Showing posts with label counting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label counting. Show all posts

Sunday, October 28, 2018

Fall Forestry Studies

The best part of my job is getting students outdoors.  I especially enjoy getting them into the woods to study forestry and forest ecology

Want to make a kid's jaw drop?  Tell them that they are going to count how many trees are in a forest.  Even better is to tell them that they have to find out how many leaves can be found on the forest floor or that they have to find out how the leaves weigh!

I always manage to get lots of students outdoors in the spring, but this year I made an effort to schedule more field explorations for the fall.  Over the past three weeks, I was able to get eleven classrooms from four different schools out into the woods.  Two of the classrooms have been out in the woods with me before, but for the other nine classes it was a completely new experience.  It's always interesting to see how the students (and their teachers) react to the independence.

Here are a few pictures from three of the schools.  (Unfortunately, it looks like I did not take any photos of the two classrooms from the fourth school.)  The students in these photos are counting leaves in a square foot plot (or quadrat), collecting leaves to weigh, measuring the forest canopy using a clear grid, and identifying leaves using a guide. 

12 October 2018 - Winn Elementary at Audubon Woods
 


 




16 October 2018 and 19 October 2018 - Mary McGuire Elementary at Mission Creek Park









 





25 October 2018 - Beal City Elementary at Beal City School woodlot









Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Fall Forest Ecology at Audubon Woods Preserve

Whenever I can, I like to get students out of the classroom and into local woods or wetlands.  Last Friday, I had the opportunity to meet Third, Fourth, and Fifth Grade students from Winn Elementary at the Chippewa Watershed Conservancy's Audubon Woods Preserve.


Winn Elementary students are no strangers to Audubon Woods.  Located only a few miles from the school, Audubon Woods is a great place for them to put science concepts into action.  For the the Third Graders, this was their first trip to Audubon Woods as a class; Fourth and Fifth Graders have made multiple trips the preserve, beginning in Third Grade.

It was homecoming for Shepherd Public Schools - that explains all the blue and yellow (including the hair)


Before the trip to Audubon Woods, I had visited each grade in the classroom at least once.  Third Grade began the year learning about trees - their parts and adaptations, how to age a tree and measure diameter, and learning to classify leaves.  My Fourth Grade presentation focused on plant adaptations and how plants use adaptations to overcome challenges.  The Fifth Grade program repeated much of the information from Third Grade, but with a deeper emphasis on adaptations and using growth ring patterns to analyze past growing conditions.

In the woods, the focus shift a little.  Here I ask all three groups of students to measure diameter of trees.  While in the classroom this was easy - students simply measured the distance across prepared slices of tree trunk (AKA "tree cookies").  In the woods this is not an option.  Instead students must measure the circumference (distance around) of the tree and divide that by pi (approx. 3.14) to find diameter.

Measuring circumference with a tape measure

For Third Grade students this can be quite a challenge.  They have to be able to measure the circumference with a tape measure, convert that that circumference from feet and inches to all inches, and finally use a calculator to divide by pi to find the diameter.  We do one tree as a whole group before the students measure two more trees on their own.

Calculating diameter

Fourth Graders should be able to do all of these things on their own.  Just as a refresher, we go over one tree as a group and then they measure three trees on their own.

Fifth Graders have already done this activity as Third and Fourth Graders.  They measure three trees on their own without a demonstration.  This might seem like overkill, but in the Spring when the students return, the Fifth Grade students will learn a shortcut to estimating diameter - the Biltmore Stick.  I just want them to have a firm understanding of how to calculate diameter before they learn the tricks to make it easier.

During this Fall visit, the classrooms have a very limited amount of time in the woods (about 1 hour to 1.25 hours for each class).  This means that they have a limited amount of work to accomplish.  For Third Graders, tree measurement and diameter calculation may take all of the available time.  If they finish this activity, they are also given the assignment of finding, drawing, identifying, and classifying leaves.  Most students do one or two leaves in the time allowed.  If time is short (as it was this time), Fourth Grade students are assigned the same work, but are expected to accomplish more.

Student drawing of an American Beech leaf

Fifth Grade students are given two additional activities to complete.  First they are asked to determine the total number of leaves to be found on the forest floor.  Audubon Woods is forty acres!  This seems impossible, but it is a much less daunting task if broken into parts.

Counting every leaf in one square foot section of forest

Instead of counting every leaf on the forest floor, students are asked to count the number of leaves in a single square foot of the forest.  This number is then multiplied by the number of square feet in an acre.  An acre measures 43,560 square feet.  Then that number is multiplied by the number of acres in the forest.


Using this method, six groups of students came up with estimates ranging from 179 million to 390 million leaves on the floor of Audubon Woods.  The average of the six groups was approximately 254 million leaves!

Once students have found an estimate of the number of leaves, they are then tasked with finding the weight of all the leaves on the forest floor.  This is accomplished by determining the average weight of a single leaf and multiplying by the number of leaves in the forest.

To find the weight of a single leaf, students count out 100 random leaves from the forest floor.  The leaves are placed in a plastic bag and weighed (in grams).  Next the weight of the bag (already known) is subtracted.  This number is then divided by 100 to find the average weight of an individual leaf.



Estimates for the weight of the leaves on the floor of Audubon Woods ranged from 100 thousand kilograms to 241 thousand kilograms with an average of approximately 138 thousand kilograms of leaves!  Converted to pounds this more than 304 thousand pounds.  (If you had the equivalent weight in $1 bills, you would have approximately $138 million dollars!)

Why are all of  these leaves important?  They provide the organic matter (humus) that is providing food and homes for billions of bacteria, fungi, and invertebrates such as insects.  These organisms break down the organic matter into forms that can be taken up by plants (including trees).  Essentially by releasing their leaves, the trees are providing food for themselves.

Here are a few more photographs from the day.

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Forest Ecology Studies at Audubon Woods (16 OCT 2015)

Big-tooth Aspen leaf (October 2015)
 
Last Friday (16 October) I met with 3rd, 4th, and 5th grade students from Winn Elementary at the Chippewa Watershed Conservancy's Florence Maxwell Audubon Woods Preserve to continue an ongoing forest ecology study.  Students now come to the preserve twice a year (fall and spring) and perform a series of activities.  In the past, students have recorded sightings of plants and animals, collected leaves for preservation, and measured the Diameter - Breast Height (DBH) of trees.  In 2014 students counted the number of trees growing in 1/10 acre plots within the forest and used these numbers to estimate the total number of trees (with a diameter of greater than 1 inch) growing in the 40 acre preserve - their estimate between 24,000 and 29,000 trees!

Sassafras seedling at Audubon Woods Preserve


Counting Leaves

In June of 2015, the students were asked to calculate the number of leaves found on the forest floor.  They accomplished this by counting the leaves in 1 sq. ft. plots and using that data to estimate the number of leaves in one acre (43,560 sq. ft.), then multiplying that number by 40 to estimate the number of leaves on the entire forest floor.  Their estimates concluded that there were between 311,926,814 (low estimate) and 431,725,571 (high estimate) total leaves on the forest floor.

Winn Elementary students counting leaves in a square foot plot at Audubon Woods Preserve (October 2015)


Removing every single leaf from a plot


Last week the students repeated this experiment.  This time each group of students was asked to count three different one foot squares.  Here is the results from one of the three classes.




This class estimated that there were 248,519,148 leaves on the forest floor.  This number is significantly lower than the number from even the lowest estimate from June.  Many of the leaves that were present in June have since broken down and decomposed through the actions of invertebrates, fungi, and bacteria.

Fungi at Audubon Woods


Weighing Leaves
After determining the number of leaves on the forest floor, the next logical step was to try to determine the mass of all of those fallen leaves.  To perform this task, students collected 100 random leaves from the forest floor in a zip lock bag and then weighed them using a digital scale.  They then subtracted the weight of the bag and divided the result by 100 to determine the average mass of each leaf.  Measurements ranged from a low of 0.5888 grams/leaf to a high of 0.8888 grams per leaf.  These numbers were multiplied by the average estimate  of the number of leaves in the forest.  The resulting answer was then converted from grams to kilograms by dividing by 1,000.  Here are the results from one class.

Weighing leaves - Audubon Woods (October 2015)
 

They estimated that the total mass of the leaves on the forest floor was between 146,328.074 kilograms and 220,883.818 kilograms!  Converted to pounds, the leaves weigh between 322,598.18 and 486, 965.46 pounds!

Other Activities

Measuring canopy cover with a 10 x 10 grid

In addition to estimating both the number and weight of the leaves on the forest floor, students also examined canopy cover and measured the size of Sugar Maple leaves.   To measure canopy cover, one student lay on the ground and looked up at the sky through a 10 x 10 grid while another student recorded the grid squares that were covered by leaves.  They then had to answer the following questions:

       Do you think the amount of canopy cover will affect the types of wildflowers and other small
       plants that can grow in the forest?  Why or why not?

       Do you think the canopy cover can affect the amount of moisture in the soil?  Why or why not?

This job requires teamwork


Students measured the length and width of Sugar Maple leaves to determine an average leaf size.  After calculating an average size they had to explain why they think some leaves are larger than others.


Measuring Sugar Maple leaves

For some of the students this was their first trip to Audubon Woods.  For the 5th graders this was their fourth visit and they have been able to notice changes to the woods over the past two and a half years.  We already have a visit scheduled for late spring 2016.  Stay tuned for updates.