Lights, Chemicals, Action: Studying Red Worms' Responses to Environmental Contaminants

We have developed an experimental module that introduces high school students to guided scientific inquiry. It is designed to incorporate environmental health and ecological concepts into the basic biology or environmental-science content of the high school curriculum. Using the red worm, a familiar...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American biology teacher 2016-09, Vol.78 (7), p.591-598
Hauptverfasser: Weber, Daniel N., Hesselbach, Renee A., Petering, David H., Petering, Louise P., Berg, Craig A.
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container_end_page 598
container_issue 7
container_start_page 591
container_title The American biology teacher
container_volume 78
creator Weber, Daniel N.
Hesselbach, Renee A.
Petering, David H.
Petering, Louise P.
Berg, Craig A.
description We have developed an experimental module that introduces high school students to guided scientific inquiry. It is designed to incorporate environmental health and ecological concepts into the basic biology or environmental-science content of the high school curriculum. Using the red worm, a familiar live species that is amenable to classroom experimentation, students learn how environmental agents affect the animal's locomotion by altering sensory neuron-muscle interactions and, as a result, influence its distribution in nature. In turn, the results of these experiments have direct application to human-caused environmental disruptions that cause changes in species distribution and indirectly increase the recognition that environmental chemicals affect human health. Students undertake a series of explorations to identify how red worms sense their environment and then apply that knowledge to understand the effects of chemical exposure on locomotor behavior. The activities are designed to generate critical thinking about neuromuscular processes and environmental pollutants that affect them.
doi_str_mv 10.1525/abt.2016.78.7.591
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source University of California Press Journals; Jstor Complete Legacy
subjects Animal distribution
behavior
biology
Contaminants
Contamination
Environmental health
Experiments
High School Students
INQUIRY & INVESTIGATION
inquiry-based learning
neuromuscular
Pollutants
red worm
Science education
Secondary School Curriculum
Thinking Skills
Worms
title Lights, Chemicals, Action: Studying Red Worms' Responses to Environmental Contaminants
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