All posts by David Swart

High school science teacher

Week 33 – Co-Evolution

Welcome to Week 33!  Last week, you constructed phylogenetic trees based on the relationships (like physical appearance, bird songs, and DNA sequences).  For this week, we will be extending our study of evolution to include the process of co-evolution.  Co-evolution occurs when two or more species interact over time, and influence each other’s evolution.  Please work through the list of links below.  Each section contains important information and ends with a portion of the weekly assignment.  You can complete it all in one sitting or break it up as needed.  Ready, set, go!

  1. Weekly Attendance Check-In
  2. Types of Biological Relationships (Google Doc assignment)
  3. Zombie Parasites (Google Doc assignment)
  4. Biological Warfare and the Co-Evolutionary Arms Race (Google Doc assignment)

You did it!  Just to make sure, here’s a checklist of items you must complete this week by Sunday, May 10 at 11:59pm:

  • Weekly Attendance Check-In (school district requirement)
  • Biological Relationships Vocabulary section of Google Doc (worth 11 assignment points)
  • Zombie Parasites section of Google Doc (worth 4 assignment points)
  • UC Berkeley Understanding Evolution section of Google Doc (worth 20 assignment points)

Remember, you can email me any time.  Office hours for Science are Tuesdays from 11am-12pm and Thursdays from 1pm-2pm.  Check your student Gmail for Zoom instructions.

Finally, by popular demand…click here for the Week 33 Bonus Credit Opportunity!

Week 33 – Types of Biological Relationships

Over the past few weeks, we have acquired a significant amount of evidence for evolution:

  • Natural selection (the common ancestry of brown bears and polar bears; dinosaurs and chickens)
  • Artificial selection (humans selecting for desired traits, such as dog breeding)

As we continue learning about evolution, we must expand our view to consider the concept of co-evolution:

  • Co-evolution is the idea that organisms do not evolve in a vacuum.  Evolution takes place concurrently in nature: populations of organisms influence each other’s evolution.
  • The term co-evolution is used to describe cases where two (or more) species reciprocally affect each other’s evolution.
  • Plants and insects represent a classic case of co-evolution — one that is often, but not always, mutualistic (keep reading – the definition of mutualism is further down). Many plants and their pollinators are so reliant on one another and their relationships are so exclusive that biologists have good reason to think that the “match” between the two is the result of a co-evolutionary process.
  • For more about co-evolution, visit the evolution.Berkeley.edu website!

Important Vocabulary:

  • Host: an organism that harbors a parasite, or a mutual or commensal symbiont, typically providing nourishment (food) and shelter.
  • Bacteria: microscopic living organisms, usually one-celled, that can be found everywhere. They can be dangerous, such as when they cause infection, or beneficial, as in the process of fermentation (to make foods like kimchi, fish sauce, Tabasco sauce, and salami) and that of decomposition.
  • Virus: Any of various simple submicroscopic parasites of plants, animals, and bacteria that often cause disease and that consist essentially of a core of RNA or DNA surrounded by a protein coat. Unable to replicate without a host cell, viruses are typically not considered living organisms.
  • Infection: Invasion and multiplication of an infectious agent in body tissues of the host and may lead to clinical symptoms or local cellular injury as a result of competition in metabolism, production of toxins, intracellular replication, or antigen antibody response.
  • Symbiosis: the interaction between two different organisms living in close physical association.
  • Symbiotic Relationships:
    • Mutualism: symbiosis that is beneficial to both organisms involved.
    • Commensalism: an association between two organisms in which one benefits and the other derives neither benefit nor harm.
    • Parasitism: a non-mutual symbiotic relationship between species, where one species, the parasite, benefits at the expense of the other, the host.

Your assignment:

  1. Create a Google Doc titled Week 33 – Your Name (Example: Week 33 – Olive Swart)
  2. Create a section in your Week 33 Google Doc titled “Biological Relationships Vocabulary”.
  3. Make a numbered list of each of the 11 words from this lesson highlighted in red bold text.
  4. For each word in your list, research your own examples of these biological processes, type of organisms, or relationships between organisms and write up your work in your Week 33 Google Doc.  Include source citations as appropriate.  Need some help getting started? Click here for examples of symbiotic relationships.

Return to the Week 33 – Co-Evolution post and continue our work for the week.

Week 33 – Limiting Reactants

You went through the Mole Tunnel and came out the other side. Along the way, you got hungry. You go to the refrigerator and find a 10-pack of hot dogs. You check the cupboard and find an unopened 12-pack of hot dog buns. A hot dog requires 1 hot dog and 1 bun. How many complete hot dogs can you make? Do you have exactly the right amount of hot dogs and buns to use everything up?  Will you be left with too many hot dogs or too many buns? Hmmm….10 hot dogs, 12 buns…looks like you’re going to have 2 leftover hot dog buns. Turns out, when it comes to hot dogs and hot dog buns, hot dogs are the limiting reactant.  You run out of hot dogs first. The number of hot dogs determines how many complete hot dogs you can make.

The same goes for chemical reactions. When it comes to reactions, if you combine reactants, you can either combine them in the exactly right amount to use both up, or you are left over with something. The chemical that runs out first is the limiting reactant.

Let’s return to the single replacement reaction we examined as we navigated the Mole Tunnel:

Cu(s) + 2AgNO3(aq) → Cu(NO3)2(s) + 2Ag(s)

Imagine you have a beaker containing 4 mol of AgNO3.  To the beaker you add 75 g of Cu.  Will the addition of this amount of Cu completely react with the AgNO3?  Will either reactant by left over?  Let’s find out.

  • Step 1: Calculate the number of moles of Cu are in 75 g.  The molar mass of Cu is 63.55 g/mol, so 75 g x (1 mol / 63.55 g) = 1.18 mol Cu
  • Step 2: Evaluate the chemical equation to determine the mole ratios.  How many moles of Cu does it take to fully react with AgNO3?  1 mol Cu : 2 mol AgNO3
  • Step 3: Compare the mole ratio with the amount of AgNO3?  We are told we have a beaker containing 4 mol of AgNO3.  According to the mole ratio, we need 2 mol Cu to fully react with 4 mol of AgNO3.
  • Step 4: Compare the mole ratio with the amount of Cu added.  You added 1.18 mol Cu to 4 mole of AgNO3.  You need 2 mol of Cu to fully react with the AgNO3, and the 1.18 mole we added is less than 2 mol.  Therefore, Cu is the limiting reactant in this experiment.

What does that mean?  All of the copper will fully react to form Cu(NO3)2.  How many moles of Cu(NO3)2?  You added 1.18 moles of Cu as the reactant, and the mole ratio of Cu:Cu(NO3)2 is 1:1, so you will produce 1.18 mol of Cu(NO3)2.

More examples:

Chemistry Challenge!  Try this one!

Your turn!  Complete the Limiting Reactant Google Form before returning to Week 33 – Stoichiometry to continue working.

Week 33 – Zombie Parasites

Now that you have learned about the many different ways organisms can live together,  we will focus on the type of symbiotic relationship called parasitism.  We will begin by watching a National Geographic video about zombie parasites.  The presenter, Anand Varma, applies his expertise in photography to the study of parasites.  Mr. Varma travels the world collecting specimen for study, and his ability to apply biological concepts to his work, think creatively, and drive to overcome failure make him and his work truly remarkable.

Next, read the article Meet the Parasites That Control Human Brains.  In your Week 33 Google Doc, create a section titled “Zombie Parasites” and share your thoughts on the following questions:

  • Why do zombie parasites persist?
  • What niche do they fill within an ecosystem?
  • Think about behaviors you see in yourself and those around you.  Ever wonder why people do what they do?
  • Does the existence of zombie parasites cause you to think differently about people and their actions?

Return to the Week 33 – Co-Evolution post and continue our work for the week.

Week 33 – Stoichiometry

Welcome to Week 33!  For this week, we will be focusing on stoichiometry: the quantitative relationship between reactants and products in a chemical reaction.  As a question: How do you convert between grams and moles to determine the mass of product in a chemical equation?  Please work through the list of links below.  Each section contains important information and ends with a portion of the weekly assignment.  You can complete it all in one sitting or break it up as needed.  Ready, set, go!

  1. Week 33 Attendance Check-In (required)
  2. Mole Ratios (Google Form assignment)
  3. Going Through the Mole Tunnel (Google Form assignment)
  4. Limiting Reactants (Google Form assignment)
  5. Percent Yield (Google Form assignment)
  6. Summary of Stoichiometry (encouraged)

You did it!  Just to make sure, here’s a checklist of items you must complete this week by Sunday, May 10 at 11:59pm:

  • Weekly Attendance Check-In (school district requirement)
  • Mole Ratios Google Form (worth 10 assignment points)
  • Mole Tunnel Google Form (worth 10 assignment points)
  • Limiting Reactants Google Form (worth 10 assignment points)
  • Percent Yield Google Form (worth 10 assignment points)

Remember, you can email me any time.  Office hours for Science are Tuesdays from 11am-12pm and Thursdays from 1pm-2pm.  Check your student Gmail for Zoom instructions.

Finally, by popular demand…click here for the Week 33 Bonus Credit Opportunity!

Week 33 – Going Through the Mole Tunnel

Now that we understand the role of coefficients in chemical equations, we can convert between grams and moles to determine the mass of the products that result from a chemical reaction.  Let’s conduct an experiment where we combine copper and silver nitrate.

Here is the following balanced chemical reaction:

Cu(s) + 2AgNO3(aq) → Cu(NO3)2(s) + 2Ag(s)

First off, let’s notice this is a single replacement reaction.

AB + C → A + CB, where Cu = A, NO3 = B, and Ag = C

  • Question: Find the mole ratio of AgNO3 to Cu(NO3)2  Answer: 2:1
  • Question: Find the mole ration of AgNO3 to Ag  Answer: 1:1
  • Suppose you have 6.0 mol of Cu.
    • Question: How many moles of AgNO3 are needed to react completely with 6.0 mol of Cu? Answer: The mole ratio is 2 moles of AgNO3 to 1 mole of Cu, so to completely react 6.0 mol of Cu, you need twice as many moles of AgNO3 (12 mol).
    • Question: How many moles of Cu(NO3)2 are produced? Answer: The mole ratio of Cu(NO3)2 to Cu is 1:1, so if you have 6.0 mol of Cu, you produce 6.0 mol of Cu(NO3)2.
  • Suppose you want to make 30.0g of Ag.
    • Question: How many moles of Ag is that? Answer: The molar mass of Ag is 107.9 g/mol.  30g x (1mol / 107.9g) = 0.278 mol Ag
    • Question: How many moles of Cu do you need? Answer: The mole ration of Ag to Cu is 2:1, so with 0.278 mol Ag, you would need 0.139 mol of Cu.

Imagine we actually want to do this single replacement experiment where we produce 30.0 g of silver.  You go to the chemical supply shelf and locate the bottle of copper and silver nitrate.  Both are in solid form.  Now what?  The Mole Tunnel!  In the real world, we work in mass quantities like grams.  To move through a chemical reaction from products to reactants (or vice versa), you go from grams to moles to grams.

We know we need 0.139 mol of Cu.  The copper:silver nitrate ratio is 1:2, so we need twice as many moles of silver nitrate, or 0.278 mol AgNO3.  To actually do this experiment, we need to use counting by weighing, which means converting moles to grams.  To convert moles to grams, we need molar mass (g/mol).  For Cu, the molar mass is 63.55 g/mol.  For AgNO3, the molar mass is 169.9 g/mol.

  • 0.139 mol Cu x 63.55 g/mol = 8.83 g of Cu
  • 0.278 mol AgNO3 x 169.9 g/mol = 47.2 g of AgNO3

Done!  You successfully navigated the Mole Tunnel!  You started with grams (30 g), converted to moles, compared mole ratios, then converted back to grams.  By combining 8.83 g of Cu with 47.2 g of AgNO3, you will produce 30 g of Ag.  Math!

Your turn!  Complete the Mole Tunnel Google Form before returning to Week 33 – Stoichiometry to continue working.

Week 32 – The Beak of the Finch

By now you should fully understand that evolution does not have a direction.  There is no goal.  Evolution is simply the process of genetic mutations occurring within a population that give rise to traits which may allow some individuals of a population to survive when the environment changes.  The video below brings us back to the Galapagos Islands where Charles Darwin first encountered the finches that would ultimately help him formulate the Theory of Evolution.  (Note: in science, theory is considered fact.  We often hear the phrase “just a theory” which is not a scientific use of the term.)  Would Darwin be surprised to see the timescale on which evolution can be observed on the island?  To complete this next section:

  1. Watch The Beak of the Finch video below:
  2. Complete the accompanying worksheet packet as a section of your Week 32 Google Doc (section title: The Beak of the Finch).
  3. Work through the Sorting Finch Species interactive (sound required) and complete the Sorting Finch Species worksheet as a section of your Week 32 Google Doc (section title: Sorting Finch Species).  This is a fun activity to play with someone at home – feel free to team up and share your learning with others.

Return to the Week 32 – Phylogenetic Trees post and continue our work for the week.

Week 32 – Moles and Molar Mass

This section of the lesson will serve as a review of working with moles.  Our textbook defines a mole as a counting unit used to keep track of large numbers of particles.  Just like one dozen represents 12 items, one mole represents 6.02 x 1023 items. Here are some examples:

  • One mole of gold atoms is equal to 6.02 x 1023 gold atoms.
  • One mole of glucose molecules is equal to 6.02 x 1023 glucose molecules.  The molecular formula of a molecule of glucose is C6H12O6.  

How many carbon atoms are in one mole of glucose?  Since each glucose molecule includes 6 carbons, and we have 6.02 x 1023 glucose molecules (equal to 1 mole), then we have a total of 6 x 6.02 x 1023 carbon atoms, which is equal to 36.12 x 1023 carbon atoms.  For proper scientific notation, we need to move the decimal one position to the left which then increases the exponent by 1.  Therefore, we have 3.612 x 1024 carbon atoms per mole of glucose.  Because we also have 6 oxygen atoms per molecule of glucose, the same math applies, so we have 3.612 x 1024 oxygen atoms per mole of glucose.  Finally, since we have 12 hydrogen atoms per molecule of glucose, and 12 is 2 x 6, we can double the number of carbon (or oxygen) atoms per mole of glucose to determine the number of hydrogen atoms per mole of glucose: 2 x 3.612 x 1024 = 7.224 x 1024 hydrogen atoms.

How many moles of atoms are in one mole of glucose?  Well, for each glucose molecule, there are 6 carbon atoms, 12 hydrogen atoms, and 6 oxygen atoms.  That adds up to 24 atoms (6+6+12) per molecule of glucose.  That means there are 24 moles of atoms per mole of glucose molecules!  Of those 24 moles of atoms, there are 6 moles of carbon, 12 moles of hydrogen, and 6 moles of oxygen atoms per mole of glucose molecules.

Why does this matter?  Glad you asked!  The mole connects the microscale world (number of atoms or molecules) with the macroscale world (number of grams – something we can actually measure in the lab).  The number of grams per mole of a substance is the same as the number of atomic mass units (amu) of a substance.  For example:

  • Gold, Au (element 79), has an average atomic mass of 197.0 amu.  Therefore, 1 mole of gold has a mass of 197.0 grams.  The molar mass of gold is 197.0 g/mol.
  • Glucose, C6H12O6 has a molecular mass of 180.2 amu.  The molecular mass is calculated by multiplying the average atomic mass of each element by the number of atoms of that element and then adding them all up:
    • carbon = 12.01 amu x 6 atoms = 72.06 amu
    • hydrogen = 1.008 amu x 12 atoms = 12.096 amu
    • oxygen = 16.00 amu x 6 atoms = 96.00 amu
    • 72.06 amu + 12.096 amu + 96.00 amu = 180.156 amu
    • 72.06 and 96.00 both have 4 significant digits, so we round 180.156 amu to 180.2 amu (which has 4 significant digits).
    • Note: One formula unit of glucose has a mass of 180.2 amu.  One formula unit of glucose is the same thing as one glucose molecule.
    • Therefore, 1 mole of glucose has a mass of 180.2 grams.  The molar mass of glucose is 180.2 g/mol.

Finally, imagine you have two samples: 100 g of C6H12O6 and 100 g of CO2.  Which sample has more carbon atoms?  Which sample has more oxygen atoms?  One way to solve this problem is to determine how many moles of each substance are in 100 g:

  • From our work above, we know that C6H12O6 has a molar mass of 180.2 g/mol.  Therefore, 100 g x 1 mol / 180.2 g = 0.55 mol of C6H12O6
  • For CO2, the molar mass works out to 44.01 g/mol.  We’ve calculated that in class many, many times, but you should also try the math yourself to be sure you get it.  Therefore, 100 g x 1 mol / 44.01 g = 2.27 mol of CO2

Next, we can determine how many moles of carbon are in each substance:

  • 0.55 mol of C6H12O6 x 6 moles of carbon / mole of C6H12O6 = 3.3 moles of carbon in 100 g of C6H12O6
  • 2.27 mol of CO2 x 1 mole of carbon / mole of CO2 = 2.27 moles of carbon in 100 g of CO2
  • Therefore, C6H12O6 has more carbon atoms than CO2 in 100 g of each sample

Finally, we can repeat the process to determine how many moles of oxygen are in each substance.  Give it a try.  Then click here to check your work.

Time to move into the textbook:

  1. Create a Google Doc titled Week 32 – Name (example: Week 32 – Pickles Swart)
  2. Share the Doc with david.swart@g.highlineschools.org
  3. Read Lesson 76 in the textbook and complete Exercise questions 4-7 in your Google Doc in a section labeled Lesson 76
  4. Read Lesson 77 in the textbook and complete Exercise questions 3-8 in your Google Doc in a section labeled Lesson 77
  5. Read Lesson 78 in the textbook and complete Exercise questions 1-8 in your Google Doc in a section labeled Lesson 78

Return to Week 32 – Mass-Mole Conversions and continue working.

Week 32 – Counting by Weighing

For this section of our weekly lesson, we will be working between the macroscale world (the one we inhabit) and the microscale world (the world of atoms and molecules).

To begin, imagine you have a 10-pound (4.54 kg) bag of potatoes.  You are tasked with counting the number of potatoes in the bag.  For potatoes, that’s pretty straight-forward.  You literally count each potato and the number you count is the number of potatoes in a 10-pound bag of potatoes.  Counting large objects is pretty easy.

Next, you are tasked with counting the number of grains of rice in a 20-pound (9.07 kg) bag of rice.  Suddenly, this job is a lot less easy.  Could you count all those grains of rice by hand?  Sure.  Do you want to?  No.  So what can do you do to estimate the number of grains of rice in the bag?  One solution is to use the technique of counting by weighing.

  • You begin by trying to measure the mass of a single grain of rice. It turns out, the mass is to small to read out on your balance.  Also, what if the grain of rice you selected is not representative of a typical grain of rice?  Maybe you selected a grain of rice that is bigger or smaller than normal.
  • You decide to be more scientific.  You count out a random sample of 100 grains of rice and then measure the mass using your balance.  You find that 100 grains of rice have a mass of 2.9 grams.  To calculate the average mass of one grain of rice, you divide 2.9 grams by 100 grains of rice, for an average of 0.029 grams per grain of rice.
  • Finally, you have 9.07 kg of rice and you know that each grain of rice has an average mass of 0.029 g.
    • 9.07 kg x 1000 g/kg = 9070 g of rice in the bag
    • 9070 g x 1 grain of rice / 0.029 g = 312,759 grains of rice!
    • Actually, since 0.029 grams only has 2 significant digits, we would actually estimate a total of 310,000 grains of rice.

Finally, it’s time to enter the microscale world of counting by weighing in chemistry.  Imagine you are tasked with counting how many atoms of gold are in a gold ring.  The ring has a mass of 10 grams.  Are you going to count each atom by hand?  Nope.  Instead, you turn to your trusty periodic table and find that gold, atomic symbol Au, has an average atomic mass of 197.0 amu.  You also remember Avogadro’s Number which tells you that 1 mole of gold has 6.02 x 1023 atoms.  That’s all you need!

  • First, 197.0 amu = 197.0 g/mole
  • Next, to figure out how many moles of gold are in 10 grams of gold: 10 g x 1 mole / 197.0 g = 0.051 moles of gold
  • Finally, to figure out how many atoms of gold are in the ring: 0.051 moles x 6.02 x 1023 atoms / mole = 0.31 x 1023 atoms of gold (or 3.1 x 1022 atoms using correct scientific notation)

The video below will help reinforce your learning. Also, Lesson 75 in the textbook is titled “Counting by Weighing” and is an excellent resource for more review.  While not required, you are encouraged to read the lesson and practice the exercises at the end of the lesson.  These will not be entered into Synergy but I am happy to answer any questions you have and review your work if you need help.  When ready, complete the Week 32 – Counting by Weighing Google Form assignment.  Note: For this and all Google Form assignments, you can re-assess and your highest score will be entered into Synergy.  Obviously, do your best the first time through!

Return to Week 32 – Mass-Mole Conversions and continue working.

Week 32 – Mass-Mole Conversions

Welcome to Week 32!  For this week, we will be focusing on mass-mole conversions.  In other words, how are particle mass and particle number connected?  Please work through the list of links below.  Each section contains important information and ends with a portion of the weekly assignment.  You can complete it all in one sitting or break it up as needed.  Ready, set, go!

  1. Week 32 Attendance Check-In (required)
  2. The Return of the Mole (Entry Task)
  3. Counting by Weighing (Google Form assignment)
  4. Moles and Molar Mass (Textbook Exercises in Google Doc)
  5. Comparing Amounts (Exit Task)
  6. Chemistry Refresher…review now before it’s too late!
  7. Unit 4 Honors Project…the wait is over!

You did it!  Just to make sure, here’s a checklist of items you must complete this week by Sunday, May 3 at 11:59pm:

    • Return of the Mole Entry Task (worth 10 assignment points)
    • Counting by Weighing (worth 10 assignment points)
    • Textbook Exercises (worth 30 assignment points)
    • Comparing Amounts Exit Task (worth 10 quiz points)

Remember, you can email me any time.  Office hours for Science are Tuesdays from 11am-12pm and Thursdays from 1pm-2pm.  Check your student Gmail for Zoom instructions.

Finally, by popular demand…click here for the Week 32 Bonus Credit Opportunity!