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This lesson will increase your knowledge of concepts covered in the following TEKS for biology:. 3.a – Analyze, review, and critique scientific explanations, including hypotheses and theories, as to their strengths and weaknesses using scientific evidence and information
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This lesson will increase your knowledge of concepts covered in the following TEKS for biology: 3.a – Analyze, review, and critique scientific explanations, including hypotheses and theories, as to their strengths and weaknesses using scientific evidence and information 3.c – Evaluate impact of research on scientific thought, society, and the environment 3.f – Research and describe the history of biology and contributions of scientists 4.b – Investigate and identify cellular processes 6.d – Compare genetic variations observed in plants and animals 7.b – Illustrate the results of natural selection in the speciation, diversity, phylogeny, adaptation, behavior and extinction
This lesson will increase your knowledge of concepts covered in the following TEKS for biology: 9.d – Analyze the flow of matter and energy through different trophic levels and between organisms and the physical environment 11.b – Investigate and identify how organisms respond to external stimulation 11.c – Analyze the importance of nutrition, environmental conditions and physical exercise on health 11.d – Summarize the role of microorganisms in maintaining and disrupting equilibrium including diseases in plants and animals and decay in an ecosystem 12.b – Interpret interactions among organisms exhibiting predation, parasitism, commensalism, and mutualism 12.e – Investigate and explain interactions in an ecosystem including food chains, food webs, and food pyramids
Previous LessonAgricultural Systems and Transgenic Organisms
Question: Many of us take agriculture for granted. How has it affected human history? Photos courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
Development of agricultural systems made advanced civilization possible Photo courtesy of Texas Department of Transportation 10,000 BC Today
Question: When did domestication begin and what was the first animal domesticated?
Dates (BC) and Places of First Evidence for Domesticationfrom Diamond, J., Guns, Germs and Steel, Random House, 1997 Dog 10,000 BC SW. Asia,China, North America Sheep 8,000 BC SW. Asia Goat 8,000 BC SW. Asia Pig 8,000 BC China, SW. Asia Cow 6,000 BC SW. Asia, India, North Africa Horse 4,000 BC Ukraine Donkey 4,000 BC Egypt
The dog was one • of the first animals • domesticated • 10,000 years of • domestication may • explain why dogs • are man’s best • friend From: Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Question: Why is there a controversy over using grain to fatten cattle? From: Time, November 8, 1999
Many more people could be fed by the grain used to feed the cattle than can be fed by the cattle themselvesThis is because productive energy is diminished with each trophic level Based on: Scientific American, September 1976
Question: What is good and bad about genetically engineered agricultural plants?
Genetically Engineered Plants • The Good: Crops can be engineered to have important components of diet, contain medically important proteins, and to be pest resistant • The Bad: Plants could contain pesticides that would harm humans and wildlife, or proteins that could cause allergies in humans
Overview of Lesson • Pests, DDT and biomagnification • DDT, eagles and falcons • Endangered Species Act • Organic farming
Domestic crops were selected for maximum productivity and had little natural pest resistance
Potato famine of Ireland was caused by genetically uniform crops and lack of pesticides to protect them Blight hits potatoes, 1845 Based on: Population Reports, May 1992
Today’s Pests Pests attack and eat our food crops This problem is due, in part, to not selecting for pest resistance during domestication Based on: National Geographic, February 1980
DDT was invented in the 1940’s and viewed as:- miracle for farmers- and safe
“The most discussed of the new insecticides is dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane, shortened to DDT but also called Guesarol. This compound has remarkable power to kill insects, particularly body lice-the ‘cooties’ of World War I. The prevalence of typhus, carried by body lice, in the Mediterranean theater of this war has emphasized its value. DDT’s effectiveness in war may well be overshadowed by its value in peace. Painstaking investigations have shown it to be signally effective against many of the most destructive insects that feed upon crops.”Scientific American, July 1944.
Arial crop sprayers were used to spray tons of DDT on crops across the U.S. Photo courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
Pests became resistant to DDT Based on: National Geographic
Pesticide Resistance In the beginning, most pests were sensitive to DDT but a few were resistant The resistant forms survived and reproduced In the end, most pests were resistant to DDT Based on: National Geographic, February 1980
BiomagnificationThe concentration of pesticides in higher levels of food chains
Trophic Levels Based on: Mader, S., Inquiry Into Life, McGraw-Hill Most food chains consist of four trophic levels
Energy Available to Consumers at Next Trophic Level Energy Lost by Death and Decay Energy Lost by Respiration Energy Lost by Excretion Energy Lost by Egestion of Feces Energy Ingested
DDT in Food Chain DDT is concentrated as it moved up food chain This is because energy is lost (from respiration) as go up food chain but DDT is not Based on: Campbell et al, Biology: Concepts and Connections, Benjamin Cummings
Overview of Lesson • Pests, DDT and biomagnification • DDT, eagles and falcons • Endangered Species Act • Organic foods
Bald Eagle • Once was widely • distributed over U.S. • As a top carnivore it feeds on fish • Swoops down and captures fish off the surface of the water Photo courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
Scientists discovered that DDT was • concentrated in the bald eagle • DDT affected the eagle’s ability to reproduce Photos courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
Scientists found that the eagle eggs had thin egg shells and broke easily Nests contained broken, rotten eggs The number of young produced per breeding pair was reduced
Population of adult eagles declined to 4,000 and the eagle was listed as “Endangered” Photo courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) banned DDT in 1972 Photo courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
Eagle reproduction before and after DDT ban Based on: Grier, J., Science, 1982
Eagle populations increased rapidly and the eagle is now listed as “Threatened” From: Time, July 11, 1994
Peregrine Falcon • Occurred naturally • over most of continental U.S. • Nests on cliffs • Keen eyesight • (if human, could read newspaper print at 110 yards) • Feeds on other birds, knocking them out of the sky at 200 m.p.h. Photo courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
DDT & Peregrine • After DDT was introduced • in 1940s, DDT weakened • the birds’ egg shells, • devastating the population • By early 1970s, the entire • U.S. population was down • to 12 breeding pairs • Peregrines were declared • federally endangered and • DDT banned • Peregrines were bred in • captivity and reintroduced • successfully in cities Photos courtesy of Texas Parks and Wildlife Department
Overview of Lesson • Pests, DDT and biomagnification • DDT, eagles and falcons • Endangered Species Act • Organic foods
“In the United States at least 500 species and subspecies of plants and animals have become extinct since the 1500s.” Douglas Chadwick, H., National Geographic, March 1995
Endangered Species Act of 1973 • The Secretary of the Interior determines whether a species is endangered or threatened • The Secretary develops and implements recovery plans for the conservation of endangered species
Definitions - Endangered Species Act • Endangered Species - Any species that is in danger of extinction throughout all or a significant portion of its range • Threatened Species - Any species that is likely to become an endangered species within the foreseeable future
OTHER COMEBACKS ESA is having some success, but there are more than 600 endangered or threatened species in the U.S. today Species removed from endangered list or reclassified as threatened date of change 1994 Gray whale (California population) Aleutian Canada goose American alligator Brown pelican Utah prairie dot Greenback cutthroat trout 1990 1987 1985 1984 1978 Based on: Time, July 11, 1994
Overview of Lesson • Pests, DDT and biomagnification • DDT, eagles and falcons • Endangered Species Act • Organic foods
Defining “Organic” Foods produced without hormones, antibiotics, herbicides, insecticides, chemical fertilizers, genetic modification or germ-killing radiation The USDA labels such foods “certified organic” From: Newsweek, Sept. 30, 2002
Availability of Organic Products Based on: Newsweek, Sept. 30, 2002
Unanswered Questions about Certified Organic Foods Are organic food safer than other foods? Do organic foods taste better? Are organic foods worth the extra costs? Are people eating organic diets healthier than people with conventional diets?
Can organic farming help the environment? Pesticides now kill 67 million American birds per year The Mississippi River dumps enough fertilizer into the Gulf of Mexico to maintain a 60 mile “dead zone” devoid of fish
Next Lesson The Water Cycle