Examining human impacts on tusk evolution in elephants using authentic research data using Serenity
Author(s): Kaitlin Bonner
St. John Fisher College
1689 total view(s), 1060 download(s)
- Bonner_LDC_Elephant_selection.pptx(PPTX | 11 MB)
- Tuskless-shiny-tutorial.mov(MOV | 127 MB)
- Tusklessness_activity_Serenity_mod_3.19.2019.pdf(PDF | 149 KB)
- Tusklessness_activity_Serenity_mod_3.19.2019.docx(DOCX | 82 KB)
- License terms
Description
In this activity students explore human impacts on elephant tusk evolution using HHMI’s Scientists at Work “Selection for Tuskless Elephants” and a research data set from Chiyo et al. (2015) on the relationship between illegal tusk harvest and recent population changes in tusk size in the African elephant that is publicly-available through Dryad Data Repositories. This adaptation provides an additional mechanism of working with Chiyo et al.'s (2015) dataset using Serenity as the graphical tool. Serenity is an R-Shiny App developed by Drew LaMar. Students can quickly and easily generate figures and statistical analyses in Serenity. Similar to the activities posted, students compare the impacts of selective pressure as a result of poaching from the research data to the discussion of the Gorongosa population in the HHMI video.
Notes
This version uses Serenity, an R-shiny app developed by Drew LaMar.
Cite this work
Researchers should cite this work as follows:
- Bonner, K. (2019). Examining human impacts on tusk evolution in elephants using authentic research data using Serenity. HHMI BioInteractive, QUBES Educational Resources. doi:10.25334/D87T-FS18