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KABT Spring Field Trip: June 6, 2009

May 11, 2009 in Field Trips, KABT News, Nature

This year’s Spring field trip will be on Saturday, June 6, at Cheyenne Bottoms Wildlife Area.

From Fort Hays Univeristy Wetlands Education Center Website

From Fort Hays Univeristy Wetlands Education Center Website

We will be meeting at 10am at the Kansas Wetlands Education Center at the Bottoms.  We have reserved a classroom there, and are asking participants to bring any materials we can use to collaborate and create a lesson/lab or two that we can then take back and do with our classrooms next year.  That may mean bringing laptops, microscopes, slides, petri dishes, dropping pipettes, cameras, nets, buckets, binoculars, etc.  The classroom that is reserved has tables and chairs, and that is about it, so we need to bring all of our own lab equipment.

For those who want to arrive Friday and camp out, we will be at the Venango campground at Kanopolis State Park, about 45 minutes northeast of Cheyenne Bottoms.  Friday evening we will have fly fishing, bird watching, and other activities for those who are interested.  Please bring your own camping gear and food.   (Please see the Venango link for camping costs).

Friends and family are welcome!  Hope to see you there!

Biotechnology Workshops at JCCC

April 27, 2009 in Field Trips, KABT News, Nature

jccc

Johnson County Community College is offering teachers Introductory and Advanced biotechnology classes. There is no charge for the classes and a stipend is available for attendees. See attachment for details.  educator_information1

Teachers looking for paid summer internships should complete the attached application. biotech-summer-internship-application-2009 Placement can be arranged for 2-4 weeks at a biotechnology company.

Contact  Megan Gray for more details.

eBird–Citizen Science at its best

January 11, 2009 in Nature, Student Research Ideas, Teaching Resources, Technology

eBird Home Page

eBird Home Page

Saturday morning, I got up early and headed over to a program presented by Chris Wood, sponsored by the Topeka Audobon folks and hosted by Janeen Walters at Washburn Rural Middle School.   Now I am a geek but the topic had to have a lot of promise for me to give up my Saturday morning cinnamon roll and the promise was more than fulfilled.  Chris Wood works with the eBird program at the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology.  I’ve got to say from years and years of working in the field of citizen science I was not expecting to be wowed but I was.  My expectations were tempered by the years of struggles trying to figure out how to encourage volunteers to submit, good quality data in a way that benefited the citizen scientist as well as the professional scientist–all the while trying to keep things inviting and exciting for recruiting new folks to participate.   Steve Case and Tom Baker put together a good web based infrastructure to support the Pathfinder science project but today’s Web 2.0 tools take collaboration to an entire new level, creating an environment that can promote and support powerful web-based efforts in conservation science.  eBird provides an exemplary example.

If you are a biology teacher that provides any instruction in or encourages birdwatching or if you are a bird watcher yourself eBird is something to really consider.  I’m not a lister but I think I’m about to start–only because my effort can significantly contribute to a larger effort.  I’m really more of a nature observer–birds just happen to be a convenient focal point.  I have participated in Christmas bird counts and have made a number of reports to the Kansas Bird List about observations and sightings but in general I’m not a hard-core birder.  That is the beauty of eBird.  A more casual birder like myself with just a bit of extra effort to record my sightings can make really significant contributions to a data  base of bird observations while a more intense birder can have a huge impact.  eBird makes it easy to record your sightings and their locations.  eBird simply works for all kinds of birders.

Data input

Data input

In fact, I learned from Chris that researchers accessing the data have developed very sophisticated algorithms to take into account your personal bird watching habits.  For instance, I might be hesitant to participate because when I bird in the spring, I’m primarily looking for warblers.  I’ll note the sparrows and such now, but my effort is going to be focused on the warblers.  Well guess what,  the filtering tools will note this correct for this.  That is good because I wouldn’t want my lack of focus on sparrows to indicate that they weren’t there when they probably were.  (That could create conservation issues.)  This is powerful.

Here’s the deal, though.  One of the reasons that Chris came to KS is that we have only a few folks signed up and participating in eBird.  Notice if you go to the site we are not in the top 30 states for observations reported this year, in fact as of this morning there were only 117 observations turned in this year.  The key to this overall effort is large numbers of observers.  For instance here’s part of a bar chart of bird occurrence in Johnson County.

eBird Chart

eBird Chart

Because of the numbers involved and the data base is a very rich resource for professional researchers.  The professionals are benefiting and we are learning more and more about our birds.  More importantly, as an educator think of the advantages eBird can offer you and your students to collect and help make sense of observations made from year to year, season to season–all the while contributing to the larger research community.  Think about it, create an account and start to contribute–I am.

Kansas Winter Bird Feeder Survey

January 8, 2009 in Nature

The Winter Bird Feeder Survey began in January 1988 as a cooperative effort between the Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks and the Kansas Ornithological Society, to census birds at feeders. Data is gathered by hundreds of volunteers who watch their feeders and count birds on two, of four designated days. The four day feeder survey period for January 2009 is from January 15th, through January 18th.

The data collected on this project is invaluable to wildlife planners and researchers. The data and maps are also available to all who are interested in exploring the natural world.

Nature’s Evolutionary Gems

January 3, 2009 in KABT News, Nature, Teaching Resources

A pdf Resource for Teachers wishing to spread Awareness of Evolution by Natural Selection

darwinnatureimage1
www.nature.com/evolutiongems

In this celebratory year of the Birth of Charles Darwin and the publication of his On the Origin of Species, it is fitting that the January 1 issue of the journal Nature announces a document “for teachers and others wishing to spread awareness of evolution by natural selection.”  The document is accessible at the link above, which forwards one to a seventeen page pdf file

The document includes student-friendly ”editorial introductions” to 15 papers that have been published in Nature during the past decade.  These papers were selected “to illustrate the breadth, depth and power of evolutionary thinking”, and cover natural selection from the perspectives of the Fossil Record, Habitats, and Molecular Processes.  The specific titles are given by clicking the more link at the end of this post. 

Each abstract is formatted to a single page, and is followed by a link to the orginal paper, links to additional resources (which may not be accessible), and a link to the website(s) of the author(s).  For those that don’t have a subscription to the journal, many of the links to abstracts of the original research papers provide access to the full text and a freely downloadable pdf .  Happy readings!

Nature, thanks for compiling this fitting and freely available educational resource!  It is a wonderful New Years Gift!

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Bird ID Challenge

December 22, 2008 in Nature

birdidimage1

This afternoon my daughter Rebecca observed this beautiful bird eating what appears to have been a Mourning Dove.  This event occurred in our front yard in the Brookside area of Kansas City, Missouri.   Even though we were on our way out the door I took the time to capture a few images, one of which is shown above. 

ID the bird and identify important characteristics that distinguish this bird from other birds that it is related to.  Stan or Brad will confirm your identification.

Perspectives on Trees

November 26, 2008 in Nature, Teaching Resources

A few weeks ago, my fall semester field biology students and I began our studies of forest ecology.  Luckily before the majority of our local trees demonstrated their deciduous nature, we were able to travel into the field and collect quite a diversity of leaves for identificaiton.  More recently, we have turned our attention to dendrochronology methods and using the point-quarter-method for determing tree density, dominance, and frequency. 

Normally, I wouldn’t have considered sharing such information but during the past week, two NPR broadcasts have inspired me to do so.  More specifically, the inspriation came from Robert Kruwich‘s “Krulwich on Science” radio segments.  Links to the specific radio segment follow, with a few related class resources that I have used while teaching about dendrochronology and forest density.

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Challenge: Have You Seen This Wasp?

November 9, 2008 in Nature

Back on 28 September I found this insect occupied on a log as evening approached here in northeast Kansas.  After my students found they could stump me with fairly basic questions, I told them that someday I would be back with more information on it.  My enthusiasm far exceeds my working knowledge on most insects, so I would love to know both its identity and any natural history.

An experiment in collaborative spreadsheets and Hardy-Weinberg

September 29, 2008 in KABT News, Nature

Last spring, at KATS KAMP, I introduced the idea of using student generated spreadsheet models to explore Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and as a substitute for the H-W simulations described in the AP-Biology lab manual. This fall at KABT’s meeting, I presented a bit about collaborative documents. I propose that we combine the two to create unique collabortive opportunity to explore the application of spreadsheets in biology.

I have created a blank collaborative spreadsheet at Zoho.com that is ready for collaborative work. I sent a message to the AP-Bio list inviting collaborators and we have two, Kim Foglia and Davida LaCosse. Paula Donham has said she’ll participate as well. Together we will recreate the spreadsheet that I have described earlier and take it further to develop a multi-generational model that can explore how drift, selection, mutation and migration affect populations. I’d really like to have a couple more KABT folks involved so let me know if you’d like to participate (Eric, Jeff and others). Thanks in advance to everyone involved in this experiment.

Below, you’ll find the embedded “work-in -progress” spreadsheet. You can return to this post to see how things are progressing.

Finding your way to the Fall KABT meeting

September 11, 2008 in KABT News, Nature, Technology

Here’s the google map to the Fall KABT meeting. I dropped the pin in the parking lot. If you click on larger map and zoom out, you’ll be able to “ask for directions” from your address to KU up at the top of the map. See you Saturday.

BW


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