Biospheres
Standard 3240-0201
Introduction
Students will design a system which will actually be balanced and which
could sustain life.
Human Biosphere
Materials
- 18"x24" paper
- pencil
- ruler
- compass
- protractor
Scenario
The earth is in serious jeopardy. Soon the only inhabitable place will
be the biosphere which you design and build. It must be able to hold 8
people to begin with. The materials which you need for expansion must
be nearby. All conditions to support and feed these people must be within
the biosphere. You must plan for at least a five year stay. The people
who stay in your biosphere will be the only ones who will be able to pass
knowledge onto the next generations. You will need to consider what kind
of skills and knowledge these people will need to have. Also you should
consider their age. Within the biosphere you will need to consider how
you will repair and maintain the vital systems within the biosphere. People
to research and solve problems before they get too serious and can maintain
the systems and keep them operating.
Resources as information
about the Biosphere 2 and what was involved in having people live in that
contained system.
Report
Your report must include a list of plants, animals, and other organisms
that you will have in the biosphere as well as how much of each you will
bring in. (Be careful to get organisms from all the different types producers,
consumers, and decomposers). You will need to include drawings which give
the dimensions and approximate size of your biosphere. Your drawings need
to consist of a floor plan and an outside drawing. The website listed
above will help you to get an idea of what is expected. Also remember
to include how you will keep your biosphere clear of waste and with fresh
water and air, along with how you will maintain your food supply.
Notes to Teacher
Be careful to help students analyze whether or not their biosphere is
balanced. The following is a list of questions students should be able
to answer in their report. How much food will you consume each day? How
much food will you need to bring in with you? What will you need to support
the animal life in the biosphere? What will you need to support the plant
life in the biosphere? How much food do expect to be able to grow within
your biosphere? If you bring in other large predators what impact will
they have on the biosphere?
Assesment Rubric
4- All components are present and you are able to answer all of the
above questions. Your drawings are neat and have dimensions listed as
well as the location of all the major components of your bioshere. You
are able to defend your biosphere and why you think you would be able
to survive.
3- All components are present you can answer most of the teachers questions
and defend most of your components. Drawings are neat but lacking some
major systems as well as missing parts of the required elements.
2- Missing components of your biosphere you are only able to answer
1/2 of the teachers questions and defend 1/2 of your systems. Drawings
are O.K. but do not have listed all of the needed systems. You are not
able to show that you could survive.
1- Missing major components of your biosphere. You can answer less than
half the teachers questions and cannot defend your systems. Drawings are
poor and do not list most of the needed system. You cannot defend your
ability to survive in your biosphere.
Bottle Biosphere
The following activity is an assesment variation off of the core experiment
"Making
a Bottle Ecosystem"
Materials
- bottle (2L pop, gallon glass jar, 5 gallon water bottle or whatever
else you can find)
- plants(algae, duck weed, small house plants, weeds, or whatever they
can find),
- animals (fish, crickets, snails, pill bugs, or worms
- soil
- rocks
- water
- something else that the student wants to put in it.
- tape
- marker
Procedure / Assessment
Students go home and build an ecosystem which they feel contains all
the components needed for the life in the ecosystem to survive. They seal
it up with tape and bring it to school. Students then write their name
and the date across the top in such a way that the ecosystem cannot be
opened and resealed without showing. The ecosystem is left in the classroom
for two weeks and then students have to analyze their ecosystem. If it
survives the student understands the concept of ecosystem and therefore
needs no more work. If it does not survive they must write an autopsy
report which must explain why their ecosystem did not survive. If a students
is able to report why their ecosystem did not survive they also have demonstrated
that they understand how an ecosystem works. This is a great assesment
tool at the end of a unit on ecosystems.
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