1 / 21

Kellogg Biological Station ’ s GK-12 Bioenergy Sustainability Project

Kellogg Biological Station ’ s GK-12 Bioenergy Sustainability Project. Your resident scientist Alycia Lackey Harper Creek coordinators Sandy Erwin and Steve Barry. Project Director: Tom Getty Project Manager: Robin Tinghitella. Species Loss in Stickleback Fish.

nida
Download Presentation

Kellogg Biological Station ’ s GK-12 Bioenergy Sustainability Project

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Kellogg Biological Station’s GK-12 Bioenergy Sustainability Project Your resident scientist Alycia Lackey Harper Creek coordinators Sandy Erwin and Steve Barry Project Director: Tom Getty Project Manager: Robin Tinghitella

  2. Species Loss in Stickleback Fish • Historically 2 species that differ in • Color, size, shape, behavior • Feeding & mating habitats • One species mates in the open • The other species mates in the vegetation

  3. Invasive Species Changed Mating Habitats • Recent crayfish introduction • Ecological changes: • - Vegetation loss • - Increased turbidity • - Water color Current Conditions Historical Conditions

  4. Loss of species through hybridization Percent of Population

  5. Importance of research outcomes • Inform conservation and management actions • Understand how evolution works • Explore impacts of the environment on evolution - including human changes to environment • Understand what affects biodiversity (formation and loss of species)

  6. Kellogg Biological Station’s GK-12 Bioenergy Sustainability Project Project Director: Tom Getty Project Manager: Robin Tinghitella

  7. NSF’s GK-12 Program Graduate STEM Fellows in K-12 Education This program provides funding for graduate students in NSF-supported science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines to bring their leading researchpractice and findingsinto K-12 learning settings.

  8. NSF’s GK-12 Program Graduate STEM Fellows in K-12 Education • Benefits: • Grad students • Communicate science broadly • Learn to teach • K-12 students • Excitement for science • Real-world, hands-on application • K-12 teachers • - Experiment with new activities, concepts This program provides funding for graduate students in NSF-supported science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines to bring their leading researchpractice and findingsinto K-12 learning settings.

  9. Our theme is bioenergy sustainability and we will work in collaboration with: Great Lakes Bioenergy Research Center

  10. From the new GK-12 grant proposal – We will create a collaborative research network of schoolyard science research sites which will (a) serve as arenas for inquiry science activities that mimic aspects of KBS and fellows’ thesis research, while addressing Michigan Science GLCEs in Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Earth Science and Mathematics. (b) allow K-12 classes to develop their own research initiatives, (c) facilitate cross-district research collaboration

  11. The Schoolyard Science Plots- these are experimental ecology plots designed to address specific questions to be determined via collaboration continuing through fall 2010 B=1 C=1 D=1 B=2 C=2 D=1 • Combinations of 3 treatments: • Plant Composition: • 1. switch grass • 2. native prairie mixture • B. Fertilization • 1. fertilized • 2. not fertilized • Harvesting • 1. harvested (biomass removed) • 2. not harvested (small biomass samples) B=1 C=2 D=1 B=2 C=1 D=1 B=1 C=1 D=2 B=2 C=2 D=2 B=1 C=2 D=2 B=2 C=1 D=2 y x = 3m 2 standard replicates at each site.

  12. The Schoolyard Science Plots- these are experimental ecology plots designed to address specific questions to be determined via collaboration continuing through fall 2010 B=1 C=1 D=1 B=2 C=2 D=1 • Research Questions are still developing. • Example questions: • Which section will have more biomass – switch grass or prairie? • important for using these crops as biofuels • 2) Which section will attract more species of insects? • - important for understanding how planting biofuel crops might affect community diversity B=1 C=2 D=1 B=2 C=1 D=1 B=1 C=1 D=2 B=2 C=2 D=2 B=1 C=2 D=2 B=2 C=1 D=2 y x = 3m 2 standard replicates at each site.

  13. GK-12 Fellow Nikhil and KBS K-12 Partnership teacher John Edgerton check out a native prairie plot at KBS. KBS K-12 Partnership teacher Sandy Erwin observes a switch grass plot at KBS.

  14. Switchgrass after 1 year Switchgrass after 1 month Switchgrass June 2010 Native prairie after 1 month Native prairie after 1 year Native prairie June 2010

  15. Sandy, Alycia and Steve marking four of the 10 blocks of plots in the Harper Creek school district.

  16. 1 2 1 2 3 1 2 1 2 1 2 * 1 2 3 1 2 1 2 3 1 2 3 4 5 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 1 1 2 2 *Parchment will be added (returned) to this map asap.

  17. A few ideas about the usefulness of our plots: Biology/Ecology: • Species identification and diversity, humans as part of the ecosystem, plants, birds, insects, microbial diversity (fungi, bacteria) • Changes in ecosystems and environmental factors

  18. Soils and Earth Sciences: - Soil quality measurements, gas exchange surveys, water flow through plots (measuring evapotranspiration)

  19. Geography/Social Studies: • Implications of human land use decisions; comparisons of fertility and diversity across different landscapes and soils • Agronomy: • Productivity of various biofuel crops under differing conditions, impacts of plant diversity on productivity

  20. The KBS K-12 Partnership gathers at the manor house during our 2010 Summer Science Institute. Our fearless leader, Tom Getty

  21. Kellogg Biological Station’s GK-12 Bioenergy Sustainability Project Your resident scientist Alycia Lackey Harper Creek coordinators Sandy Erwin and Steve Barry

More Related