Name: Date: Learning Resource Guide. Grades K-3

Similar documents
Whale Week Activity Booklet!

Meet the Dolphin. Sample file. Amuse Their Minds Publishing

Talking Whales. By listening to these a lot, you kind of develop a sense of the vocabulary of killer whales, Viers says of his audio recordings.

LESSON 2 Marine Mammals Kindergarten to Grade 3

Dolphins. By Emmy Richards

LESSON 2 Marine Mammals Grades 4 to 7

Humpback Whale. The Kids Times: Volume II, Issue 5. NOAA s National Marine Fisheries Service, Office of Protected Resources

INTRODUCTION. common name: scientific name: Tursiops truncatus

Lesson 3: Researching Individual Whale and Dolphin Species

Sperm Whale. The Kid s Times: Volume II, Issue 8. NOAA s National Marine Fisheries Service, Office of Protected Resources

Text Features. Title Page. Timeline. Table of Contents. Illustrations and Photographs. Index. Captions. Glossary. Diagrams. Subtitle. Labels.

ORCA s Whale Education Month Lesson Pack 2: Dolphins

Dolphins. By lily pad

Chapter 12: Marine Mammals. By: Da Lynne Cousar, Megan Dudenbostel, Kyle Nemeth, Matt Boyle, and Steven Miller

Lesson 2: Cetaceans What makes a whale a whale?

DOLPHIN RESEARCH CENTER Acoustics

GRAY WHALE. Text source: The Marine Mammal Center

Flipping Fins By Olivia Robitaille

MBA Education. For non profit use only.

Non-Fiction Close Reading Passages

Unit 2. Lesson 2. Sound Production and Reception

Meet the Science Expert

For Creative Minds. The Inuit

MARINE SCIENCE. Monday 23 Jan 2017

ORCA s Whale Education Month Lesson Pack 3: Porpoises

Cetacean fact sheet. What are cetaceans? BALEEN WHALES TOOTHED WHALES

featured animals: Elephants

Dr. Jumanto, Basic Reading, Basic Skills, FIB, Udinus, Semarang 1 September 2016 to date

Welcome to the Animal Ambassador Program From IFAW!

MARINE SCIENCE. Monday 21 May 2018

T T. July September 2015 Volume 4 Issue 3

By Loran Wlodarski Illustrated by Laurie Allen Klein

All about Marine Mammals

Sound and hearing 2 The outside of the ear. Sound and hearing 1 How sounds get to our ears

Sound A Science A Z Physical Series Word Count: 1,093

Mini 4-H Whales & Dolphins All Divisions Draft Developed by Purdue University Cooperative Extension Service Area VII 4-H Youth Development Educators

Lecture Nektons Pearson Education, Inc.

DOLPHIN RESEARCH CENTER Dolphin Bodies

Socal Odontoceti (toothed whales) by Patti Schick Hornblower Cruises & Events

WELCOME. We re so excited you are leading an Adopt-a-Beach event!

IT S A SECRET! (1 Hour) Addresses NGSS Level of Difficulty: 4 Grade Range: K-2

Grade 3. Practice Test. Plight of the Polar Bear Giant Pandas

the Bone Teacher Pages Classroom Activities Grade Level 4-6

Interactive Notebooks

Chapter 09 Marine Reptiles, Birds, and Mammals

MARINE SCIENCE. Monday 14 May 2018

Cetacean Social & Reproductive Systems

McGraw-Hill Treasures Grade 3

McGraw-Hill CA Treasures Grade 3

Logistics (cont.) While in the park

The ocean. The ocean

Circulatory System Heart Stations

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge Secondary 1 Checkpoint

A Kazoo For You. Science Activity.

Impact of a Changing Climate on the Pacific Walrus

Stenella clymene (Gray, 1850) DELPH Sten 5 DCL

Guess: Correct or Incorrect. Trial (perform in random order)

This activity introduces the concept of food chains and some of the predator-prey relationships in the marine environment.

The Dolphin Diploma. activity pack

DOLPHIN RESEARCH CENTER The Poetry Of Dolphins

Fruits and Vegetables 2 nd grade lesson plan

Towering Traits: An Adaptations Inquiry (6-12)

Norwood Science Center

Cell Membranes: Diffusion and Osmosis

SENDING SECRET MESSAGES (1 Hour)

INTRODUCTION ABOUT THE AUTHOR

September 21, 18. If adaptations were made or activity was not done, please describe what was changed and why. Please be as specific as possible.

Effects of Providing Information About Common Bottlenose Dolphins (Tursiops truncatus) Behavior on Anthropomorphic Responses. Supplemental Appendices

First Grade Fitness Lesson Plan Page 1 of 7. Dear Educator,

Charismatic Megafauna (Marine Mammals) Marine Mammals

Cetaceans whales, dolphins and porpoises

The Human Ear. Grade Level: 4 6

Level 14 Book f. Level 14 Word Count 321 Text Type Information report High Frequency children, father, Word/s Introduced people

HEAR YE! HEAR YE! (1.5 Hours)

water from several miles away.

Let s Pretend...Dentist

AND THE EARS HAVE IT! (1 Hour)

For more of Dolphin Research Australia s education resources, check out our website

CAST CARE. Helping Broken Bones Heal

Controlling Worries and Habits

Animal Behavior

Sea Turtle. Discovery. Teacher Resource Guide Grades K-2. Contents: Educational Objectives: Hello! Field Trip Information. Orlando.

SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL FOR

Behaviors may be innate or learned. Many behaviors have both genetic and learned components.

How to Run Group Exercise Sessions for the Elderly

Weddell World. Our expedition camp glows at midnight on the sea ice.

Instructions for Use Enbrel (en-brel) (etanercept) injection, for subcutaneous use Single-dose Prefilled Syringe

Drainage Frequency: PATIENT GUIDE. Dressing Frequency: Every Drainage Weekly Drainage. Physician Contact Information. Dr. Phone:

Año Nuevo. Karen Pihl

SPIRITUAL LESSONS FROM NATURE'S WORLD PART XII

Character and Life Skills: Self-Control Lesson Title: Red Light, Green Light Grade Level: 3-5

Name: Date Block Selective Permeability

Overview. Meeting Length 90 minutes. Senses [Meeting 1]

Research suggests nanoparticles could be contaminating seafood supply

Table of Contents. Dialysis Port Care Chemotherapy Port Care G-Tube Care Colostomy Bags Wound Dressings

Seismic testing and the impacts of high intensity sound on whales. Lindy Weilgart Department of Biology Dalhousie University Halifax, Nova Scotia

Lesson at a Glance Students make models of dragonfly and damselfly eggs, larvae and adults and place them on a stream habitat diorama.

Sharks can have babies three different ways. Some species of sharks lay eggs externally, others give birth and some lay internal eggs.

ORAL HYGIENE SESSION 2

Our Sense Organs Ears

Transcription:

Name: Date: Learning Resource Guide Grades K-3 1

Name: Date: MY DAY AS A DOLPHIN In Being Dolphin 4D: Dream Dive Discover, the narrator talks about what it would be like to be a dolphin. What if you could transform and actually spend a day as a dolphin? Tell a story about what you might experience. Describe how you would feel before, during and after your transformation. Highlight what you would see, hear and feel during your day as a dolphin. Illustrate your story in the space provided. 3

ATLANTIC BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN Name: Date: Atlantic bottlenose dolphins are named bottlenose after their short, stubby rostrums, or beaks. Bottlenose dolphins have 86 to 100 sharp, cone-shaped teeth which help to catch slippery prey. The diet of these dolphins includes fish, squid and crustaceans. Bottlenose dolphins exhibit a range of feeding strategies, including cooperative hunting (often herding fish into tight circles), feeding in association with fishing boats, digging in the sand to uncover food and chasing fish onto mud banks. Adults reach six to 12 feet in length and weigh 400 to 800 pounds. Males are slightly larger than females. Bottlenose dolphins are found worldwide in tropical and temperate waters, often along coastlines or in bays, harbors or estuaries. Photography Bob Talbot. All rights reserved. 4 Bottlenose dolphins are top ocean predators with few predators of their own. Sharks and killer whales occasionally prey upon dolphins. Humans represent a major threat to bottlenose dolphins that are accidentally caught in fishing gear (gill nets, purse seines and shrimp trawls) or entangled in discarded gear and monofilament line. Dolphins are still hunted in some parts of the world.

COMMON DOLPHIN Name: Date: Common dolphin species are medium-sized. Adults range between 6.2 and 8.2 feet in length, and can weigh between 176 and 518 pounds. Males are generally longer and heavier. The color pattern on the body is unusual. The back is dark and the belly is white, while on each side is an hourglass pattern colored light grey, yellow, or gold in front and light grey in back. Common dolphins live in both warm-temperate and tropical waters. Common dolphins can live in groups of hundreds or even thousands of dolphins. Common dolphins have a varied diet consisting of many species of fish and squid. Photography Bob Talbot. All rights reserved. 5

ATLANTIC SPOTTED DOLPHIN Name: Date: The Atlantic spotted dolphin is a dolphin found in the Gulf Stream of the North Atlantic Ocean. The coloring of the Atlantic spotted dolphin varies enormously as it grows, and is usually classified into age-dependent phases known as two-tone, speckled, mottled, and fused. As the animal matures, the spots become denser and spread until the body appears black with white spots as an adult. In comparison to other dolphin species, the Atlantic spotted dolphin is medium-sized. Male adults can reach a length 7 feet. 5 inches and a weight of 310 pounds, and females can reach 7 feet 6 inches and 290 pounds. The species exhibits a range of about ten different vocalizations, including whistles,buzzes, squawks and barks, each corresponding with different behaviors. Photography Bob Talbot. All rights reserved. The diet of an Atlantic spotted dolphin consists of many species of small schooling fish and squid. The Atlantic spotted dolphin is a social creature. It is a fast swimmer and prone to acrobatic aerial displays. 6

Name: Date: MY DAY AS A DOLPHIN Based on what you have learned about dolphins, decide whether each statement is a Fact (+) or Fiction (-). 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Dolphins are mammals. Dolphins live in groups called pods. Dolphins are herbivores (plant eaters). Dolphins use echolocation for hunting. Dolphins are fish. Dolphins have gills and can breathe underwater. Dolphins are highly intelligent. Dolphins never hunt with other dolphins, they only hunt alone. Dolphins eat mainly fish and squid. Dolphins are related to whales. 7

Name: Date: DOLPHIN OR SHARK? Compare and Contrast: Standing on the beach, you spot a dorsal fin cutting through the water but is it a dolphin or a shark? Although shark and dolphin fins share some characteristics, a closer look reveals which type of animal actually is swimming nearby. Straight trailing edge = shark fin curved trailing edge = dolphin fin What are some other similarities and differences between dolphins and sharks? Cut out each statement circle on the next page and paste it in the correct location below to compare and contrast dolphins and sharks. REMEMBER Place similarities in the middle circles, and differences in the outside circles. Dolphin Shark 8

DOLPHIN OR SHARK? Mammal Fish Found in all the oceans of the world Carnivores Breath air through blowhole Warmblooded Coldblooded Torpedoshaped body Breath underwater through gills 9

Name: Date: BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN ANATOMY Read the information about the anatomy of a bottlenose dolphin. Use the wordbank to label the picture below. WORD BANK: melon dorsal fin beak flukes blowhole pectoral fin ear eye BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN ANATOMY: 1. Beak: a dolphin s mouth 2. Blowhole: the hole on top of the dolphin s head used for breathing 3. Dorsal fin: helps to provide steering and keeps the dolphin upright in the water 4. Flukes: the two lobes of a dolphin s tail 5. Melon: fatty tissue on the forehead of a dolphin involved in echolocation, acts to produce vocalizations and to focus beams of vibrations 6. Pectoral fins: the two paddle-shaped front limbs of dolphins, used for steering and stopping 10

DOLPHIN COMMUNICATION EXPLORATION Introduction: Dolphins live together in groups called pods. Pods vary in size from just a few dolphins to more than 1,000. Scientists think that these mammals have a complicated language system. They communicate with each other using whistles, clicks, and cries. This lets them recognize, locate and help each other. They respond to each other s whistles and calls and make noises when playing or hunting, or when predators are near. When dolphins recognize a distress call, they will follow it in search of a lost friend or relative. Every dolphin has its own unique whistle, which other dolphins recognize. Materials: (for teacher use, teacher should demonstrate each of the sounds produced): Balloon* Whistle Kazoo Guiro (or similar instrument) Blow-out noise maker or party horn Noise maker *inflate, but don t tie let air out slowly while pinching the neck to produce a squeak/whistle. Activity 1: The Name Game Every dolphin has its own unique whistle, which other dolphins recognize. Have students give themselves dolphin names using a combination of the materials cards (they should choose no more than 3). Students then create a nameplate table tent for their dolphin name. Try using the dolphin names for the day. Balloon Whistle Kazoo Guiro Party Horns or Blow Out Noise Makers Noise Maker 11

Name: Date: DOLPHIN COMMUNICATION EXPLORATION Activity 2: Four Corners Before the activity, you will want to create four large signs, each with a different action on it (Hunt, Flee, Rescue, Play). Post each sign in one of the four corners of your room. As a class, assign a sound or combination of sounds for the following: Shark Food/Fish Help Let s Play I m Lost Boat Family Friend Net Four Corners Activity - Student Sheet Make the assigned sound for one of the situations on the list. Tell students to go to the corner of the room labeled with the action that matches what their first response would be if they were a dolphin. Once all students are settled into a corner, invite them to share some of the reasons they went to that corner. Situation Sound Shark Food/Fish Help Let s Play I m Lost Boat Family Friend Net 12

ECHOLOCATION GAME Objective: Similar to Four Corners, this game will get kids moving and communicating like dolphins! Materials: Blindfold or scarf Directions: 1. Explain to students that bottlenose dolphins are very intelligent marine mammals and researchers believe much of the dolphin's brain is used for communication or "echolocation." Using echolocation, or sonar, dolphins send out frequencies by clicking. The clicking sounds bounce off objects and the returning sound waves are picked up by the dolphin's forehead and lower jaw and interpreted as distance, size and shape of object. 2. Explain to students that they will be playing a game that will show how echolocation works. 3. Choose one student to be the dolphin." Seat that student in the center of the space (suggested spaces include a gymnasium, cafeteria or outdoor blacktop area) and blindfold them. 4. Other students will be the fish swimming clockwise around the edge of the space. When the teacher says STOP," all fish go to the corner of the space closest to them. 5. The dolphin claps twice to represent sending an echo. Fish clap twice to represent the echo returning to the dolphin." 6. The dolphin points to the corner of the space where he or she thinks the most fish are. All fish in the selected corner are eaten by the dolphin and sit near the dolphin. Teacher says swim and game continues. 7. Last surviving fish becomes the next dolphin. 13

DIVING DOLPHINS CRAFT Materials: Paper Plates (2 per student) Tempera paint (turquoise and blue) Dolphin templates (1/2 sheet per student) Crayons or markers Glue sticks Brass fasteners (brads) Scissors Directions: 1. Give each student two paper plates. 2. Have students paint one of their plates turquoise and the other dark blue. 3. While the paint on the plates is drying, give each student a half sheet of dolphin templates (4 dolphins each). Have students color and decorate the dolphins with crayons or markers, then cut them out. 4. Help students glue the dolphins around the edges of the turquoise plates about an inch from the rim so that they all face the same direction. 5. Encourage each student to cut crescent shapes out from the top of the dark blue plate to create a surface of ocean waves, ensuring that they do not cut past the center of the plate. (For younger students, you may want to either complete this step for them or draw cut-lines onto their plates for them to follow.) 6. Have students overlay their dark blue plates onto the turquoise plates, arranging the plates so that their bottom edges align. 7. Help each student poke a brass fastener through the center of the two plates and then loosely secure the fastener through the back of the turquoise plate. 8. Show students how to hold the top plate and gently spin the turquoise plate behind it to make the dolphins dive in and out of the water! 14

DOLPHIN TEMPLATE 15

BLUBBER LAB One question that frequently gets asked about dolphins, especially those that live in cold water environments, is how do dolphins stay warm? Though they are mammals, dolphins have very little hair they lose most of it before they reach maturity. This means that to stay warm in the ocean, they rely heavily on their blubber for insulation. Depending on the species of dolphin, the thickness of a dolphin s blubber can vary considerably. Materials: 1-2 gallon bucket Ice Water Vegetable shortening Zip lock bags (quart size works best) Timer Thermometers Duct Tape Directions: 1. Fill a one or two gallon bucket half full with cold water. Add 1-2 cups of ice. This ice bath will be a great representation of the dolphin s cold water environment. 2. Since you aren't a dolphin, you don't have blubber. You need to find a suitable blubber substitute. Fill a zip lock bag (make sure the bag is big enough to fit your whole hand inside) with shortening, enough to form a thick layer in the bag. The fat molecules in shortening make them act a little like blubber. 3. Put your hand inside a second zipper lock bag of the same size and push it into the shortening-filled zipper lock bag. Spread the shortening around the zipper lock bags until the inner bag is covered. 16

4. Fold the top of the inner zipper lock bag over the top of the outer zipper lock bag, keeping the shortening between the two. Duct tape the fold in place so that the shortening doesn t come out. 5. Make a "control" glove by putting the other two zip lock bags inside each other. This will you give you the same amount of plastic, but with no insulating "blubber" layer. 6. Put your hand in the control glove and stick it in the ice water. Time how long you can keep it there before it gets too cold for you. Control Glove Time: 7. Now put your hand in the glove with the blubber in between the bags and submerge it in the water. Time how long you can keep it there. Can you hold your hand in the water longer? Blubber Glove Time: 8. Was this longer? Yes No 9. Put a thermometer in the control glove and put the end in the water. Wait 1 minute. Record the temperature. Control Glove Temperature After 1 Minute: 10. Do the same thing with the blubber glove. Blubber Glove Temperature After 1 Minute: 11. What is the difference between the two temperatures? Blubber helps keep animals warm because it acts as an insulator. An insulator slows down the transfer of heat, keeping the animal's body heat from escaping and protecting it from the cold. * Extension Activity: Try using other materials in the same fashion to find out which insulator works best. (Ex: Cotton balls, packing peanuts, dirt or sand...pretty much anything that you can fit between two zip lock bags!). 17

THE OCEAN AND YOU Introduction: People use the ocean for transportation, as a source of food and minerals, and for recreation. All water eventually reaches the ocean, so the things we do on land also affect the oceans. Coastal animals, such as bottlenose dolphins, and ocean habitats are likely to be affected by pollution, habitat destruction, heavy boat traffic, and global climate change. Conservation means taking care of our environment by wisely managing its resources. We do this by interacting with the ecosystem in responsible ways. You are conserving when you turn off lights in an empty room, when you recycle, and when you turn off water while you are brushing your teeth. Action: 1. As a class, discuss how humans interact with the ocean ecosystem both negatively and positively. Introduce the terms pollution and conservation. 2. Complete The Ocean & You activity as a class. This can be completed on an overhead projector, document camera or chart paper. 3. As an extension, create a class bar graph of the results. 4. Discuss how much you use the ocean and its resources. Discuss ways to help conserve ocean resources and resources worldwide. Students write and illustrate one way they will help to conserve resources and protect the environment. Examples include: I will remember to shut off lights when I leave a room. I will bring a reusable lunch bag to school instead of a paper or plastic bag. I will recycle aluminum cans and plastic bottles at home. 18

THE OCEAN AND YOU Ask students if they have ever used the ocean for the activities listed below (determine if students should raise hands, stand, give a thumbs up, etc). The teacher will tally the results for each. Do the same for the conservation questions. How do we use the ocean? Boating Fishing Visiting the Beach Surfing Swimming Eating Seafood Snorkeling Tubing Other How do we conserve? Recycling Turning Off Lights Cleaning Up Litter Conserving Water Other 19

Name: Date: THE OCEAN AND YOU HOW DO WE USE THE OCEAN? CLASS GRAPH Boating Fishing Visiting Beach Surfing Swimming Eating Seafood Snorkeling Tubing Other 20

Name: Date: THE OCEAN AND YOU HOW DO WE USE THE OCEAN? CLASS GRAPH Recycling Turning off lights Cleaning up litter Conserving water Other 21

Name: Date: THE OCEAN AND YOU To help conserve resources and protect our oceans and the environment, I pledge to: 22

Name: Date: DOLPHIN LENGTH GRAPHING ACTIVITY Using the following data (information), graph the lengths of the dolphins on the graphing worksheet. Determine an appropriate scale for your graph. Label each column with the name of one of the dolphins from the table. For each dolphin, color the correct number of boxes to show how long it is. Give your graph an appropriate title. Average Length of Adult Dolphins by Species Short-Beaked Common Dolphin Rough-Toothed Dolphin Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin White-Beaked Dolphin Dusky Dolphin Fraser's Dolphin Long-Beaked Common Dolphin Spinner Dolphin Hourglass Dolphin Risso's Dolphin 9 feet 9 feet 12 feet 10 feet 7 feet 9 feet 8 feet 8 feet 6 feet 13 feet 1) Which dolphin is the longest? 2) Which dolphin is the shortest? 3) Which two dolphins have the same length as a Fraser s Dolphin? 4) Which dolphin has the same length as a Spinner Dolphin? 5) Which dolphin is longer, a White-Beaked Dolphin or a Spinner Dolphin? 6) Which dolphin is shorter, an Hourglass Dolphin or a Dusky Dolphin? 7) How much longer is a Risso s Dolphin than a Short-Beaked Common Dolphin? 8) How much shorter is an Hourglass Dolphin than an Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin? 23

Name: Date: 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Short-Beaked Common Dolphin Rough-Toothed Dolphin Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin White-Beaked Dolphin Dusky Dolphin Fraser's Dolphin Long-Beaked Common Dolphin Spinner Dolphin Hourglass Dolphin Risso's Dolphin 24

Name: ANSWER KEY Date: DOLPHIN OR SHARK? COMPARE AND CONTRAST Dolphin: Breathe air through a blowhole; mammal; warm-blooded Shark: Breathe underwater through gills; fish; cold-blooded Both: Torpedo-shaped body; found in all the oceans of the world; carnivores. BOTTLENOSE DOLPHIN ANATOMY blowhole ear dorsal fin melon flukes beak eye pectoral fins Dolphin Length Graphing 1. Risso s dolphin 2. Hourglass dolphin 3. Short-Beaked Common Dolphin and Rough-Toothed Dolphin 4. Long-Beaked Common Dolphin 5. White-Beaked Dolphin 6. Hourglass Dolphin 7. 4 feet longer 8. 6 feet longer 25

Name: ANSWER KEY Date: Dolphin Length Graphing 1. Risso s dolphin 2. Hourglass dolphin 3. Short-Beaked Common Dolphin and Rough-Toothed Dolphin 4. Long-Beaked Common Dolphin 5. White-Beaked Dolphin 6. Hourglass Dolphin 7. 4 feet longer 8. 6 feet longer 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Short-Beaked Common Dolphin Rough-Toothed Dolphin Atlantic Bottlenose Dolphin White-Beaked Dolphin Dusky Dolphin Fraser's Dolphin Long-Beaked Common Dolphin Spinner Dolphin Hourglass Dolphin Risso's Dolphin Fintastic Fact or Fiction? 1. + 2. + 3. 4. + 5. 6. 7. + 8. 9. + 10. + 26

Name: SOURCES Date: ECHOLOCATION GAME Adapted from: http://www.scholastic.com/browse/lessonplan.jsp?id=1301 BLUBBER ACTIVITY Adapted from: http://www.hometrainingtools.com/a/whale-blubber-project http://www.stevespanglerscience.com/lab/experiments/blubber-gloves THE OCEAN AND YOU Adapted from: http://c0026106.cdn1.cloudfiles.rackspacecloud.com/1fd140b1d1784addb724545ae5168794_ science-activity-k-4.pdf 27

Name: Date: Being Dolphin 4D: 2019 Fin Productions, LLC. All rights reserved. Cover Photograph Bob Talbot. All rights reserved. 29