The Discovery of Jelly bellicus

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Name The Discovery of Jelly bellicus Date Captain Dan and his crew were sailing from South America to Australia when they encountered a severe storm. The ship tossed in the sea for days before coming to a rest on an island somewhere in the South Pacific. The ship was badly damaged and most of the supplies had fallen overboard during the storm. Dan and his crew were very hungry and the island didn t promise much in the way of food. After stepping foot on the unusual pine shaving terrain, the crew discovered tiny organisms hiding in the grass. They named it Jelly bellicus because the organisms reminded them of a sweet treat back home. Upon closer inspection the crew realized that there were eight different varieties of Jelly bellicus. The crew began gobbling up as many of the delicious critters as they could find. Soon the number of Jelly bellicus was reduced to just a few, and the crew began fighting for what was left. Part 1: Cryptic coloration 1. List the eight different Jelly bellicus varieties (jelly bean colors) discovered by Captain Dan and his crew. 2. Fill your box lid with the cage litter provided by your teacher. 3. Count the jelly beans in your presorted bag. You should have 10 jelly beans of each color for a total of 80 candies. (Safety note: The jelly beans are not fit for consumption. Do not eat them!) 4. Add the bag of presorted jelly beans to your box. Mix them into the cage litter. 5. On your instructor s direction, take 30 seconds to find as many jelly beans you can. You can only use one hand and all crew members should search at the same time. 6. Record the type and number of jelly beans found for each crew member in the breakfast chart below. 7. Put all the collected jelly beans back in the box to simulate moving to a new location. 8. Repeat steps 4-7 for lunch and dinner. Member name Breakfast (Part 1: Cryptic coloration) 1 Member name Lunch (Part 1: Cryptic coloration) 1

Dinner (Part 1: Cryptic coloration) Je lly bellicus color Member name 1 Analysis questions 1. Which jelly beans were easy to find? What traits do you think made them easier to find? 2. Which jelly beans were hard to find? What traits made them more difficult to find? 3. Explain the advantage of cryptic coloration. Part 2: Mimicry After eating mainly spotted red Jelly bellicus, several crew members became ill. Those that hadn t eaten the spotted Jelly bellicus felt fine. The spotted critters must have been poisonous! It was difficult to determine which red Jelly bellicus had spots so most of the crew members avoided red Jelly bellicus altogether! 1. As a class, select a jelly bean color, which also has a spotted variety that is poisonous. 2. Please all 80 jelly beans in the box. 3. On your teacher s direction, search for 30 seconds. 4. Avoid the poisonous color. If you pick a poison jelly bean, you must stop and skip the rest of the meal. 5. Record the number and type of jelly beans found for each crewmember in the breakfast chart below. 6. Put all 80 jelly beans back in the box to simulate moving to a new location. 7. Repeat steps 3-6 two more times for lunch and dinner. Member name 1 Breakfast (Part 2: Mimicry)

Member name 1 Lunch (Part 2: Mimicry) Member name 1 Dinner (Part 2: Mimicry) Analysis Questions 1. Which jelly bean is the model? The mimic? 2. What advantage does a mimic have? 3. What disadvantage does the model have? 4. What type of mimicry does this simulation represent? Give a real life example of this type of mimicry. Part 3: Population shift Captain Dan and his crew were stranded for months. As time went on, the Jelly bellicus population began to change. Some organisms seemed to thrive and reproduce, while others became scarce, and some disappeared completely. Overall, it was becoming more difficult to find food. Captain Dan and his crew had to find something else to eat if they were going to survive. 1. Place all 80 jelly beans in the box.

2. On your teacher s direction, search for food for 30 seconds. 3. Record the number and type of jelly beans consumed in the first generation chart below. 4. DO NOT return the collected jelly beans to the box. Put the collected candies in the bag. They have been consumed and are no longer part of the gene pool. 5. Determine the number and type of survivors left in the box. Generation 1 started with 10 of each. To find the number of survivors, subtract the number consumed from 10. 6. Assume that the survivors live and reproduce. For each pair of survivors left in the box, add 2 more jelly beans of the same type. If you have an odd number of survivors, round down. Example: 8 survivors = 4 pairs = 8 offspring 7 survivors = 3 pairs = 6 offspring 7. Repeat steps 2-6 two more times to simulate the next 2 generations. To determine the survivors for generations 2 and 3, subtract the number of consumed candies from the new total in the previous generation. Generation 1 Crew combined 1 New total (survivors + Crew combined 1 Generation 2 New total (survivors + Crew combined 1 Generation 1

New total (survivors + Analysis Questions 1. Did any of the species become extinct (disappear from the? If so, which ones? 2. Did any become endangered (less than 4)? If so, which ones? 3. Which population grew the most? 4. Overall, jelly bean diversity has declined. How might this affect the future of the jelly bean population? 5. In the natural world, the environment is constantly changing. How might your jelly bean results change if you used green or cedar (red) bedding instead of pine cage litter? 6. Would a gradual or a sudden change in the color of the bedding have a bigger impact? Why?