lottie Peppers

Butterfly Hunt - National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science - 0 views

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    This case study uses an interactive activity to illustrate density dependence in ecology classes. We developed a "hunt" using paper butterflies with warning signals on the upper side of the wings and symbols that indicate if a butterfly is noxious underneath the wings. Butterflies are distributed in four different patches with varying densities of noxious and palatable butterflies, simulating Batesian or Müllerian mimicry. Students can catch as many butterflies they want for a period of time, but if they catch more than three noxious butterflies they are out of the game. After the activity, students calculate the survival rate of each type of butterfly in each patch and discuss the implications of density and warning signals according to their results. Students then answer questions and build graphs using the data from the activity and knowledge from the class and the discussion. With this case study, students will be able to understand negative and positive density dependence, as well as predation, learning, and convergent evolution, while recalling or being introduced to Batesian and Müllerian mimicry.
Lottie Peppers

The Riddle of the Red Queen - National Center for Case Study Teaching in Science - 0 views

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    This case study introduces students to the "Red Queen Hypothesis." The hypothesis states that when two species compete for a limited resource or exist in a predator-prey relationship, in order for the antagonists to remain in relative population equilibrium, there must be ongoing and reciprocal adaptation on each side. If one species fails to adapt, it may quickly face extinction. Students are introduced to the Red Queen Hypothesis through an excerpt from Lewis Carroll's novel, Through the Looking Glass, in which Alice meets the Red Queen. They then review experiments from the research literature to evaluate the validity of the hypothesis in extant populations.  Students culminate their learning by contrasting their knowledge of the Red Queen Hypothesis to Darwinian evolutionary theory based on a passage from On the Origin of Species.  Students then craft a letter to Darwin helping to explain his "wedge" theory, a notion he originally developed but removed from later iterations of his book due to a lack of experimental evidence. Originally developed for advanced high school biology students, the case also may be used in a college-level introductory course on evolutionary biology.
Lottie Peppers

Assessing Habitat Suitability for Squirrels on Campus - National Center for Case Study ... - 0 views

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    Squirrels are frequent and beloved residents of college campuses throughout the United States, but oftentimes less welcomed by campus maintenance officials who report squirrels nesting in buildings, interfering with airflow from heating and cooling units, and destroying gutters. In this laboratory case, students act as members of a fictitious "squirrel task force" appointed by their campus administrators to provide recommendations for how to manage their school's squirrel population.  Students work in groups to assess the habitat suitability of their campus for squirrels by identifying and measuring trees that provide seasonal food for squirrels, and by identifying desirable hunting perches for common squirrel predators.  Students conduct squirrel surveys in designated campus zones to calculate the number of squirrels per acre on their campus and compare it with mean squirrel densities reported in forested areas and at a rival institution.  Students then compile and synthesize class data to provide management recommendations for university maintenance officials for either increasing or decreasing campus squirrel populations. Originally developed for an undergraduate wildlife biology course, the case could also be used in a lower-division biology or environmental studies course.
Lottie Peppers

Why Are These Sea Stars Turning Into Goo? - YouTube - 0 views

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    2:25 video  Scientists have recently discovered that the limbs of some sea stars have been turning into goo, and populations are dying off! Why is this happening, and will this hurt their ecosystem? Join Laci as discusses how this disease is spreading, and why it have some negative consequences.
lloyshel

Deer: Predation or Starvation - 0 views

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    Graphing activity, would be nice if they could see this graph digitally after they generate their own
Lottie Peppers

Natural Selection - 0 views

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    simulation of natural selection 
Lottie Peppers

Welcome to Virtual Urchin - 0 views

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    Digital resources using sea urchins to engage across topics
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