Title: Activity 2.2
1Unit 2 Louisianas Wetland Ecosystems
Activity 2.2 How Many Nutria Are Too Many Nutria?
2Host Researcher
Jacoby Carter, BA in Zoology and Botany Has
developed a computer model that helps him study
how nutria populations impact the
wetlands. Enters data, how much plant life exists
and how much plant life each nutria will eat,
into the computer model. Using this data Jacoby
Carter can determine the number of nutria the
plot of land can support. When nutria becomes
too high he alerts the wetland managers.
3Content Standards A, C, and G
Standard A Science as Inquiry Strand A1-All
students should develop abilities necessary to do
scientific inquiry. Standard C Life
Science Strand C3-Students should develop an
understanding of regulation and behavior. Strand
C4-Students should develop an understanding of
populations and ecosystems.
4Content Standards A, C, and G
Standard G History and Nature of Science Strand
G2-Students should develop an understanding about
the nature of science.
5Teacher/Student Activity Book
Page 54 How are changes to Louisianas wetlands
impacting the plant and animal communities that
live there? Page 63 Activity 2.2 How Many
Nutria Are Too Many Nutria? Page 65-66 Nutria
Masters
6Paragraph Shrinking Page 54
- Divide into 5 groups.
- Each group reads only 1 assigned paragraph to
present. - Complete the following to share with the group
- a. Name the who or the what the paragraph
is about. - b. Identify two or three important details.
- c. Shrink the paragraph. State the main idea
of the paragraph in a complete sentence, using
fifteen words or less.
7Objectives
- Students will simulate Jacoby Carters studies
by modeling the impact of different nutria
population sizes on marsh vegetation. - Students will examine the balance between the
rate at which nutria consume vegetation and the
rate at which it grows back. - Students will discover that if vegetation grows
back more quickly than it is consumed, the marsh
is healthy.
8Objectives
- Students will discover that if vegetation grows
back more slowly than it is consumed, and if
nutria completely eat out a plot of land, the
marsh is in danger. - Students will understand how the introduction of
alien species can impact an environment.
9Activity 2.2 How Many Nutria Are Too Many Nutria?
- Master 2.2 A page 65
- Work in pairs.
- Set up marshland by
- placing 5 dried beans
- on each plot.
- Draw a card from
- the bag and remove
- 2 beans from the corresponding
- number square.
- Return card to bag. Repeat for each nutria
living on your marshland (4, 8 or 12). If there
is only 1 bean in the plot, take one from a
neighboring plot. If 0 beans remain, take 2 from
another random plot.
10Activity 2.2 How Many Nutria Are Too Many Nutria?
- One month has now passed. Observe the conditions
and record your data on your worksheet. - During this month, some plant life grew back.
Follow directions below your marsh to replace
plants (beans). - Continue for one year and be prepared to share
your results with Dr. Jacoby Carter.
11Conclusion
Observations At the end of 1 year, how many
plots were eaten out when nutria population was
4? 8? 12? Conclusions Summarize how the
introduction of nutria impacts the wetlands over
time. What would happen to the marshland over a
period of years?
12Apply Your Knowledge
Digital Lab The Secret Life of the
Bayou Show What You Know To Fish or Not To
Fish? Literature Connection Swamp