How Do Species Adapt to Environments Over Time? Materials (per group) - one piece of pattern fabric - 10 vials of paper chips, each of a different color - data tables Procedures 1. Get into groups of four 2. Gather all of the materials listed 3. Spread the piece of fabric over your table. This fabric represents a natural landscape (pond, forest, cave, etc.) 4. Take 10 “mice” from each of the 10 vials 5. Spread all 100 mice randomly throughout the landscape 6. At the teacher’s signal, begin capturing mice and depositing them into the nest. - You may only capture one mouse at a time - Your group must catch 80 mice total (20 for each owl) 7. Record the number of survivors and the number eaten for each color on the data table. 8. Collect all of the 20 remaining Survivors. For each survivor, add four new mice of the same color (ex. If you have 7 red survivors, add 28 more mice). 9. Calculate the population of the new generation on your data table. 10. Repeat steps 5-9 two more times. 11. Record your data on the table provided. - Use the New Population for each generation 12. Graph your data on the charts provided 13. Answer the Analysis Questions on Page 4 14. Write an explanatory paragraph on Page 5 80 100 Offspring New Population 80 100 Offspring New Population 80 100 2nd Generation # of Survivors 100 Original Population 20 3rd Generation # of Survivors 100 20 Offspring: multiply the number of survivors from each color by 4 (offspring) 20 # of Survivors: amount of survivors after feeding time FEEDING TIME New Population Original Population: amount of mice at the beginning of the round Mouse Color Brown Red Pink Orange Yellow Green Light Blue Dark Blue Black White Total Original Population Offspring FEEDING TIME Mouse Color Brown Red Pink Orange Yellow Green Light Blue Dark Blue Black White Total Original Population 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 100 FEEDING TIME Mouse Color Brown Red Pink Orange Yellow Green Light Blue Dark Blue Black White Total 1st Generation # of Survivors GENERATIONS OF MICE LINE GRAPH LEGEND 3 2 1 0 Brown Red Pink Orange Yellow Green Light Blue Dark Blue Black White Generation White Black Dark Blue Light Blue Green Yellow Orange Pink Red Brown 3rd GENERATION OF MICE BAR GRAPH Analysis Questions 1. What is the relationship between the mice and the elf owl? 2. What colors of mice were eaten in the greatest numbers in your habitat? 3. What colors of mice survived in the greatest numbers? How does their color compare to that of their habitat? 4. Did each color of mouse do equally well in each of the different habitats? Why or why not? 5. What might happen if the mice were all of the same color at the start? 6. What might happen to the mice populations if they reproduced at an even higher rate (i.e. each survivor has 9 offspring)? 7. What might happen to the mice populations if predation stopped? During the 1920s, a population of spotted crabs was known to inhabit the white sandy beaches near a volcano on one of the Hawaiian Islands. The spotted crabs were observed to feed off of plants that were cast upon the beaches by ocean waves. They also noticed that occasionally seagulls were observed capturing and eating some of the crabs. When first observed, about 90% of the crabs were white with a few black spots, so they appeared mostly white. Only about 2% of the crabs had so many black spots that they appeared mostly black. In 1930, a volcano erupted, sending lava flow across the beach out into the water. The lava cooled and blocked the ocean currents that had deposited the white sands on the beach. Instead, black sands from other currents began to accumulate on the beach until, within a few years, the beach had become completely covered with black sand. By the 1950s, nearly 95% of the spotted crab population was composed of crabs that were nearly black. Only about 1% of the crabs were white with a few spots. In a descriptive paragraph (7-9 complete sentences), describe what caused the spotted crab population to change over time. How does this relate to the model we created with the mice activity?