Is bigger always better? An investigation on the effect of drought on different sizes of trees
Author(s): Jessica Brzyski
Seton Hill University
1068 total view(s), 688 download(s)
- Data Activity_ Student Handout-Drought effects on tree survival.pdf(PDF | 113 KB)
- Data Activity_Educator Materials-Drought effects on tree survival.pdf(PDF | 212 KB)
- Data Explorer Info- Drought effects on tree survival and growth.docx(DOCX | 660 KB)
- Data set Drought effects on tree survival.csv(CSV | 4 KB)
- License terms
Description
In this activity, students begin by first watching a video by Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI) BioInteractive called Scientists at Work “Liz Hadley Tracks the Impact of Climate Change in Yellowstone”. This video provides an example of the long-reaching effects of biotic interactions and how climate change can affect these interactions. Students then work with authentic data from Bennett et al. (2015) to statistically analyze the effect of drought, one consequence of climate change, on tree mortality and diameter growth, and assess how these variables are further exacerbated by bark beetle infestations. Tree mortality and growth are separated by the size category of tree, allowing students to conclude that larger trees are more negatively impacted by drought than smaller trees and mortality is drastically increased in the presence of beetle infestation. By first observing scientists in the field through the video, and then working with a real dataset, students are able to gain a broader perspective of the work scientists perform and gain experience analyzing and interpreting data. Students also reflect on the cascading effect of this one abiotic factor on a large interdependent ecosystem.
Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
- Brzyski, J. (2020). Is bigger always better? An investigation on the effect of drought on different sizes of trees. HHMI BioInteractive Data Explorer FMN (2020), QUBES Educational Resources. doi:10.25334/7PVP-1K07