Budding Botanists Teachers Pre-Visit Packet

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1 Budding Botanists Teachers Pre-Visit Packet The staff at Crissy Field Center is pleased that your class will be participating in Budding Botanists, an urban environmental education program. This packet contains logistical information about your program as well as resources for you and your students. Among these resources are activities that you may find useful in preparing your class for their visit and follow-up activities for use after the program. Please feel free to use only the activities you feel are most appropriate and convenient for your class and curriculum schedule. Thank you again for participating in our education programs, and we look forward to seeing you and working with your class! Botany: the study of plants. What is a botanist? Botanists study and have a lot of knowledge about plants. There are many kinds of botanists. Some botanists work in the field, while some work in a lab. Some botanists do research to increase and improve our supply of plant products. Others are conservationists who use their knowledge to manage parks, forests, and wilderness areas. Botanists may use their knowledge to solve pollution problems.

2 Table of Contents What to Expect... 4 A summary of the logistics and expectations for the day. Schedule for the Day... 5 Approximate times for your program activities. Resources for Teachers... 7 Background information... 9 General information about plant identification and ecology. Vocabulary Vocabulary words printed in bold will be used during your program. Activity 1: Setting the Stage Some questions to help your students start thinking more deeply about plants and their relationship to animals and people. Activity 2: Learning About Plants and Their Seeds In this activity, students compare seeds from different kinds of fruit. This lesson is a good introduction to the plant dissections we will do during your program. Extensions for Activity 2: Two additional activities exploring plant parts. Activity 3: Building a Food Web An activity to help students understand the role of plants in their environment. It can be used before or after your program. Extensions for Activity 3: Two activities that further demonstrate the concept of food webs. Activity 4: Brainstorming Solutions A lesson on protecting plant habitats, suggested for use after your program. Activity 5: Letter to a Developer An activity encouraging students to express their thoughts and take action. This is an excellent follow-up to Activity 4. Resources for Students Plant Diagrams Illustrations of two flowering plants which students can label. Budding Botanists Word Search A word search using botanical vocabulary. Is it a Fruit or a Vegetable? A handout that helps students recognize common foods as plant parts. Plants in Our World: Crossword Puzzle A puzzle that uses vocabulary that students may encounter during their program. 2

3 What To Expect This program includes indoor and outdoor components. We will spend the first part of the program learning about leaf identification. Then we ll use our skills to identify and describe plants around the Crissy Field marsh. We ll complete the day by making miniature field guides for students to take home. Please ask students to dress appropriately for walking outdoors and getting messy and to be prepared for all kinds of weather. Arrival Staff from the Crissy Field Center will greet you at the entrance. We will happily provide nametags for your students, but you can save time by giving them nametags before you arrive. Your students will have the chance to use the restrooms and put away their lunches and backpacks before the program begins. Lunch Please have your students bring bag lunches. There will be a scheduled lunch break during which your class will eat outside in the garden in back of the Center. If it is raining or cold, we will provide an indoor space for your lunch. Chaperones The active assistance of adult chaperones can help to make your program even more successful. We will ask chaperones to spread themselves out among the students to help answer questions, distribute supplies, and manage safety (particularly when crossing the street). 3

4 Arrive and settle in: 5 minutes Program Schedule all times are approximate Total Program Time: 3 hours Students will have the chance to take a bathroom break and receive nametags for the day. We will provide a place to store lunches, backpacks, jackets, and other items. Welcome and introduction: 10 minutes Students are introduced to the park and to botany. Leaf characteristics: 25 minutes Not all plants have flowers in bloom throughout the year. In order for students to learn about a specific local plant, students will examine the leaf characteristics and function as well as the botanical vocabulary used to describe a plant by observing the leaves. Students work in pairs to begin a plant identification worksheet on one specific plant using a hands-on approach and applying new terminology. Field Botany: 50 minutes Students hike to Crissy Field marsh to observe, document, and sketch local plants used by the people of the Presidio. Lunch: 30 minutes Students should bring a bag lunch. Unless it is raining, your class will eat outside. What Makes Your Plant Unique: 50 minutes Students complete their plant research by creating a marketing piece and sharing their knowledge with the class through small presentations. Closing: 10 minutes 4

5 Resources For Teachers 5

6 Background Information About Plants Plant Identification: Although it is helpful to know a variety of botanical terms when describing plants, it is equally important simply to have the skills to make detailed observations. Here are some of the first things botanists look for when attempting to identify a plant: Size, shape, and habit: Is it a small, herbaceous plant or a woody shrub? Does it creep along the ground like a vine, or is it upright? What is its typical size and form? Where is the plant growing? Leaf shape and arrangement: What shape are the leaves? What does the surface of the leaf look and feel like? Are the edges of the leaves smooth, jagged (serrated) or lobed? What pattern do the veins make? How are the leaves arranged on the stem opposite, alternate or whorled? Are the leaves in groups or single? Flower: What color is the flower? What size? What kind of shape is it? Is it symmetrical? Does it have petals and/or sepals? How many? How many stamens does it have and how are they arranged? Is the ovary above or below the meeting of the petals? How and where are the flowers growing on the plant? Other: What does the fruit or seed look like? The stem? The root? Other unusual parts? Plants as Producers: Plants perform a number of different services for us, from providing medicine and clothing, to making the oxygen we breathe. However, the most important function they serve may be as producers, the foundation of the food chain. A producer is an organism that makes its own food out of inorganic matter (also called an autotroph). Through photosynthesis, plants use energy from the sun (sunlight), along with water and carbon dioxide, to make food for themselves in the form of sugars. Higher up on the food chain are animals, including humans, which rely on plants (or other animals that eat plants) for their food. We are called consumers, because we get our food from organic matter such as plants and other animals. Thus, plants provide the essential step of capturing the sun s energy and putting it into a form that other animals can access and use. Indigenous vs. Exotic: We often distinguish between plants that are native, or indigenous, to an area and those that are exotic (also called introduced or non-native). Indigenous plants are those that grow naturally in an area and were not brought there intentionally or unintentionally by humans. Exotic species -- having evolved under different environmental conditions than indigenous plants -- may use more or less of particular resources, have different predators, and be susceptible to different diseases; they have different effects on the local environment. They may be beneficial or harmful, depending on the species and the ecosystem to which they were introduced. Tomatoes are a good example of an exotic plant that most of us greatly appreciate. However, some exotic species disrupt or harm their new environments; we call these invasive species. Invasives can out-compete local species, alter the local microclimate, and affect human culture and economics. The impacts of these changes are often widespread and long lasting and are sometimes devastating to ecosystems. During Budding Botanists, we will focus on plants that are indigenous to the Bay Area. 6

7 Vocabulary flower: fruit: the reproductive structure of a plant, often showy, colorful, or fragrant a ripened ovary of a plant; the part that holds the seed(s) indigenous: occurring naturally in an area; not brought by people; native leaf: light: nutrients: plant: roots: stem: bud: carnivore: consumer: the part of a plant that takes in the light and the air that a plant needs provides the energy that plants need to make food things that are necessary for life and growth, such as food a living thing that can make food using energy from the sun the part of a plant that holds it in place and takes in water and nutrients the part of a plant that carries water and nutrients from the roots to the leaves a small growth on a stem that can develop into a flower or a new stem an animal that eats meat an organism that eats other living things or things that were once alive decomposer: a type of consumer that recycles nutrients by eating or breaking down dead things food chain: herbivore: omnivore: producer: how energy is transferred from one living thing to another an animal that eats plants an animal that eats plants and meat a living thing that creates its own food and makes up the base of the food chain 7

8 Activity #1: Setting the Stage You may want to discuss the following questions with your students: What is a botanist? Why would a botanist want to study plants? Are plants important in our world? What kinds of things do plants do for humans? What kinds of things do we do with plants? Do animals use plants? How? What would the world be like if there weren t any plants? Can we do things to impact plants and their habitats? Negative? Positive? Is it important to protect plants? Is there anything you can think of that you already do to protect plants? Encourage students to come up with 2-3 questions that they have about plants or about botany. If you like, you can bring them with you on your visit to Crissy Field Center and ask us! 8

9 Activity #2: Learning About Plants and Their Seeds This activity introduces students to seeds and their function. Students will practice data gathering. Materials: Plates A variety of fruits (apples, cucumbers, oranges, pears, plums, peas, etc.) Experience chart (page 11) Pictures of produce (optional) Procedure: 1. Cut open two pieces of produce. Ask the students: What is inside both of these that is the same? (seeds) 2. Discuss with the class that a new plant will grow from a seed. Seeds are found in the fruit of the plant. 3. Cut open the rest of the items. Place each different fruit s seed(s) on a plate labeled with the name and/or picture of that fruit. 4. Ask the students to tell you about each seed's color. Have them record it on the experience chart. 5. Repeat for the size (big, small), the shape (flat, round), and the feel of the covering (smooth, rough). Have the students record their responses on the experience chart. 6. Have small groups of students work together to sort and classify the seeds into various groupings. 7. Optional: Count the number of seeds for each fruit that has been examined and make a bar graph and/or plant some of the seeds. Homework: Have students bring in seeds from other food items. Discussion: In what ways are seeds different from one another? What advantages are there to different seed shapes, sizes, etc.? Why do some plants make more seeds than other plants? Activity adapted from How Are Seeds the Same and Different? at lesson plan #AELP-AGR0013, submitted by Lisa Ventura. 9

10 Fruit and Seed Experience Chart Name of fruit Seed Color Seed Size (big/small) Seed Shape (flat/round) Seed Feel (smooth/rough) 10

11 Extension #1 for Learning About Plants and Their Seeds: Plant Parts We Love to Eat People and animals eat the fruits of some plants, the seeds of some, the leaves of others, and sometimes even the flowers (like broccoli). Chart on the whiteboard the different parts of plants that people can eat. Have the students fill in as many foods that they can. Imagine a world without plants. What would we eat? Have the students write a story about a world without plants. *This activity connects well with the handout Is it a Fruit or a Vegetable? provided on pages 26 and 27 of this packet. Extension #2 for Learning About Plants and Their Seeds: Lima Bean Dissection Soak lima beans in water overnight. Have the students use a hand lenses to examine the outsides of the seeds. Have them try to peel off the seed covering. Ask them to split the seed in half. Ask the students to draw the lima bean. Can they find a tiny plant inside? Activity adapted from From Seed to Plant at lesson plan #AELP-AGR0010, written by Marcia Goudie (1998). 11

12 Activity #3: Building a Food Web This activity introduces students to food webs and their components (producers and consumers) and teaches the central role that plants play in the food chain. It also introduces students to four different types of consumers: carnivores, omnivores, herbivores, and decomposers. Materials: Food web cards depicting a variety of plants and animals (producers, carnivores, omnivores, herbivores and decomposers) Whiteboard or poster board (This activity can be done as a poster or on a whiteboard.) Markers Procedure: 1. Place the following diagram on your whiteboard or poster board: producers: consumers: carnivores: omnivores: herbivores: decomposers: 2. Go through the food web cards and have students decide where each card should be put on the diagram. If necessary, go over vocabulary beforehand. 3. Have students, one at a time, draw in lines to show the connections between the different organisms. 4. Lead a discussion about what would happen if the plants (producers) were taken away. Activity adapted from Living Lightly In The City: An Environmental Education Guidebook, National Audubon Society, Maura O Connor and Kathy McGlauflin, illustrated by Nancy Chenery (1992). 12

13 Materials: Extension #1 for Building a Food Web: Play a Game! Ball of yarn Enough space to stand comfortably in a circle Masking tape and a pen to label the students Procedure: 1. Label the students as specific plants, animals or parts of an ecosystem. (You can include abiotic elements, like sun and soil, in addition to the living things.) 2. Give one of the students the ball of yarn and ask him or her to toss the yarn to someone else to whom he or she is connected. (For example, if the first person is a bird, he or she may want to pass the yarn to a fish because the bird eats the fish.) The person tossing the ball of yarn must keep holding onto an end of the yarn. Have the second student with the yarn toss the ball to a third student to whom he or she is connected. Continue until all the students have been tossed the yarn. At the end of the game, there will be a web of yarn in the center of the circle. 3. After you ve constructed the web, introduce the following scenario to see what happens: Scenario: A hotel has been built. Plants were removed to make way for it. (The students who represent the plants will let go of the string.) Who else will be affected? (The next person lets go). This will continue until most of the students let go of the string. The web will be visibly damaged. Discussion: What happened when the hotel was built? Who was affected by it? Were any humans affected by the hotel? What would happen if we removed the hotel? Do you think the ecosystem could be repaired? Extension #2 for Building a Food Web: Discussion Discuss food chains involving the students. What did they eat for breakfast? Did they eat a producer, an herbivore, a carnivore, or more than one? Where did the thing they ate get its energy? Where was it in the food chain? Where are the students in the food chain? Activity adapted from Cooperative Lesson: Create a Food Web at contributed by Barbara Baxton, Teacher Librarian. 13

14 Activity #4: Brainstorming Solutions This activity can be used before or after your program. Materials: Paper for a poster or individual sheets of paper for each student Colored markers and/or colored pencils Procedure: 1. Have students brainstorm ideas of how people can protect plant habitats. You can do this as a mind map, an outline, or any way that is convenient. Generate three to five strong ideas (litter control, getting rid of pesticides, oil recycling, driving less, etc.). 2. Divide students into groups and have them draw a picture depicting one of the ideas and describe it in a few sentences. 3. You can do this activity as a poster project and then put the posters up around the school. You can also have each student do his/her own and put them up around the classroom. 14

15 Activity # 4: A Letter to the Developer This is a good activity to do after your Budding Botanists program. In this activity, students will write letters to a developer explaining what the developer s actions will mean to a plant habitat and suggesting that he or she take steps to protect the habitat. Students should be encouraged to offer solutions or alternative plans to the developer. Materials: Paper Lots of ideas Procedure: 1. Give the students an introduction, explaining how an area might be developed. You may want to create your own scenario based on an actual development or an area that is relevant to them. For example: Hotel Atlantic has announced their intention to build a resort hotel on 2,000 acres fronting San Pablo Bay. This is a known habitat for endangered species, such as the salt marsh harvest mouse, and the plants these animals depend on. 2. Have students write letters to the developer, explaining their concerns, the effects development may have on the habitat, and possible solutions they have to offer. 3. Have students share their letters in groups or in front of the whole class. If applicable, you can even send them to the developer! 15

16 Resources For Students 16

17 Label the parts of this plant. Include roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and any other parts or information that you know. You may want to color it in when you re done. DAFFODIL (not indigenous to California) 17

18 Label the parts of this plant. Include roots, stems, leaves, flowers, and any other parts or information that you know. You may want to color it in when you re done. POPPY (indigenous to California) 18

19 DAFFODIL: key Flowers ~ contain reproductive parts Stem Leaves ~ holds up flowers (with parallel veins) ~ make food for the plant through photosynthesis Leaves arranged basally (coming from base of stem) Bulb (Storage leaves) ~ stores food for the plant in the form of carbohydrates Roots ~ take up water and nutrients from the soil 19

20 POPPY: key Flower Petals ~ attract pollinators ~ contains Sepals reproductive parts ~ protect the flower bud Stem ~ holds up leaves and flowers Leaves (lobed, pinnate veins, arranged alternately) Flower Bud Leaf ~ makes food for the plant through photosynthesis Roots ~ take up water and nutrients from the soil 20

21 21

22 Is it a Fruit or Vegetable? Write the name of the plant part next to its picture (fruit, root, leaf, etc). The first one is done for you as an example. Celery: Stem Cucumber: Bell pepper: Artichoke: Carrot: Rhubarb: Lettuce: Pumpkin: Broccoli: Beet: Peas: Chard: Onion: Potato: Peanut: Tomato: 22

23 Is it a Fruit or Vegetable? Answers Celery: Stem Cucumber: Fruit Bell pepper: Fruit A fruit is anything that contains seeds Artichoke: Flower Carrots: Root Rhubarb: Stem Lettuce: Leaf Pumpkin: Fruit Broccoli: Flower Beets: Root Peas: Fruit Chard: Leaf Onions: Leaf An onion bulb is actually a group of storage leaves that do not photosynthesize Peanuts: Fruit The nuts that we eat are seeds of the peanut plant! Potato: Tuber A tuber is a type of modified underground stem that does not take up water or nutrients but stores food for the plant Tomato: Fruit 23

24 Plants in our World ACROSS: 2) The female part of the flower 3) The part of the plant that contains the reproductive parts 5) Something we make from plants 6) The basis of the food chain and an important resource for people 8) A type of leaf edge that is like a bread knife 9) Another thing we make from plants 11) Occurring naturally in a place; not brought by humans 13) The process that is necessary for a flower to make fruit DOWN: 1) The male parts of the flower 2) A process that happens inside of plant cells, where a plant uses sunlight and carbon dioxide to make food in the form of sugars 4) The part of the plant that takes up water and nutrients from the soil 7) What holds the plant up? 10) Another thing we make from plants 12) The part of the plant that makes food through photosynthesis 14) A type of leaf arrangement where pairs of leaves grow out of either side of the same point on the stem 24

25 Crossword Puzzle Vocabulary List Use the vocabulary list to help you with the crossword puzzle but watch out -- not every word on the vocabulary list is used in the puzzle. ALTERNATE BOTANY CARNIVORES CLOTHING DECOMPOSITION FLOWER FOOD INSECT INTRODUCED LEAVES LOBED MEDICINE NATIVE

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