Pitfall Traps & Diversity Indices: Using Quantitative Reasoning to Test Edge Effect Theory

Author:

Prinster Andrew J.1,Hoskins Josephina L.2,Strode Paul K.3

Affiliation:

1. ANDREW J. PRINSTER (2017) is a former student at Fairview High School. Prinster is currently an undergraduate student at Yale University.

2. JOSEPHINA L. HOSKINS (2018) is a former student at Fairview High School. Hoskins is currently an undergraduate student at Amherst College.

3. PAUL K. STRODE teaches AP/IB Biology and Science Research at Fairview High School, Boulder, CO 80305; e-mail: paul.strode@bvsd.org.

Abstract

Students learning the skills of science benefit from opportunities to move between the scientific problems and questions they confront and the mathematical tools available to answer the questions and solve the problems. Indeed, students learn science best when they are actively engaged in pursuing answers to authentic and relevant questions. We present an activity teachers can use in the classroom to introduce the concepts of species richness and diversity. We break down the history and logic behind the two primary statistical tools ecologists use to quantify species diversity: Simpson's and Shannon's diversity indices. With hypothetical data, we show how students can learn about and practice the calculations. We then describe an activity where students collect authentic ecological data with pitfall traps while learning some arthropod systematics and practicing their newly acquired quantitative reasoning skills, all within the context of edge effect ecology and habitat conservation. The entire activity reinforces for students how interesting and helpful mathematical models and quantitative reasoning in science can be for understanding biological phenomena, but also for generating more questions, and for designing additional data-collection techniques and experiments.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Education

Reference29 articles.

1. AAAS (2011). Vision and Change in Undergraduate Biology Education: A Call to Action. Washington, DC: AAAS. http://visionandchange.org/files/2013/11/aaas-VISchange-web1113.pdf.

2. Broadbent, E.N., Asner, G.P., Keller, M., Knapp, D.E., Oliveira, P.J. & Silva, J.N. (2008). Forest fragmentation and edge effects from deforestation and selective logging in the Brazilian Amazon. Biological Conservation, 141, 1745–1757.

3. College Board (2015). AP Biology Course and Exam Description. New York, NY: The College Board.

4. Davis-Berg, E.C. & Jordan, D.R. (2018). The innovative use of Mathematica to teach biodiversity. American Biology Teacher, 80, 372–378.

5. Delang, C.O. & Li, W.M. (2013). Species richness and diversity. In Ecological Succession on Fallowed Shifting Cultivation Fields. Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.

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