NaturalSelectionSE 2
NaturalSelectionSE 2
Vocabulary: biological evolution, camouflage, Industrial Revolution, lichen, morph, natural selection, peppered
moth
Gizmo Warm-up
The Natural Selection Gizmo allows you to play the role of a bird feeding on
peppered moths. The initial population of 40 moths is scattered over 20 tree
trunks. Click on moths to capture them. Click the Next tree button (or the
spacebar on your keyboard) to advance to the next tree.
1. Check that LIGHT TREES is selected. Click Play ( ), and hunt moths
for one year.
2. If a forest contained mostly light-colored trees, which type of moth would you expect to be most common?
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Get the Gizmo ready:
Activity A:
● Click Reset ( ).
Light trees
● Check that the LIGHT TREES tab is selected.
Introduction: Before the 19th century in England, the air was very clean. The bark on trees was usually light in
color. Abundant lichens growing on tree trunks also lightened their appearance.
1. Predict: Over time, what will to happen to the populations of light and dark moths on light trees?
the dark moths will be seen more abundant and the light will bee seen less
2. Experiment: Click Play and hunt peppered moths on light tree trunks for five years. In each year, try to
capture as many moths as you can. Note: You can use the spacebar on your keyboard to quickly advance
to the next tree.
After 5 years, select the TABLE tab and record the percentages of each moth type. (Note: The table
shows current populations of each moth, not the number of captured moths.)
that the population of light morphs went and the number of dark went down
4. Apply: Which type of moth do you think was more common before the 19 th century, when most trees were
light in color?
light moths
5. Extend your thinking: What strategies did you use to hunt for moths?
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Get the Gizmo ready:
Activity B:
● Click Reset.
Dark trees
● Select the DARK TREES tab.
Introduction: The 19th century was the time of the Industrial Revolution in England. Most of the new
industries used coal for energy, and the air was polluted with black soot. In forests near factories, the soot
coated trees and killed lichens. As a result, tree trunks became darker.
1. Predict: Over time, what will to happen to the populations of light and dark moths on dark trees?
2. Experiment: Click Play and hunt peppered moths on dark tree trunks for five years. In each year, try to
capture as many moths as you can.
When you are done, select the TABLE tab and record the percentages of each moth type.
that the dark moth population went up and the other went down
4. Apply: Which type of moth do you think was more common during the 19 th century? Why?
the dark moth was more popular during the 19th century
5. Draw conclusions: Natural selection is the process by which favorable traits tend to increase in frequency
over time. How does this experiment illustrate natural selection?
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that the light moths where sought out by animals and caught.
6. Think and discuss: Did the changes you observed in the moth populations result from individual moths
changing colors? Or did they occur because the best-hidden moths survived and reproduced, passing on
their colors to their offspring? Explain your answer.
1. THe changes I observed was that the best hidden moth that survived passed it down to their offspring
their original color. The individual moth can not change color on their own
7. Extend your thinking: Biological evolution is the process by which populations of organisms change over
time. How could natural selection lead to evolution? If possible, discuss your answer with your classmates
and teacher.
yes since evolution allows and helps to explain the diversity of life on the earth
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