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"Please
the Trees, But Not These, Please!" Lesson Plans
Keywords: tree
growth, invasive plants, tree competition
Prepared by: Barbara Morton, Wildlands Conservancy, Emmaus,
Pa.
Grade Levels: third through sixth grade (ES)
Total Time for Lesson: 2-hour field trip
Setting: outdoors
Objectives
Students will be able
to:
- Identify basic requirements
for tree survival and indicate how these needs are met (4.6.4.A)(4.7.4.A).
- Explain that adaptations
can determine a tree's ability to compete for basic survival needs
(4.7.4.B).
- Explain that the introduction
of exotic invasive species is often a human activity that has
altered the environmental condition of forests (4.8.4.C).
- Describe how changes
in the forest ecosystems can affect tree growth (4.6.4.C)(4.6.4.A).
Materials Needed
Activity 1
- "What
a Tree Craves: Air, Sunlight, Food and Water"
- "Needs of a Tree
Are More Than Three" student worksheet #1
- "What a Tree
Craves" role cards, strung with loops of yarn to fit over
students' heads
- "Tree Needs"
cards, 50 each, made of squares (approximately 3 inch x 3 inch)
of colored paper in blue (water), green (food/minerals), white
(air), and yellow (sunshine)
Activity 2: "Build
a Better Tree"
Activity 3: "Too
Much of a Good Thing" or "Who Invited You, Anyway?"
Activity 4: "When
Disaster Strikes"
Overview
Students will learn basic
parts of a tree and their functions in acquiring the survival needs
of water, sunshine, food, and air. Certain characteristics of tree
species may allow them to compete effectively for these limited
resources, and students will learn how these relate to invasive
exotic species and their effect on the growth and composition of
the forest.
Procedures
Activity 1: What a Tree
Craves: Air, Sunlight, Food, and Water
Background: A tree is
composed of several structures that each have a specific function
that enables the tree to survive:
- Leaves: use water,
sunlight, and carbon dioxide gas from the air to make food (in
the form of sugar). Enough food is made by the leaves to supply
the whole tree with food energy.
- Branches: hold the
leaves in place and help them to make the food.
- Trunk: food moves
through a system of "straws" or tiny pipelines in the
wood from the leaves into all of the other parts of the tree.
The trunk also helps the tree to stand tall, enabling the leaves
to reach the sunlight they need, and stores food for the tree
to use during the winter.
- Roots: gather water
and nutrients (minerals) from the soil, which the are transported
up the trunk to the leaves, where they are used to make the food.
The roots also hold the tree in place and store some food for
winter use.
- Help the students
to identify the requirements for tree growth such as nutrients,
sunlight, water, and air. Describe for them the parts of a tree
that are responsible for the functions that enable the tree to
survive.
- Divide the students
into four groups: roots, trunks, branches, and leaves. If there
are an odd number of students, make the extra students leaves
and branches. Give each student a "What
a Tree Craves" role card to indicate the role he/she
is playing.
- Scatter the "Tree
Needs" cards onto the ground nearby. Tell the students that
the different needs of trees are represented by paper squares
in the following colors: blue (water), yellow (sunlight), green
(food), and white (air).
- Explain to the students
that they must each search through the cards on the ground or
amongst the other players to find the needs that are listed on
their role cards. For example, the roots each must find a water
card and a mineral card. The trunk must find a "root"
player who has already found its survival needs and escort that
person to a "branch" player, who has already found a
"leaf player with all its survival needs met. The lucky "trunk"
will be the one who finds the extra branch/leaf, since that tree
will be more able to make food for winter survival.
- Start the game by
yelling, "Go!" In short order, all the connections should
be made so that there are a number of completed trees in the forest,
each having what it needs in order to survive.
Activity 2: "Build
a Better Tree"
Background: The resources
needed for survival by trees are in limited supply in a forest.
Each tree seedling must compete with its neighbors. Sometimes it
is a specific adaptation or characteristic that gives a tree species
the winning edge. For example, jack pine trees have special cones
that not only survive the heat of forest fires but actually use
that heat to open and release their seeds. This adaptation allows
jack pines to thrive where other trees perish. The Norway maple
is another tree with winning adaptations: its leaves have a larger
surface area; it has waxy leaves that are more resistant to drought;
and it holds onto its leaves longer than many other maples.
- This game will be
played with several successive variations. Scatter "Tree
Needs" cards onto the ground nearby in the quantities described.
Tell the students that the different needs of trees are represented
by paper squares in the following colors: blue (water); yellow
(sunlight); green (food); and white (air). Each player will pretend
to be a tree, and each tree will need to gather at least one of
each color of card in order to survive. Those with extra resources
will grow taller and stronger and be able to produce more seedlings.
- The first round will
represent a young forest, in which there are plenty of resources
to allow each tree to survive. Scatter more than enough for each
student to have one card of each color. Notice how many seconds
it takes for each student to gather enough cards to survive (e.g.,
18 seconds). The subsequent rounds of the game will be timed at
substantially less than this amount of time (e.g., 10 seconds).
- The second round of
the game will represent a more mature forest, in which there is
competition for limited resources. Collect the "Tree Needs"
cards from the trees that survived the last round. Remove about
one-fourth of each color from the pack . Allow only the reduced
amount of time (10 seconds as above) for the trees to gather their
needs.
What happened?
Why were some
trees unable to survive?
- Assemble the students
who survived the competition round (the other students cheer on
the survivors for now, but will soon reenter the game). Collect
the "Tree Needs" cards, and again make sure that there
are fewer resources than players.
- Now allow each surviving
student to select a "Tree Species Assignment Card" from
a deck of the cards (the way that "Old Maid" cards are
selected). All of the students except one will represent native
sugar maple trees. The one exception will be a single Norway maple.
Explain to the
group that Norway maple trees were brought to this country from
northern Europe in 1762. Because it comes from a place where the
winters are long and the growing season is short, it has adapted
to living with less sunlight than the native sugar maples. Norway
maple leaves are very large and broad, and they come out earlier
in the spring and stay on the branches much longer in the fall
than sugar maples.
- The student representing
the Norway maple will be given an advantage symbolically by beginning
to gather five seconds (or more) before all the sugar maples.
By the end of the round, the Norway maple should have many extra
resources and is assured of survival. Fewer of the sugar maples
will survive.
- Conclude the round
by reminding the students that the Norway maple's adaptations
gave it an advantage that allowed it to win over the competition
for resources needed for survival.
Activity 3: "Too
Much of a Good Thing" (or "Who Invited You, Anyway?")
Background: When a species has such effective adaptations that it
can outcompete all other species in the forest, there may be virtually
no limitations to its growth and reproduction. This often occurs
when a species is introduced from another part of the world--its
limiting factors are no longer present. This species is called an
"Exotic Invasive Species."
- The Norway maple is
one such exotic invasive species. Unfortunately, the tree grows
so easily and successfully that landscapers and nurseries have
encouraged its use in American landscapes, thus unknowingly contributing
to the problem. It is only within the last decade that the threat
of exotic invasive species has become widely acknowledged, but
the Norway maple now has a solid foothold in our forest ecosystems
slowly displacing native plants such as the sugar maple.
- Begin this variation
of the game by again selecting eight students to play the initial
round. Using the "Tree
Species Assignment Cards,"
one student will be chosen to represent the Norway maple. Seven
other students will be native sugar maples. The remaining students
will be "seedlings," soon to enter the game.
- Remind the students
that the Norway maple has adaptations that give it an advantage
in gathering the "Tree Needs" of sunlight, air, water,
and food. In addition to a longer growing season, they have leaves
so large and thick on the branches that they shade out the undergrowth.
In addition, they spread a chemical into the soil near their roots
that prevents competing trees from getting started.
- Scatter eight of each
color of "Tree Needs" cards on the ground. Again, give
the Norway maple a head start of 5 (or more) seconds, before the
sugar maples can begin to gather their needs.
- When the cards are
all collected, record the number of surviving sugar maples and
Norway maples on a chart.
- Explain that each
tree having survived with one of each "Tree Needs" card
is able to produce two seedlings that year. Two students should
join the surviving trees. Give the new "trees" a "Tree
Species Assignment Card" so they will remember which species
they represent. (Now there should be three Norway maples.)
- Count out exactly
as many "Tree Needs" cards as there are trees playing
the second year round. Scatter the cards and point out to the
students that there are enough cards for each tree to have what
it needs.
- However, once again
the (now three) Norway maples will have a 5-second advantage.
After the second year round, again count sugar maples and Norway
maples. By the third or fourth round, the entire forest should
be composed of Norway maples, having successfully outcompeted
every other tree in the forest.
- Ask the students to
summarize what happened during the game.
- What happened
to the sugar maples?
- Why did the Norway
maples increase in numbers so fast?
- How many kinds
of trees are now in the forest?
- Is this a good
thing or a not-so-good thing?
Confirm for the students
that the forest now has just one species of tree in it. Mention
to them that different kinds of forest wildlife residents need many
different kinds of food sources and various places to live. How
many kinds of food and shelter are present in our forest? (Just
Norway maples.)
Activity 4: "When
Disaster Strikes"
Background: When there
is only one species of plant in an area, it is referred to as a
"monoculture," i.e., the growing of a single crop. This
is a common practice in agricultural production, where the land
is deliberately manipulated to produce a single crop for convenience
in planting and harvesting. In a natural system, monocultures are
generally unstable, since a single disease or insect infestation
can wipe out an entire forest (one example is the chestnut blight).
Monocultures also lack the interaction between species that characterizes
a healthy, sustainable ecosystem.
- Tell the students
they are about to find out what happens when there is only one
kind of tree in the forest. Everyone in the class should now be
a Norway maple tree. Define the playing area by landmarks ("between
that bench over there and the fence post").
- Now explain that a
ship has arrived from Norway, bringing a shipment of Norwegian
cross-country skis to deliver to Nestor's Sporting Goods. One
of the skis has a small crack along the edge, and lodged in the
crack is a fungus named Sporetta demapleater. The sporetta
fungus is very contagious, traveling across leaf litter to attack
only Norway maples.
A cross-country skier (you) buys the dreaded skis at Nestor's.
You go skiing in the midst of the beautiful Norway maple forest.
The fungus hops off the skis, and when the snow melts it begins
to travel across the leaf litter.
- At this point, tag
one of the students, announcing to the group, "When you are
tagged, you must tag two other Norway maple trees and then sit
down on the spot because you've died."
- It should be only
moments before the entire forest is dead from the sporetta fungus.
Point out that this total destruction happened only because the
Norway maple had already wiped out all other species in the forest.
- Extension:
If desired, play this scenario out again after distributing the
"Tree Species Assignment Cards" with a variety of species
(including several Norway and sugar maples). Remind the students
that only Norway maples can be tagged. This variation should demonstrate
that a forest of diverse species composition can better withstand
disaster.
Assessment
Evaluate the students'
understanding of the concepts from this lesson by playing a game
of "Natives and Exotics" (adapted from Joseph Cornell's
Sharing Nature with Children, p. 79).
- Split the students
into two teams, the "Natives" and the "Exotics."
Have the two teams line up facing one another, several feet apart.
Fifteen feet behind each team, make a "home base" line
between two orange traffic cones.
- Make a statement out
loud to the group. Use the statements listed below to begin, then
add your own statements according to your own learning objectives
for your students. If the statement is true, the Natives chase
the Exotics, trying to tag them before they reach their home base.
If the statement is false, the Exotics chase the Natives.
- If anyone is tagged,
he or she joins the other team. If there is confusion about whether
a question is true or not, discuss the answer with the group.
Sample Statements
- A tree is an animal
that lives in the forest. (f)
- Trees need sunlight
to survive. (t)
- This is a seed from
a maple tree (show them).
- Roots enable the leaves
to reach sunlight. (f)
- A drought is a lack
of rain. (t)
- Some trees are better
able to survive drought than others. (t)
- Norway maples cannot
survive in American forests. (f)
- Exotic invasive species
are a threat to native ecosystems. (t)
- Human beings can make
decisions that help the forest. (t)
- Trees need these things
to grow: water, sunlight, bubblegum, and air. (f)
References
Cornell, Joseph B. (1998).
Sharing Nature with Children. Nevada City, Calif.: Dawn Publications.
Randall, John M., and
Janet Marinelli, eds. (1996). Invasive Plants: Weeds of the Global
Garden. Brooklyn, N.Y.: Brooklyn Botanic Gardens Publications.
Sauer, Leslie J. (1998).
The Once and Future Forest: A Guide to Forest Restoration Strategies.
Washington, D.C.: Island Press.
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