ECOLOGY and EVOLUTIONARY BIOLOGY
12th Grade Main Lesson Block
November 28 – December 16, 2011
Mr. Hatfield
rghatfield@gmail.com
Course Description: In zoology, we will explore the diversity of the animal world through
observation and exploration of the different phyla in the animal kingdom. As a divergence from years past, we will do
this through investigation of the ecology of three related ecosystems: The Pacific Northwest Forest, Freshwater
ecology (mostly stream and river) and Pacific Coast ecology. We will also discuss some of the genetic
relationships that have been hypothesized by scientists in the field and take a
look at what evidence exists for those relationships.
Grades:
I will evaluate
grades using the following rubric:
Essays 50%
Participation/Homework 15%
Presentations 35%
Essays:
You will write four
different essays from this block. One
will be related to forest ecology, one on freshwater ecology and one on coastal
ecology. The final paper will be a survey
of general ecological and evolutionary concepts found within and between each
ecosystem. Each essay will include
information from primary research and will be well documented and
comprehensive. Topics of each individual
paper will differ depending on both assignments given and interest.
Participation/HW/Presentations: Most every day in class, we will be either observing animals and their
behavior or conducting primary research.
We will divide up into four groups for the course of the block. Each group will be assigned a specific animal
group or relationship within each ecosystem, or a topic within evolutionary
biology. Students will have time during
the week to collaborate, read, research and converse with me to come to a comprehensive
understanding of the concepts and animals contained in each of the papers that
I assign. This will likely necessitate
additional reading and research. These
papers are only meant as starting points for your research. Each group will then give a 30 minute
presentation on the information learned in their research. It will be your job to synthesize the various
presentations to learn broader concepts in ecology and evolution for the final
paper.
The links below will take you to the papers in each section. The topic is self-explanatory. After the topic is a number and that corresponds to the group that will be covering that topic. Following the number is sometimes a couple of words, those correspond to the specific document that you want when you click on the link to the papers. The evolution papers are a bit different. Each one links to the specific paper of interest. Let me know if you need any additional help.
Week 1 topic:
Fresh Water Ecology: Link to the papers is here
· Salmon (1)
Salmon Ecology 2
· Invertebrates (2) Cummins Bioscience
· Water-Land interactions (3)
· Evolution (4)
- Darwin paper
Week 2 topics:
Coastal Ecology: Link to the papers is here
· Sea stars (2)
Paine
· Otters (3)
· Sponges (4)
· Evolution (1)
- Evolution of shell curlingpaper
Week 3 topic:
Forest Ecology: Link to the papers is here
· Earthworms (3)
- Worm Ecology 2
· Lynx and Hare (4)
· Elk Wolf (1)
· Evolution (2)
- Darwin’s Finches paper
Groups:
1
Sarah
Maya
Aidan
Kyle
Koral
2
Wolky
Mayu
Emma
Sophia
Collin
3
Tamara
Alaina
Sam
Olivia
Gabriel
4
Claire
Sean
Peter
Oksana
Cameron