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Cheska Lorena                                                                          Fall 2009
1
     Email: cmlorena@gmail.com                                        Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan


    LESSON PLAN DETAILS
    Grade Level: 9th Grade                            Number of Students: 25+
    Subject:      Life Science/Living Environment     Total Class Time:        50 minutes
    Lesson Topic: Ecosystems
    Keywords:     Energy flow, interactions, environment, food chain, and food web;
                  Producers and types of consumers (herbivore, carnivore, omnivore, detritivore)


    NYS INTERMEDIATE MST STANDARDS
    Standard 1  Scientific Inquiry – Students formulate questions for explanations of everyday
                observations; construct explanations; design and read charts, tables, graphs and
                diagrams.
    Standard 4: Living Environment – Plants and animals depend on each other and their physical
    Key Idea 6  environment. SWBAT describe flow of energy and matter through food chains and food
                webs; provide evidence that green plants make food; and explain the significance of the
                process to other organisms.

    CONCEPTUAL LENS
    Interdependence

    ESSENTIAL QUESTION
     “What significance does energy flow have on interactions between living organisms in an
    ecosystem?”

    MAIN GENERALIZATIONS
      1. Living organisms depend on interactions between one another and their physical environment
          to survive.
      2. Interactions between living organisms and the environment drive the flow of energy.
      3. Energy flow cycles nutrients and materials that living organisms need to survive.
      4. The sun is the main source of energy in an ecosystem.


    TEACHING OBJECTIVES – Students will be able to…
    1      Break down the components of an ecosystem into categories of producers and consumers
    2      Construct a physical model of a food chain and a food web
    3      Research and summarize information on choice of habitat and organism found at John Boyd
           Thacher State Park
    4      Create a comic strip featuring a community of organisms that may be found at John Boyd
           Thacher State Park

    MATERIALS
    For the teacher                                    For the students (each)
    Computer station                                   Science journal
    Projector                                          Writing utensil
    Internet access                                    Index cards or half sheets of white paper
    Slideshow file                                     Markers or crayons
    Dry erase markers and eraser                       Scissors
    Ball of yarn                                       Tape


                                          The College of Saint Rose
Cheska Lorena                                                                             Fall 2009
2
     Email: cmlorena@gmail.com                                           Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan



    PREPARATION
     Lesson Plan Summary
    Bloom          Remembering Comprehension Application             Analysis      Synthesis      Evaluation
    Taxonomy
    Level                                                            X             X


    This lesson plan is the first arrangement in the ecosystems unit. It serves as an introduction to food
    chains and food webs. Students have previously learned about producers and the different types of
    consumers (herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, and detritivores). They are asked to use deductive
    reasoning by breaking down their dinner into its individual ingredients. Students’ reasoning skills are
    also employed to categorize the ingredients into plant or animal, and to further classify animal
    ingredients into different types of consumers. With this background knowledge and the creation of
    food chain and food web models, students should be able to produce generalizations about energy flow
    in ecosystems.

    With the generalizations, students can move forward and learn more in-depth about interdependence in
    ecosystems. The last half of the lesson introduces the activities for the next 2-3 days. Students will work
    in collaborative groups to design and create an ecosystem comic strip. Students will select a community
    of organisms that may be found at a local state park. Each member will pick and choose an organism,
    research information, compile organism profiles and create a comic strip that demonstrate the
    relationships of their organisms and the role of energy flow in their particular community.


    INSTRUCTIONAL METHODS

     05 Mins       Introduction – Engagement, Building Connections to Students
    Activities                                                           Resources
    Brain Buzzer- “What did you have for dinner last night?”             Attendance records
                                                                         Slideshow file
    Students will write their responses in their science journals, share
    their responses with a seat partner, and discuss answers with
    whole class. Teacher will collect student answers and generate a
    list on the board. Learning objectives and the essential question
    are introduced.



     20 Mins       Lesson Activities – Exploration, Direct Experiences with Concepts
    Activities                                                            Resources
    Brainstorm/Graphic Organizer – Students are asked to choose           Online bubble map generator
    one of the meals on the list for analysis. A student volunteer is     Index cards, paper, yarn, and tape
    picked to create a bubble-map diagram on the whiteboard or
    interactive white board, using information determined by fellow
    classmates. Together students break down a meal into its
    individual ingredients. They will use the diagram to answer the



                                            The College of Saint Rose
Cheska Lorena                                                                             Fall 2009
3
     Email: cmlorena@gmail.com                                           Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan


    following questions:

           Which of these foods come from plants?
           Which of these foods do not come from plants?
           Which of the animals eat plants? Other animals? Both?
           Are there any decomposers?

    A second student volunteer is picked to label the bubble-map
    diagram. With the help of fellow classmates, together they will
    assign the following vocabulary words to the individual
    ingredients: producer, consumer, herbivore, carnivore, and
    detritivore.

    Looking at the diagram at this point, is there anything that
    students think or feel that is missing? Students should be able to
    add the plants’ food source, which is the sun. Revise the diagram
    to fit the new information.

    Students should look at the diagram again. What can students say
    about ecosystems based on this diagram? What patterns do they
    see? Answers should include the following: there are different
    organisms in an ecosystem, the organisms interact with one
    another, there is a general flow of energy from producers to
    consumers, and the energy flow starts with the sun.

    Individual Practice* - Students create their own food chains by
    taking their own dinner meal and breaking it down into its
    individual ingredients onto index cards. They should list one
    ingredient per index card and label them as producer or as a type
    of consumer. Students will select one of their ingredients and
    draw a picture of it on a half sheet of paper. The half sheet must
    also be properly labeled.

    Group Practice** – In small groups, students will work together
    to form a food web using their individual food chains. Each
    student will display one of his or her organisms to each other.
    Teacher will give a ball of yarn to one student. That student must
    toss the yarn to another organism that 1) it feeds on; or 2) is
    eaten by another organism. Another variation is to start with all
    producers and then include different consumers into the web.

    Students will continue adding additional different organisms to
    their food web by adding the sun, producers, consumers and
    decomposers. They should create a giant food web and realize
    that all members of the web are interconnected. They will also
    discover that some organisms share the same role in the food
    web—eating the same foods or being eaten by the same
    predators.


                                            The College of Saint Rose
Cheska Lorena                                                                             Fall 2009
4
     Email: cmlorena@gmail.com                                           Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan



    *Students can draw their individual ingredients/organisms of
    writing names down onto index cards.

    **This activity can also be performed as a whole class standing up
    in a circle, or by their desks depending on available room space
    and remaining class time.


    20 Mins        Discussion – Explain, Building Connections to Ideas
    Activities                                                         Resources
    Group Discussion-                                                  Slideshow file
    At the end of the group activity, display diagrams of a food chain
    and food web. How is a food chain similar to and different from a
    food web? Students should be able to reflect on the previous
    activities and answer the following questions:

           Why is a food web a better representation of who eats
            who in an ecosystem than a food chain?
           What would happen to the rest of the food web if an
            organism became extinct? If the habitat was damaged?
           What are the pros and cons of organisms being
            interconnected or interdependent on one another?
           How does this translate to survival of a living organism?



    00 Mins       Expansion – Elaboration, Building Real World Connections
    Activities                                                       Resources
    Food Pyramid- Display a picture of a food pyramid. Ask students  YouTube Video Clip
    what they see. Answers should include the following: there are   Slideshow file
    more producers at the bottom; the numbers of organisms           Project handout and rubrics
    decreases as you go further up the pyramid; there is less energy Animals of NY Checklist
    as you go up the pyramid because the organisms at the previous   6-Panel Comic Storyboard Template
    level use some of it for their own growth and survival.          Online Comic Strip Generator

    Ask the essential question again: What significance does energy
    flow have on interactions between living organisms in an
    ecosystem? Refer to main generalizations for answers. Show
    YouTube music video clip, “It’s The Food Webby Web”, as
    summary of today’s topics.

    Student Research- Introduce the next assignment. Students will
    work in collaborative groups to design and create a comic strip,
    using organisms found in a park ecosystem as characters. Each
    member will pick an organism to research. Each organism in the
    group should be part of the group’s food web. Students will use
    remaining class time to look through the park wildlife checklist,



                                            The College of Saint Rose
Cheska Lorena                                                                          Fall 2009
5
     Email: cmlorena@gmail.com                                        Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan


    choose their communities and individual organism to research.
    Distribute project handouts and rubrics. Depending on amount of
    remaining class time, students can start brainstorming research
    questions and storyboard ideas. Students can also decide how to
    obtain additional materials.*
    See section on Student Involvement.

    CONTINGENCY/ EXTENSION PLAN
       Students can create food chain mobiles using their index cards, yarn and tape. Groups can
         connect their individual food chain mobiles with one another to create a large class food web
         mobile.
       Students can create a grocery list mosaic using old grocery coupon magazines for their dinner
         break-down activity.
       Students can create a 3D energy pyramid using milk cartons or foldable cubes from the
         cafeteria.
       Students can watch the following clip: Brain Pop Quick Flick


    ASSESSMENT & EVALUATION OF LEARNING

    Achievement           Selected               Performance        Personal
                                       Essay                                                   Format
    Targets               Response               Assessment      Communication

                                                                                   Brainstorm activities, selected
    Knowledge and
                              X                        X                X          response quiz, closure
    Understanding
                                                                                   summaries

                                                                                   Bubble-map diagrams,
                                                                                   classification of ingredients,
    Reasoning                                                                      food chains and food web
                                                       X                X
    Proficiency                                                                    models, class discussions,
                                                                                   construct of food web on
                                                                                   product

                                                                                   Teacher observations on class
                                                                                   performances with food
                                                                                   chains/food web,
    Performance Skills                                 X                X
                                                                                   collaboration, communication
                                                                                   skills, research and technology
                                                                                   use for comic strip product

                                                                                   Food chain/food web models,
    Ability to Create
                                                       X                X          function and aesthetics of
    Products
                                                                                   comic strip poster

                                                                                   Student self-assessments,
    Dispositions                                       X                X
                                                                                   rating scales on handout




                                          The College of Saint Rose
Cheska Lorena                                                                             Fall 2009
6
     Email: cmlorena@gmail.com                                           Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan


    ACCOMODATIONS/ MODIFICATIONS
       Speak loudly and clearly.
       Repeat instructions twice.
       Call on various students to read text.
       Provide visual graphics.
       Move around and check on students.


    HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT
    Students must do this assignment: 3 points.
        1. Log onto the class website and complete the online vocabulary quiz.
        2. Students who scored 6/10 items incorrectly must retake the quiz!

    Students can choose one out of three assignments: 10 points.
        1. Consider the food web that you, as a human, are part of. Draw an illustration of this food web
           on an 8x11” sheet, color and label the different categories of producers and types of consumers.
        2. Create a T-chart listing 5 different ways each that food chains are similar, and then different to
           food webs.
        3. Compose a haiku poem or 1-minute song about food chains and food webs.


    STUDENT INVOLVEMENT
        Encourage students to obtain additional research materials by contacting local park rangers
         and/or members of the community. They can ask for brochures, animal field guides, and set up
         online Skype interviews and conferences with biologists and naturalists.
        Encourage students to set up bake sales as fundraisers, arrange a field trip to the local park, set
         up guided tours with a park ranger, and take pictures and/or video of their trip to add to their
         product.
        Students are given choice on type of organism and habitat and design flexibility of comic strip
         product.
        Students are given voice through group roles, self-assessments and rating scales.


    CREDITS & RESOURCES

    Salter, Irene. (2005, August 26). My Science box: hands-on science curriculum for the adventurous
    teacher. Retrieved from http://www.mysciencebox.org/foodwebs

    Anderson, B, Dixon, E, & Hayden, B. (n.d.). Create a food chain (k-2). Retrieved from
    http://www.sd5.k12.mt.us/glaciereft/foodchk2.htm

    Nye, Bill. (Producer). (2008). It's the food web [Web]. Retrieved from
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbWyrcY5i3s.

    BrainPOP. (Producer). (n.d.). National geographic for kids: food chain movie [Web]. Retrieved from
    http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngexplorer/0309/quickflicks/

    Edelman, K, & Amelyan, L. (2009). Bubbl.us: brainstorming made simple. Retrieved from http://bubbl.us/


                                            The College of Saint Rose
Cheska Lorena                                                                          Fall 2009
7
     Email: cmlorena@gmail.com                                        Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan



    Zimmerman, B. (2006). Make Beliefs comix. Retrieved from http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/Comix/

    Enchanted Learning. (n.d.). Foldable cube. Retrieved from
    http://www.enchantedlearning.com/math/geometry/solids/Cubetemplate.shtml


    NYS Department of Wildlife Conservation. Checklist of amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals of New
    York State. Retrieved from http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/wildlife_pdf/vertchecklist0907.pdf.

    Animals, Plants, Aquatic Life: Information about species. (2009). Retrieved October 31, 2009 from NYS
    Department of Environmental Conservation: http://www.dec.ny.gov/23.html.

    Color Brochures and Posters of NY Natural Resources. (2009). Retrieved October 31, 2009 from NYS
    Department of Environmental Conservation: http://www.dec.ny.gov/pubs/4791.html.




                                          The College of Saint Rose

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CL-Sample-Constructivist-Lesson-Plan

  • 1. Cheska Lorena Fall 2009 1 Email: cmlorena@gmail.com Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan LESSON PLAN DETAILS Grade Level: 9th Grade Number of Students: 25+ Subject: Life Science/Living Environment Total Class Time: 50 minutes Lesson Topic: Ecosystems Keywords: Energy flow, interactions, environment, food chain, and food web; Producers and types of consumers (herbivore, carnivore, omnivore, detritivore) NYS INTERMEDIATE MST STANDARDS Standard 1 Scientific Inquiry – Students formulate questions for explanations of everyday observations; construct explanations; design and read charts, tables, graphs and diagrams. Standard 4: Living Environment – Plants and animals depend on each other and their physical Key Idea 6 environment. SWBAT describe flow of energy and matter through food chains and food webs; provide evidence that green plants make food; and explain the significance of the process to other organisms. CONCEPTUAL LENS Interdependence ESSENTIAL QUESTION “What significance does energy flow have on interactions between living organisms in an ecosystem?” MAIN GENERALIZATIONS 1. Living organisms depend on interactions between one another and their physical environment to survive. 2. Interactions between living organisms and the environment drive the flow of energy. 3. Energy flow cycles nutrients and materials that living organisms need to survive. 4. The sun is the main source of energy in an ecosystem. TEACHING OBJECTIVES – Students will be able to… 1 Break down the components of an ecosystem into categories of producers and consumers 2 Construct a physical model of a food chain and a food web 3 Research and summarize information on choice of habitat and organism found at John Boyd Thacher State Park 4 Create a comic strip featuring a community of organisms that may be found at John Boyd Thacher State Park MATERIALS For the teacher For the students (each) Computer station Science journal Projector Writing utensil Internet access Index cards or half sheets of white paper Slideshow file Markers or crayons Dry erase markers and eraser Scissors Ball of yarn Tape The College of Saint Rose
  • 2. Cheska Lorena Fall 2009 2 Email: cmlorena@gmail.com Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan PREPARATION Lesson Plan Summary Bloom Remembering Comprehension Application Analysis Synthesis Evaluation Taxonomy Level X X This lesson plan is the first arrangement in the ecosystems unit. It serves as an introduction to food chains and food webs. Students have previously learned about producers and the different types of consumers (herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, and detritivores). They are asked to use deductive reasoning by breaking down their dinner into its individual ingredients. Students’ reasoning skills are also employed to categorize the ingredients into plant or animal, and to further classify animal ingredients into different types of consumers. With this background knowledge and the creation of food chain and food web models, students should be able to produce generalizations about energy flow in ecosystems. With the generalizations, students can move forward and learn more in-depth about interdependence in ecosystems. The last half of the lesson introduces the activities for the next 2-3 days. Students will work in collaborative groups to design and create an ecosystem comic strip. Students will select a community of organisms that may be found at a local state park. Each member will pick and choose an organism, research information, compile organism profiles and create a comic strip that demonstrate the relationships of their organisms and the role of energy flow in their particular community. INSTRUCTIONAL METHODS 05 Mins Introduction – Engagement, Building Connections to Students Activities Resources Brain Buzzer- “What did you have for dinner last night?” Attendance records Slideshow file Students will write their responses in their science journals, share their responses with a seat partner, and discuss answers with whole class. Teacher will collect student answers and generate a list on the board. Learning objectives and the essential question are introduced. 20 Mins Lesson Activities – Exploration, Direct Experiences with Concepts Activities Resources Brainstorm/Graphic Organizer – Students are asked to choose Online bubble map generator one of the meals on the list for analysis. A student volunteer is Index cards, paper, yarn, and tape picked to create a bubble-map diagram on the whiteboard or interactive white board, using information determined by fellow classmates. Together students break down a meal into its individual ingredients. They will use the diagram to answer the The College of Saint Rose
  • 3. Cheska Lorena Fall 2009 3 Email: cmlorena@gmail.com Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan following questions:  Which of these foods come from plants?  Which of these foods do not come from plants?  Which of the animals eat plants? Other animals? Both?  Are there any decomposers? A second student volunteer is picked to label the bubble-map diagram. With the help of fellow classmates, together they will assign the following vocabulary words to the individual ingredients: producer, consumer, herbivore, carnivore, and detritivore. Looking at the diagram at this point, is there anything that students think or feel that is missing? Students should be able to add the plants’ food source, which is the sun. Revise the diagram to fit the new information. Students should look at the diagram again. What can students say about ecosystems based on this diagram? What patterns do they see? Answers should include the following: there are different organisms in an ecosystem, the organisms interact with one another, there is a general flow of energy from producers to consumers, and the energy flow starts with the sun. Individual Practice* - Students create their own food chains by taking their own dinner meal and breaking it down into its individual ingredients onto index cards. They should list one ingredient per index card and label them as producer or as a type of consumer. Students will select one of their ingredients and draw a picture of it on a half sheet of paper. The half sheet must also be properly labeled. Group Practice** – In small groups, students will work together to form a food web using their individual food chains. Each student will display one of his or her organisms to each other. Teacher will give a ball of yarn to one student. That student must toss the yarn to another organism that 1) it feeds on; or 2) is eaten by another organism. Another variation is to start with all producers and then include different consumers into the web. Students will continue adding additional different organisms to their food web by adding the sun, producers, consumers and decomposers. They should create a giant food web and realize that all members of the web are interconnected. They will also discover that some organisms share the same role in the food web—eating the same foods or being eaten by the same predators. The College of Saint Rose
  • 4. Cheska Lorena Fall 2009 4 Email: cmlorena@gmail.com Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan *Students can draw their individual ingredients/organisms of writing names down onto index cards. **This activity can also be performed as a whole class standing up in a circle, or by their desks depending on available room space and remaining class time. 20 Mins Discussion – Explain, Building Connections to Ideas Activities Resources Group Discussion- Slideshow file At the end of the group activity, display diagrams of a food chain and food web. How is a food chain similar to and different from a food web? Students should be able to reflect on the previous activities and answer the following questions:  Why is a food web a better representation of who eats who in an ecosystem than a food chain?  What would happen to the rest of the food web if an organism became extinct? If the habitat was damaged?  What are the pros and cons of organisms being interconnected or interdependent on one another?  How does this translate to survival of a living organism? 00 Mins Expansion – Elaboration, Building Real World Connections Activities Resources Food Pyramid- Display a picture of a food pyramid. Ask students YouTube Video Clip what they see. Answers should include the following: there are Slideshow file more producers at the bottom; the numbers of organisms Project handout and rubrics decreases as you go further up the pyramid; there is less energy Animals of NY Checklist as you go up the pyramid because the organisms at the previous 6-Panel Comic Storyboard Template level use some of it for their own growth and survival. Online Comic Strip Generator Ask the essential question again: What significance does energy flow have on interactions between living organisms in an ecosystem? Refer to main generalizations for answers. Show YouTube music video clip, “It’s The Food Webby Web”, as summary of today’s topics. Student Research- Introduce the next assignment. Students will work in collaborative groups to design and create a comic strip, using organisms found in a park ecosystem as characters. Each member will pick an organism to research. Each organism in the group should be part of the group’s food web. Students will use remaining class time to look through the park wildlife checklist, The College of Saint Rose
  • 5. Cheska Lorena Fall 2009 5 Email: cmlorena@gmail.com Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan choose their communities and individual organism to research. Distribute project handouts and rubrics. Depending on amount of remaining class time, students can start brainstorming research questions and storyboard ideas. Students can also decide how to obtain additional materials.* See section on Student Involvement. CONTINGENCY/ EXTENSION PLAN  Students can create food chain mobiles using their index cards, yarn and tape. Groups can connect their individual food chain mobiles with one another to create a large class food web mobile.  Students can create a grocery list mosaic using old grocery coupon magazines for their dinner break-down activity.  Students can create a 3D energy pyramid using milk cartons or foldable cubes from the cafeteria.  Students can watch the following clip: Brain Pop Quick Flick ASSESSMENT & EVALUATION OF LEARNING Achievement Selected Performance Personal Essay Format Targets Response Assessment Communication Brainstorm activities, selected Knowledge and X X X response quiz, closure Understanding summaries Bubble-map diagrams, classification of ingredients, Reasoning food chains and food web X X Proficiency models, class discussions, construct of food web on product Teacher observations on class performances with food chains/food web, Performance Skills X X collaboration, communication skills, research and technology use for comic strip product Food chain/food web models, Ability to Create X X function and aesthetics of Products comic strip poster Student self-assessments, Dispositions X X rating scales on handout The College of Saint Rose
  • 6. Cheska Lorena Fall 2009 6 Email: cmlorena@gmail.com Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan ACCOMODATIONS/ MODIFICATIONS  Speak loudly and clearly.  Repeat instructions twice.  Call on various students to read text.  Provide visual graphics.  Move around and check on students. HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT Students must do this assignment: 3 points. 1. Log onto the class website and complete the online vocabulary quiz. 2. Students who scored 6/10 items incorrectly must retake the quiz! Students can choose one out of three assignments: 10 points. 1. Consider the food web that you, as a human, are part of. Draw an illustration of this food web on an 8x11” sheet, color and label the different categories of producers and types of consumers. 2. Create a T-chart listing 5 different ways each that food chains are similar, and then different to food webs. 3. Compose a haiku poem or 1-minute song about food chains and food webs. STUDENT INVOLVEMENT  Encourage students to obtain additional research materials by contacting local park rangers and/or members of the community. They can ask for brochures, animal field guides, and set up online Skype interviews and conferences with biologists and naturalists.  Encourage students to set up bake sales as fundraisers, arrange a field trip to the local park, set up guided tours with a park ranger, and take pictures and/or video of their trip to add to their product.  Students are given choice on type of organism and habitat and design flexibility of comic strip product.  Students are given voice through group roles, self-assessments and rating scales. CREDITS & RESOURCES Salter, Irene. (2005, August 26). My Science box: hands-on science curriculum for the adventurous teacher. Retrieved from http://www.mysciencebox.org/foodwebs Anderson, B, Dixon, E, & Hayden, B. (n.d.). Create a food chain (k-2). Retrieved from http://www.sd5.k12.mt.us/glaciereft/foodchk2.htm Nye, Bill. (Producer). (2008). It's the food web [Web]. Retrieved from http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sbWyrcY5i3s. BrainPOP. (Producer). (n.d.). National geographic for kids: food chain movie [Web]. Retrieved from http://magma.nationalgeographic.com/ngexplorer/0309/quickflicks/ Edelman, K, & Amelyan, L. (2009). Bubbl.us: brainstorming made simple. Retrieved from http://bubbl.us/ The College of Saint Rose
  • 7. Cheska Lorena Fall 2009 7 Email: cmlorena@gmail.com Food Chains & Webs Lesson Plan Zimmerman, B. (2006). Make Beliefs comix. Retrieved from http://www.makebeliefscomix.com/Comix/ Enchanted Learning. (n.d.). Foldable cube. Retrieved from http://www.enchantedlearning.com/math/geometry/solids/Cubetemplate.shtml NYS Department of Wildlife Conservation. Checklist of amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals of New York State. Retrieved from http://www.dec.ny.gov/docs/wildlife_pdf/vertchecklist0907.pdf. Animals, Plants, Aquatic Life: Information about species. (2009). Retrieved October 31, 2009 from NYS Department of Environmental Conservation: http://www.dec.ny.gov/23.html. Color Brochures and Posters of NY Natural Resources. (2009). Retrieved October 31, 2009 from NYS Department of Environmental Conservation: http://www.dec.ny.gov/pubs/4791.html. The College of Saint Rose