Ocean Acidification: Predator-Prey Interactions of Intertidal Snails and Sea Stars
Author(s): Paige Punzalan
540 total view(s), 492 download(s)
- Black Turban Snail and Sea Star.jpg(JPG | 15 KB)
- Ocean Acidification - Pitch.pptx(PPTX | 17 MB)
- Ocean acidification alters the response of intertidal snails to a key sea star predator.pdf(PDF | 579 KB)
- Ocean Acidification Quantitative Skills.Rmd(RMD | 5 KB)
- Snails_Data_Info_Sheet.docx(DOCX | 15 KB)
- Snails_Lesson_Data.csv(CSV | 517 B )
- Student Version - Ocean Acidification.docx(DOCX | 2 MB)
- Teacher Version - Ocean Acidification.docx(DOCX | 2 MB)
- License terms
Description
This QUBES lesson takes a look at the effects of lower pH on predator-prey interactions, precisely flight responses and interactions between intertidal invertebrates (snails and sea star predators) using the variables of pH, the proportion of time out of water as the flight response, and the presence or absence of predator cue. This lesson connects to the bigger picture of ocean acidification and dangers by discussing how changes in snail behavior could influence general trophic interactions and, consequently, ecosystem functioning.
This lesson also contains introductory information on GLMs using the proportion and pH data provided from the focal paper. Students also learn how to visualize these variables in the R programming language.
Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
- Punzalan, P. (2022). Ocean Acidification: Predator-Prey Interactions of Intertidal Snails and Sea Stars. VCU Environmental Research Methods, QUBES Educational Resources. doi:10.25334/8TN4-TE51