bioassay investigations with daphnia developed by kathy cahill wantagh high school

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Bioassay Investigations with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School Wantagh, New York

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Bioassay Investigations with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School Wantagh, New York. Inquiry Process Skills. Hypothesizing Preparing solutions Designing and conducting experiments Recording experimental data Analyzing experimental data Drawing conclusions - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Bioassay Investigations with Daphnia

Developed by Kathy CahillWantagh High School

Wantagh, New York

Page 2: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Inquiry Process Skills

• Hypothesizing

• Preparing solutions

• Designing and conducting experiments

• Recording experimental data

• Analyzing experimental data

• Drawing conclusions

• Considering further research

Page 3: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Environmental Science Concepts

Use bioassay to develop students’

understanding of:

– The effect of toxicant concentration on organisms

– The use of model organisms as indicators of potential health hazards for humans

Page 4: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Chemical Risk?

What is the chance that human health problems will result from exposure to a particular toxicant?

• Is it safe to eat fruits or vegetables containing traces of pesticide residues?

• Should fluoride be added to drinking water? • Is diet soda safe to drink?

Page 5: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Toxicant

• A chemical or mixture of chemicals that is harmful to living organisms.

• It’s the dose (concentration) that makes the poison.

Page 6: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Identifying Risks

To identify possible risks from exposure to a particular toxicant, scientists use simple plants or animals, rather than humans, as test subjects.

Page 7: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Bioassay

A procedure that uses living organisms to determine the toxicity of a chemical.

1. Expose living organisms to different concentrations of a potential toxicant

2. Observe the effects on the organisms’ behavior and survival

3. Determine if, or at what concentration, a chemical has harmful effects

Page 8: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Model Organisms

• Why use model organisms?

• What other kinds of organisms might be used for bioassays?

Page 9: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Dose-Response Curve

Dose (mg/kg body weight)

0

25

50

75

100

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

No Effect

All Affected

Half Affected

% R

es

po

ns

e

Page 10: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

LD50

Lethal Dose 50 is the concentration of a substance which

causes the death of 50% (one half) of a group of test organisms.

Dose (mg/kg body weight)

0

25

50

75

100

0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 90 100

No Effect

All Affected

Half Affected

% R

es

po

ns

e

Page 11: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Why Use LD50

Toxicant LD50 (mg/kg)Ethyl alcohol 10,000Salt (sodium chloride) 4,000Iron (Ferrous sulfate) 1,500Morphine 900Mothballs (paradichlorobenzene) 500Aspirin 250DDT 250Cyanide 10Nicotine 1Black Widow Spider venom 0.55Rattle Snake venom 0.24Tetrodotoxin (from fish) 0.01Dioxin (TCDD) 0.001Botulinum Toxin 0.00001

Page 12: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Bioassay Investigations with Daphnia

Part 1

Introduction to Bioassays

Part 2

Investigating the Effects of a Toxicant on Daphnia

Inquiry

Version

Guided

Version

Page 13: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Timeline

Part 1: Introduction to Bioassays

• Two 40 minute class periods– Introduce – Do procedure and make observations (absolute

minimum of 40 minutes and may need to adjust observation time)

– Analyze data and answer questions

Page 14: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Introduction to Bioassays

Materials for each pair of “students”

• Jar containing living Daphnia

• Plastic exposure chamber (or 6 test tubes or small cups)

• One large plastic pipette

• Two small plastic pipettes (note 1 mL marking near the top)

• 10 mL Graduated cylinder

• 6 small beakers or cups for mixing solutions

• Spring water (0% salt)

• Salt solutions (0.2 – 2%)

Page 15: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Introduction to Bioassays

Complete through step 4.

Do not add the solutions to the exposure chambers until instructed to do so.

Page 16: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Introduction to Bioassays

Complete steps 5 and 6

Your teacher will notify you when to make the 5, 10, and 20 minute observations.

Page 17: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Introduction to Bioassays

Work with your partner to complete the:

– Data table– Graph– Data analysis and Interpretation

questions

Page 18: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Investigating the Effects of Toxicants on Daphnia

Two versions:

Guided Version or Inquiry Version

Select ONE of these

Page 19: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Guided Version

Investigating the Effects of Toxicants on Daphnia

Similar to the first experiment but students will:– Investigate other toxicants

– Construct their own data table and graph

– Discuss application to humans

– Share and draw conclusions based on information from other groups

Page 20: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Guided Version Timeline

• Two 40 minute class periods

– Introduce

– Do procedure and make observations (absolute minimum of 40 minutes and may need to adjust observation time)

– Analyze data and answer questions

Page 21: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Inquiry Version

Students apply their understandings from the introductory laboratory activity by:

• Designing an experiment to investigate the effects of other toxicants.

• Constructing their own data table and graph

• Drawing conclusions and discuss application their applications to humans

• Optional: Sharing and drawing additional conclusions based on information from other groups

Page 22: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Inquiry Version Timeline

• One period for designing procedure

• At least one period for conducting experiment

• One period for analyzing group data

• Optional additional period for class sharing and discussion of results.

Page 23: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Work with three others

• Select a toxicant

• Design an experiment to investigate the effect of the toxicant on Daphnia

• Complete the exposure chamber graphic and the experiment planning sheet for your proposed experiment.

Record your work on the transparencies so that you are prepared to share your plan with others.

Page 24: Bioassay Investigations  with Daphnia Developed by Kathy Cahill Wantagh High School

Extensions/Modifications

Talk with others at your table and make a list of ways that these experiments could be extended or modified.

Record your work on the transparency to that you are prepared to share your plan with others.