Animal Defenses
(Video)
Coral Reef Connections
(Interactive)
Masters of Disguise
(Video)
Toxic Newts
(Video)
This lesson explores the connection between an organism's behavioral and physical traits and its environment. In particular, students examine the interactions among different types of organisms and the importance of these relationships to the evolution of species. Students begin the activity by discussing adaptations that have evolved from generations of predator-prey interactions. Next, they investigate a classic evolutionary "arms race" between two species: newts and garter snakes. Then they explore the complex symbiotic relationship between leaf-cutter ants, the fungus they grow for food, and the bacteria they employ to protect their crop from mold. Finally, they go online and explore a virtual coral reef and document the different types of relationships they find among the organisms that live there.
Read the background essay that accompanies each resource to gain information that will help you facilitate class discussion.
1. Show the Animal Defenses and Masters of Disguise videos and discuss the following:
2. Explain to students that some differences among individuals in a population -- variations that can be passed from one generation to the next -- provide survival and/or reproductive advantages under certain environmental conditions. In other words, variation in a population means that some individuals have a better chance than others of surviving and reproducing. Ask students:
3. Show the Toxic Newts video and discuss the following:
4. Show the Ancient Farmers of the Amazon video and discuss the following:
5. Some of the most important types of relationships that can occur between organisms include predation, parasitism, competition, commensalism, and mutualism. Discuss each one and provide examples, either from the videos listed above or from other sources, including books and the Internet. Suggest to students that these types of interactions can be as important to the evolution of species as the physical environment.
6. Have students work in pairs to explore the Coral Reef Connections Web activity. Tell students to search for an example for each type of relationship that can occur between species: predation, parasitism, competition, commensalism, and mutualism. Have students take turns exploring and taking notes. In their notes ask them to describe the type of relationship, the organisms involved, and the evolutionary effect the relationship might have on one of the two species. Then have the student pairs present their observations to the class.
Ask students to choose four organisms from any of the four videos or the Web activity, and describe the relationship of each organism to another organism in its environment. Tell students to describe the adaptations -- physical or behavioral traits -- that help each organism survive there.