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A Population of Duckweed

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Presentation on theme: "A Population of Duckweed"— Presentation transcript:

1 A Population of Duckweed
Activity 2 A Population of Duckweed

2 LIMITED LICENSE TO MODIFY
LIMITED LICENSE TO MODIFY. These PowerPoint® slides may be modified only by teachers currently teaching the Science and Global Issues SEPUP course to customize the unit to match their students’ learning levels or to insert additional teaching aides. Modified slides may be used only by the modifying teacher in his or her classroom, or shared with other teachers of Science and Global Issues within the teacher’s school district, with these same restrictions. Modified slides may not be taken out of the classroom or distributed to any non-student person or organization. Except for use with students in the classroom, modified slides may not be published in printed or electronic form, including posting on the Internet. Only text may be modified: photographs and illustrations on the slides may not be modified in any way except to change their size. DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTY. THE REGENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA (“University”) MAKE NO REPRESENTATIONS OR WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. University will not be liable for any costs, damages, fees or other liability, nor for any direct, indirect, special, incidental or consequential damages (including lost profits) with respect to any claims by the purchaser or user of Science and Global Issues or any third party on account of or arising from the use or modifications to the slides. Client acknowledges and accepts that University services are provided on an as-is basis.

3 As you read the introduction, think about the following:
What is a population? What is a community? What examples of these terms did you read about in Activity 1, “Ecosystems and Change”? Note that this Activity will continue for the length of the unit. Students do not need to delve deeper into population dynamics at this point, as that topic will be addressed in depth in later activities.

4 A population is a group of individuals of the same species that live in the same general area and are able to reproduce. Populations of multiple species living in the same area are a community.

5 Challenge How quickly can a population grow? How does the size of a population change through time?

6 Part A: Establishing a Baseline
Your group will be assigned an initial number of plants for your duckweed population. Complete steps 1-6. If appropriate, introduce the Organizing Data (OD) assessment variable here. More information on how to introduce and use this assessment variable is available in your Teacher’s Edition for this Activity and in Teacher Resources IV: Assessment.

7 Part B: Tracking the Population
Monitor your duckweed populations. Be sure to keep careful track of your population data. At the end of the growing period, share your population data with the class.

8 Did the duckweed populations grow as expected?
How are population growth and sustainability related? This class discussion should take approximately 20—25 minutes.

9 Analysis 1 Interpret your graph by answering the following questions:
A. What happened to your duckweed population over the study period? B. Why do you think your population changed the way it did? If appropriate, introduce the Analyzing Data (AD) assessment variable here. It can be used to score Analysis question one. More information on how to introduce and use this assessment variable, as well as a sample student response, is available in your Teacher’s Edition for this Activity and in Teacher Resources IV: Assessment.

10 Revisit the Challenge How quickly can a population grow? How does the size of a population change through time? Encourage students to compare the duckweed results to the different populations they have examined throughout the unit, particularly the different population graphs they looked at in Activity 14, “Investigating Population Growth Results.”

11 population growth rate
Key Vocabulary carrying capacity community ecosystem invasive species limiting factor organism population population growth rate See Teacher Resources III: Literacy for more information on key vocabulary and the most effective strategies to enhance student vocabulary learning. Note that bold words are formally defined in this activity. Words in regular font are used in the activity, but not formally defined. The definition of a key vocabulary word should not be discussed as a class prior to the formal definition being introduced.


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