10/3/13

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10/3/13 Agenda : Go over Unit 2 Test Go Fish? Coral Reefs Life’s Work: Read ch. 11 and study for quiz tomorrow Objective : SWBAT evaluate the effects of fishing on aquatic ecosystems. SWBAT describe the ecological services provided by coral reefs and evaluate human impacts on coral reefs. Due Now: 1. Sunrise Cinema Summary (if you attended) 2. Freshwater ?s 3. Ocean Zones handout 4. Do Now Sheet Do Now: Complete the Unit 2 Test Wrap- Up anticipation guide

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Objective : SWBAT evaluate the effects of fishing on aquatic ecosystems. SWBAT describe the ecological services provided by coral reefs and evaluate human impacts on coral reefs. Due Now: 1. Sunrise Cinema Summary (if you attended) 2. Freshwater ?s 3. Ocean Zones handout 4. Do Now Sheet - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 10/3/13

10/3/13Agenda: Go over Unit 2

Test Go Fish? Coral Reefs

Life’s Work:Read ch. 11 and study for quiz tomorrow

Objective: SWBAT evaluate the effects of fishing

on aquatic ecosystems. SWBAT describe the ecological services

provided by coral reefs and evaluate human impacts on coral reefs.

Due Now: 1. Sunrise Cinema Summary (if you attended)2. Freshwater ?s3. Ocean Zones handout4. Do Now Sheet

Do Now:Complete the Unit 2 Test Wrap-Up anticipation guide

Page 2: 10/3/13

Unit Test Class Averages (1st, 5th, and 7th)

Unit 1 Test Unit 2 Test61.5

6262.5

6363.5

6464.5

6565.5

6666.5

63%

66%

Page 3: 10/3/13

Free Response Scoring Guide 2003 - #1(a) Support Dr. Tate’s assertion that “the leaf litter is critical to the survival of local species of forest plants.” Include in your discussion the roles of leaf litter in a deciduous forest ecosystem. (2 POINTS TOTAL)

Page 4: 10/3/13

Free Response Scoring Guide 2003 - #1(b) Describe THREE abiotic changes that would be likely to result if the exotic worms consumed all the leaf litter in a single year. (3 POINTS TOTAL)

Page 5: 10/3/13

Free Response Scoring Guide 2003 - #1(c) For one of the changes you identified in part (b), explain how the change could set the stage for the takeover of Japanese stilt grass or other exotic species. (1 POINT TOTAL)

Page 6: 10/3/13

Free Response Scoring Guide 2003 - #1(d) Design a controlled experiment to determine whether the worms, in fact, do change the forest ecosystem. Identify the environmental factor you will measure, and include the specific hypothesis you will test and the data you will collect. (4 POINTS TOTAL)

Page 7: 10/3/13

Unit 2 Test Multiple Choice

More questions? Attend tutorials:

Tues/Thurs 4-5pm in the library OR make an appointment

Look over your responses and the

questions you missed.

1 Minute

Multiple choice question Q&A

5 Minutes

Page 8: 10/3/13

Troubled Waters: The Hidden Dangers of Overfishing The major decline in the worldwide catch of

fish since 1990 is because of over-fishing. About 75% of the world’s commercially

valuable marine fish species are over fished or fished near their sustainable limits. Big fish are becoming scarce, and smaller fish are

next. We throw away 30% of the fish we catch. We needlessly kill sea mammals and birds.

By-catch: fish or animals that were not meant to be caught.

Page 12: 10/3/13

Fig. 12-A, p. 255

Fish farming in cage

Trawler fishing

Spotter airplane

Sonar

Trawl flapTrawl lines

Purse-seine fishing

Trawl bagFish school

Drift-net fishingLong line fishing

Lines with hooks

Fish caught by gills

Deep sea aquaculture cage

Float Buoy

Your Turn: Name each of the following types of nets AND describe the way it works to catch fish.

12

3

Page 13: 10/3/13

Fig. 12-A, p. 255

Fish farming in cage

Trawler fishing

Spotter airplane

Sonar

Trawl flapTrawl lines

Purse-seine fishing

Trawl bagFish school

Drift-net fishingLong line fishing

Lines with hooks

Fish caught by gills

Deep sea aquaculture cage

Float Buoy

Page 14: 10/3/13

What is a Coral Reef? Coral reefs: form in clear, warm

coastal waters of the tropics and subtropics

Formed by massive colonies of tiny animals called polyps that slowly build reefs by taking in calcium and secreting a protective crust of limestone (calcium carbonate) around their bodies Coral reefs take in half of all of the

calcium flowing into the ocean every year

When the polyps die, their empty crusts remain behind as a platform for more reef growth

Some coral reefs are millions of years old

Page 19: 10/3/13

Ecological Services of Coral Reefs Act as natural

barriers to protect 15% of the world’s coastlines from erosion caused by battering waves and storms

Provide habitats for marine organisms

“Goldmines” of aquatic biodiversity

Page 20: 10/3/13

Human Effects on Coral Reefs Trawler nets:

dragged along ocean floor like a giant plow

Coral bleaching: result of warmer temperatures and sediment pollution

Overfishing Increasing amounts of CO2 in the atmosphere makes the ocean more acidic, which damages the corals

Page 21: 10/3/13