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Nature's Night Lights









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Museum Educator-led Programs
Pre-During-Post Visit Resources

Nature's Night Lights

July 2 - October 31, 2004

Grades 3-5

Pre Visit Questionnaire

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Program Description and Frameworks
Program Outline
Key Terms and Concepts
Classroom Activities

Print and Web Resources

Click here for printable version of all resources listed above


Program Description and Frameworks
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Discover a world of natural light: find out why fireflies flicker, why some rocks glow, or what makes a night sea glimmer. Get a chance to look at specimens up close and learn how a natural glow helps some animals to survive.

Location: Presence of Light, Last Gallery
Length: One Hour
Grades: 3 - 5

Massachusetts Frameworks
Science and Technology/Engineering Strand 1

1 Give a simple explanation of what a mineral is and some examples, e.g., quartz, mica.

Science and Technology/Engineering Strand 2: Standards 1,5,6,7,8,9,10

1 Classify plants and animals according to the physical characteristics that they share.
5 Differentiate between observed characteristics of plants and animals that are fully inherited (e.g., color of flower, shape of leaves, color of eyes, number of appendages) and characteristics that are affected by the climate or environment (e.g., browning of leaves due to too much sun, language spoken).
6 Give examples of how inherited characteristics may change over time as adaptations to changes in the environment that enable organisms to survive, e.g., shape of beak or feet, placement of eyes on head, length of neck, shape of teeth, color.
7 Recognize that plants and animals go through predictable life cycles that include birth, growth, development, reproduction, and death.
8 Describe how organisms meet some of their needs in an environment by using behaviors (patterns of activities) in response to information (stimuli) received from the environment. Recognize that some animal behaviors are instinctive (e.g., turtles burying their eggs), and others are learned (e.g., humans building fires for warmth, chimpanzees learning how to use tools).
9 Recognize plant behaviors, such as the way seedlings' stems grow toward light and their roots grow downward in response to gravity. Recognize that many plants and animals can survive harsh environments because of seasonal behaviors, e.g., in winter, some trees shed leaves, some animals hibernate, and other animals migrate.
10 Give examples of how organisms can cause changes in their environment to ensure survival. Explain how some of these changes may affect the ecosystem.

Science and Technology/Engineering Strand 3: Standard 5

5 Give examples of how energy can be transferred from one form to another.

New York Standards
Math, Science and Technology Standard 4: The Living Environment 1,3,4,5,6

1 Living things are both similar to and different from each other and nonliving things. Describe the characteristics of and variations between living and nonliving things. Describe the life processes common to all living things.
3 Individual organisms and species change over time. Describe how the structures of plants and animals complement the environment of the plant or animal. Observe that differences within a species may give individuals an advantage in surviving and reproducing.
4 The continuity of life is sustained through reproduction and development. Describe the major stages in the life cycles of selected plants and animals.
5 Organisms maintain a dynamic equilibrium that sustains life. Describe some survival behaviors of common living specimens. 6 Plants and animals depend on each other and their physical environment. Describe how plants and animals, including humans, depend upon each other and the nonliving environment.

Standard 3: Physical Setting 3, 4

3 Matter is made up of particles whose properties determine the observable characteristics of matter and its reactivity. Observe and describe properties of materials using appropriate tools. Describe chemical and physical changes, including changes in states of matter.
4 Energy exists in many forms, and when these forms change energy is conserved. Describe a variety of forms of energy (e.g., heat, chemical, light) and the changes that occur in objects when they interact with those forms of energy. Observe the way one form of energy can be transformed into another form of energy present in common situations (e.g., mechanical to heat energy, mechanical to electrical energy, chemical to heat energy).

Program Outline
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Introduction
Students brainstorm together to name different types of light that can be found in nature. They will then compare and contrast a man-made glow stick to examples of natural items that emit light, such as fluorescent minerals and live glowing bacteria, which students will be able to examine closely. Students will be able to draw on their observations throughout the program.

Bioluminescence
The term bioluminescence and the concept of chemical reactions along with visual aids will be discussed.

Fluorescence
Through visual aids students will learn how atoms can absorb energy from the UV rays of the sun or a UV light causing the atoms to emit this energy in the form of the light.

Phosphorescence
Some fluorescent objects are able to continue to glow for a period of time, even after the energy source is removed. An example of glow-in-the-dark paint, a material used Night Fishers in the Presence of Light exhibit.

Adaptations
Students brainstorm different ways an organism's glowing may help them to survive, attract a mate, escape from predators, and be use for counterillumination.

Adaptation Activity
Students match colored pictures of glowing organisms to appropriate cards describing different functions of glow-in-the-dark adaptations.

Conclusion
Students will discuss their answers and learn more about organisms such as fireflies, Vibrio fisheri (bacteria), dinoflagellates (algae), and the Emperor scorpion.


Concepts Covered
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  • Overarching Concept: Some animals and plants are bioluminescent or fluorescent as an adaptation that helps them to survive in nature.
How Does It Work? Where Can You Find It?
Bioluminescence A chemical reaction that results in the creation of light inside or outside of an organism. Fireflies (insect)
Vibrio fisheri (bacteria)
Dinoflagellates (algae)
Sea Fireflies (crustacean)
Fluorescence The visible light that is created when UV energy enters an object or organism and is released. Emperor Scorpion (arachnid)
Franklinite (mineral)
Willemite (mineral)
Phosphorescence A continued state of fluorescence even after the UV energy source it removed. Glow-in-the-Dark materials
   (human-made)
Siderite (mineral)

Key Terms Used During the Program
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  • Abdomen
    The back end section of an insects' body containing the organs for digestion and reproduction.
  • Adaptation
    A change or adjustment in physical characteristics or habits, often hereditary, by which a species or individual improves its ability to survive in its environment.
  • Algae
    Any of various chiefly aquatic organisms, that produce their own food ranging in size from single-celled forms to the giant kelp. Algae lack true roots, stems, leaves, and embryos and therefore are not plants.
  • Atom
    The basic "building block" of matter.
  • Bacteria
    A microscopic kind of algae that lacks chlorophyll and does not produce its own food.
    Bioluminescence
    Also known as "cool light", it is produced through a chemical reaction inside an organism, which emits little or no heat.
  • Camouflage
    An organism's ability to blend in with its surroundings, through color or patterning.
  • Chemical Reaction
    Process in which one or more substances are changed into others.
  • Counterillumination
    Light produced by an animal that is used as camouflage to help the animal hide from predators that may be hunting it from below.
  • Enzyme
    Any of several complex proteins that are produced by cells and act as catalysts in specific biochemical reactions.
  • Fluorescence
    The emission of light caused when UV energy is absorbed by an animal or object.
  • Phosphorescence
    The continued emission of light even after the UV energy source is removed.
  • UV light
    Ultra violet light; light rays that have wavelengths shorter than visible light, but longer than X rays.

Pre & Post Visit Activities
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The Glow Below
Learn about the various organisms that glow in the ocean such as jellyfish, squids, and fish, etc. Print out the first 10 pictures from The Bioluminescence Web Page: Photos of Luminous Organisms. Discuss with the students the various colors and functions of bioluminescence that each organism has. As a class, pair each photograph with the adaptation card that best matches the picture of the organism. Click here for adaptation cards.

Dauphin Island Sea Lab: Discovery Hall Programs: Lighting of the Ocean-Phosphorescence
A lesson plan created by John Dindo Ph.D. and Jenny Cook that teaches students about phosphorescence and bioluminescence as they create a diorama of the deep sea with glow-in-the-dark paint. Click here for a pdf version of the lesson.


Suggested Web and Print Resources
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Use the Berkshire Athenaeum’s on-line catalogue to search for these print resources in Central/Western Massachusetts.Print Materials for Students

Batten, Mary. Winking, Blinking Sea: All about Bioluminescence. Lerner Publishing Group, April 2000. Explore bioluminescent animals of the ocean through full-color photographs and text that is great for grades 3-5.

Bioluminescence: Secret Lights in the Sea. Harbor Branch Oceanographic Marine Science Educational Series. To order this video call 772-465-2400 x692 for telephone orders, email at giftstore@hboi.edu or via their website.

Horsburgh, Peg. Living Light: Exploring Bioluminescence. Silver Burdett Pr, 1978. This book covers such questions as: How does bioluminescence happen? What animals and plants are able to glow with natural light? How are forms of natural light being research led for use in various scientific fields?

Jacobs, Francine and Carroll. Nature's Light: The Story of Bioluminescence. Harpercollins Juvenile Books, 1974. Discover bioluminescent plants and animals, what scientists have discovered about them, and how "cool light" can be used in the future.

Waber, Bernard. A Firefly Named Torchy. New York, NY: Houghton Mifflin Company, 1970. Follow Torchy the firefly has he learns about all the things he must know to become an adult firefly. Appropriate for grades 3 and under.

Print Materials For Educators

Nightlife: Creatures of the Deep. Dir. New England Aquarium and Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute. Nar. Peter Benchley. New England Aquarium and Bermuda Underwater Exploration Institute 2001. This video documents bioluminescent animals of the ocean such as anglerfish, giant tubeworms, and six-gilled sharks through underwater footage. To order this video you may contact New England Aquarium, Conservation Department, Central Wharf Boston, MA 02110-3399, (617) 973-5288, wowfilms@neaq.org.

Robbins, Manuel. Fluorescence: Gems and Minerals Under Ultraviolet Light (Rocks, Minerals and Gemstones). Geoscience Press, 1994. Resource book about fluorescent minerals, including where they are found and experiments you can perform in the classroom that explain this natural occurrence. A great book for students as well.

Schneider, Stuart. Collecting Fluorescent Minerals. Schiffer Publishing, 2004. A useful field guide for identifying fluorescent minerals; including full-color photographs with each mineral seen under UV light and in daylight.

Warren, Thomas S., Sterling Gleason, Richard C. Bostwick, and Earl R. Verbeek. Ultraviolet Light and Fluorescent Minerals: Understanding, Collecting and Displaying Fluorescent Minerals (Rocks, Minerals and Gemstones).

Gem Guides Book Company, 1999. A book to use in conjunction with other fluorescence resource books. Includes information about fluorescent minerals, and their properties, natural ultraviolet light, and materials to use to create this light.

Web Materials for Students

Bioscience Explained
The section on marine bioluminescence is excellent and explains why so many ocean organisms emit light. Includes video (Quick Time) as well as pdf versions.

The Deep Sea
The Deep Sea page offers options to explore different levels of the ocean. The Bathypelagic Zone, in particular, is of interest for bioluminescent studies as the only light on this level of the sea is from bioluminescent organisms.
Harbor

Branch Oceanographic Institution
This site discusses how organisms produce light, why they do, and how scientists study them.

National Geographic Kids.com
Information for students about bioluminescent bays around the world that are illuminated by the dinoflagellates that live there.

Web Materials for Educators

The Bioluminescence Wed Page
Bioluminescence related information and current research on luminescence.
The

Dauphin Island Sea Lab
Includes a pdf version of a power point presentation about phosphorescence and bioluminescence that was presented at the 2003 NSTA National Convention.

Genome News Network
Learn about the newly discovered bobtail squid of Hawaii and its use of bioluminescence to aid it in counterillumination.

Monterey Bay Aquarium
Search the site for informational materials about bioluminescent animals in the ocean.

National Geographic.com
Includes articles about bioluminescent animals and bacteria and the technology scientists are using to find these specimens in the ocean.

The Institute of Museum and Library Services, an independent Federal grant- making agency dedicated to creating and sustaining a nation of learners by helping libraries and museums serve their communities supports the Berkshire Museum.

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