Module 4: Sustainability and Extinction

Transcription

Module 4: Sustainability and Extinction
Enquire
with Darwin
KS3
Module 4:
Sustainability
and Extinction
Vulnerable species
and habitats
01
Isolated habitats
Charles Darwin
visited the
Galapagos
Islands in 1835
02
Isolated habitats
An isolated island
03
Vulnerable species
Marine iguanas, Fernandina Island
http://www.arkive.org/galapagos-marine-iguana/
amblyrhynchus-cristatus/video-00.html
04
Vulnerable species
Land iguanas
http://www.arkive.org/galapagos-land-iguana/
conolophus-subcristatus/video-08.html
05
Vulnerable species
Giant Galapagos tortoise, Santa Cruz Island
http://www.arkive.org/galapagos-giant-tortoise/
geochelone-spp/video-00.html
06
Vulnerable species
Galapagos hawk
Prey species
Bartholomew Island lizard
Flightless cormorant
(Fernandina Island)
07
Vulnerable species
Birds of the Galapagos
Galapagos dove; a fairly Galapagos penguin,
common species on all Fernandina Island.
of the islands.
It is endemic to the
Galapagos Islands.
08
Red breasted frigate
bird North Seymour
Island. Darwin used
the frigate bird as an
example of a webfooted bird that no
longer spends much
time on water.
Vulnerable species
Birds of the Galapagos
Warbler finch,
Espanola Island
One species of
Galapagos mockingbird
Cactus finch
09
Vulnerable species
Galapagos insects
Galapagos spider
Crickets
on Santa Cruz Island
Queen butterfly
Galapagos centipede Carpenter bee on
cactus flower
10
Vulnerable habitats
Vulnerable habitats
Red mangrove
Prickly pear cactus
11
Vulnerable habitats
When the Beagle
visited 4 of the
Galapagos islands
in 1835 P.G.King
made these
sketches
12
Vulnerable habitats
Human activities
13
Vulnerable habitats
Human activities
Habitat
destruction
Building
Global
warming
Hunting
Human
population
growth
Invasive or
introduced
species
Tourism
Agriculture/Farming
Fishing
14
Food chain basics:
who eats who?
•
•
•
•
W
hich is the consumer?
W
hich is the producer?
P
ut them in order.
Match food eaten to type of organism.
Predator
Carnivore
Consumer
Prey
Herbivore
Producer
Green plant
Green plant
15
Conservation efforts
Tortoise-breeding programme
16
Resource materials
Food web
Mockingbird
Centipede
Warbler Finch
Spider
Nectar-feeding
insects such as bees
and butterflies
Giant tortoise
Land lguana
17
Cactus Finch
Resource materials
The Galapagos Islands board game
You join a
captive breeding
programme:
population rise
500
Your habitat
becomes
protected:
population rise
2000
You join a
conservation
programme:
population rise
1000
You don’t breed
this year:
miss a turn
18
Resource materials
Invasive species factfile cards
Factfile: Invaders
Goat
Factfile: Invaders
Cat
Factfile: Invaders
Pig
•Introduced to Galapagos
by humans
•Kept by people for meat and milk
•Eat plants such as the prickly pear
and eggs
•Introduced to Galapagos
by humans
•Hunts invertebrates and
small mammals
•Common in Galapagos
• Kept by islanders for meat
•Eat plants such as the prickly pear
and eggs
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Resource materials
Galapagos animal and plant factfile cards
Factfile: Galapagos
Galapagos tortoise
Factfile: Galapagos
Land iguana
Factfile: Galapagos
Prickly pear cactus
•Large reptile can grow to about 1.2
M in length and around 215 kg in
weight
•Can live for up to 200 yrs
•Found only in the
Galapagos Islands
•Lays eggs in ground nests and
does not look after its young
•Reptile, part of the lizard family, can
grow up to in 1.5 M in length and
over 11 kg in weight
•Found only in the
Galapagos Islands
• Lays eggs in ground burrows
•Herbivore: feeds on plants, the
prickly pear cactus is a major
food source.
•A cactus plant that produces yellow
flowers and fruit
•Most common cactus in Galapagos
•Pollinated by nectar-feeding insects
and the cactus finch
•Some species found only in the
Galapagos Islands
•Herbivore: feeds on plants, the
prickly pear cactus is a major
food source
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Resource materials
Galapagos animal and plant factfile cards
Factfile: Galapagos
Galapagos hawk
Factfile: Galapagos
Cactus finch
Factfile: Galapagos
Warbler finch
•A bird of prey, can grow to about
55cm beak to tail and with a wing
span of about 120cm
•Found only in the Galapagos
Islands
•Nests mostly in trees and in high
rocky areas
•Carnivore: feeds on insects,
centipedes, small reptiles and birds
and also the young of larger reptiles
•Small bird, found only in the
Galapagos Islands
•Herbivore: feeds on prickly pear
cactus seeds, pollen and nectar
•Nests in the prickly pear cactus
•A very small bird with a thin
probing beak
•Found only in the Galapagos Islands
•Carnivore: feeds on small insects
•A tree-nesting bird
21
Resource materials
Galapagos animal and plant factfile cards
Factfile: Galapagos
Galapagos mockingbird
Factfile: Galapagos
Carpenter bee
Factfile: Galapagos
Silver argiope spider
•Most common mockingbird
species on Galapagos
•Has a long tail and a small
pointed beak
•Found only in the Galapagos
Islands
•Omnivore: feeds on small reptiles,
young finches, centipedes, insects
and other small invertebrates
•Nests in cacti and in trees
•Large hairy bee
•Pollen and nectar feeding
•Particularly likes yellow flowers
•Nests in dead wood and timber
•Only species of bee in the
Galapagos Islands
•Pollinates 75% of plants on
the islands
•Has a silver body and holds its
legs in pairs is t looks like it only has
4 legs
•Builds web
•Carnivore: feeds on small insects
and invertebrates
•Lives on the Prickly Pear Cactus
22
Resource materials
Galapagos animal and plant factfile cards
Factfile: Galapagos
Galapagos centipede
Factfile: Galapagos
Queen butterfly
•Large centipede
•Lives under rocks and leaf litter
•Found only in the Galapagos
Islands
•Carnivore: feeds on small insects,
spiders and soil invertebrates
•Large orange and black butterfly
•Tastes nasty to birds
•Nectar feeding
•Found only in the
Galapagos Islands
•Important pollinator of
Galapagos flowers
23
Acknowledgements
This resource has been produced by The Charles
Darwin Trust
©The Charles Darwin Trust 2012
Series editor Dr Susan Johnson
Author Emma Newall
Editor Karen Goldie-Morrison
Design SPY Studio
Photographs taken at Down House are with thanks to
English Heritage which owns and opens the House to
the public.
Thank you to our current funders who are supporting
Darwin Inspired learning and have made Enquire with
Darwin possible: the Evolution Education Trust, the Foyle
Foundation, the Garfield Weston Foundation, the JJ
Charitable Trust and the Mark Leonard Trust, The Mercers’
Company, and a number of individual donors.
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Picture Credits
Slides 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 far left & left, 10 bottom middle,
11 left, 16, 20 left & middle, 21 left, A&V Stevens
Slide 2 NASA
Slide 3 SPY Studio/The Charles Darwin Trust
Slide 9 left Putney Mark/Wikimedia
Slide 9 middle DickDaniels
(http://carolinabirds.org/)/Wikimedia
Slide 9 right Darwin-online/Wikimedia
Slide 10 top middle DirkydM/Wikimedia
Slide 10 top right Korall/Wikimedia
Slide 10 far left Jordanfischer/Flikr
Slide 10 bottom right Neal/Wikimedia
Slide 11 right Wikimedia
Slide 12 Public domain/Wikimedia
Slide 13 Constantine/Wikimedia
Slide 19 clip art
Slide 20 right Wikimedia
Slide 21 middle Darwin-online/Wikimedia
Slide 21 right Putney Mark/Wikimedia
Slide 22 left DickDaniels
(http://carolinabirds.org/)/Wikimedia
Slide 22 middle Neal/Wikimedia
Slide 22 right DirkydM/Wikimedia
Slide 23 left Jordanfischer/Flikr
Slide 23 right Korall/Wikimedia
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