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Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey relationships between species. Using your schema, brainstorm other ideas on how species interact in communities and ecosystems. Branch off the main bubble in your Brain Books “How do species interact?”
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Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Jan 13, 2016

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Agnes Paul
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Page 1: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Make your own “Thinking Web”

We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey relationships between species. Using your schema, brainstorm other ideas on how species interact in communities and ecosystems. Branch off the main bubble in your Brain Books “How do species interact?”

Page 2: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Insights into Symbiotic Relationships

Page 3: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

In the movie Spiderman 3, Spiderman comes in contact with an organism that causes his suit to turn black and affects his thinking. Hold your thinking in your Brain Books:

How does this relate to the special interactions between 2 species that we discussed yesterday?

Page 4: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Organize your thinking

Mutualism Commensalism Parasitism

Definition Both species benefit

One species benefits and one is unaffected

One species benefits and one is harmed

Examples •Clownfish and the anemone•Cleaner fish cleaning the teeth of the larger fish

•Spiders and their webs in trees

•Hookworms or ticks and their hosts

Symbiosis is a close, often long-term interaction between two species

Page 5: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Parasitism:-Wasp that lays eggs on the worm for them to feed on worm as they grow

- Hornworm (host) that cannot remove eggs

Commensalism:

-Barnacles attach to whales and wait for food to go by

-Whales are unaffected

Mutualism:

Chimps benefit as-one is cleaned-another feeds

Page 6: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Match the symbiotic relationship to the set of images that best describes the interaction between the two organisms.

Page 7: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Check your thinking!

• In what ways do the pictures represent the relationships?

Page 8: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Task • Work with your partner.

• Use your knowledge of symbiosis to:– Pair organisms together based on the descriptions of their needs – Categorize the pairs by type of symbiotic relationship

• You will have three category titles to begin to classify your organism relationships. What are they?

• Let’s look at some examples.

Page 9: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.
Page 10: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Now that you have the match, classify the relationship into one of the three

categories: Commensalism, Mutualism, or Parasitism

Mutualism

Page 11: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Think about your “Thinking”

• How are you classifying/pairing the organisms?

• What type of evidence are you looking for as you read about the diverse creatures?

Page 12: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

• What are you doing about the organisms you are not sure where they belong?

• How do you know the relationships are correct? Do you see any patterns emerging from the organisms in each category? If so, what are they?

Page 13: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.
Page 14: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.
Page 15: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.
Page 16: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.
Page 17: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.
Page 18: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.
Page 19: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

Reflection

1. Are the relationships in the organism pairs what you expected? (Were there surprise matches?)2. How has your thinking changed?3. Which cooperative learning skills and discourse norms were helpful today?

Page 20: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

How is this a non-example of symbiosis?

Page 21: Make your own “Thinking Web” We have looked at food chains and food webs that show the transfer of energy between organisms as well as the predator-prey.

• Think back to the example of Spiderman and the symbiote that bonds with him and then later his enemy. The bond creates very different creatures between the good "darker" Spiderman and the evil Venom.

Answer in your Brain Books: What type of symbiotic relationship is created when it binds with humans? JUSTIFY your answer in your brain books.