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Night Creatures of the Kalahari
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Classroom Activity
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Objective
To explore the balance between predator and prey.
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copy of "Life in a Bottle" student handouts
Life in a Bottle (PDF
or
HTML)
Food Chain Chambers (PDF
or
HTML)
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An ecosystem such as the Kalahari has a system of checks and
balances to ensure that no species overpopulates and threatens
the survival of other species. Students can explore the balance
between predator and prey in this activity.
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Begin by establishing a set of Food Chain Chambers.
Insert the predators (spiders) and the fruit that will attract
the prey (fruit flies), according to the instructions for each
chamber. Students might need to trap their initial fruit fly
population at home in a kitchen or near a compost pile. They can
then bring the chambers to the classroom for observation.
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Copy and distribute the "Life in a Bottle" student handout. Over
the next three to five weeks, students will record observations
and make predictions for each chamber (one control chamber and
three chambers in which variables have been altered). After the
final observations, ask students to give examples of real-life
instances modeled in these chambers.
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Conclude the activity by having students think of ideas for
additional ways to test predator-prey relationships.
Teachers: How You Can Find Spiders
You can either look for small, non-poisonous, web-building spiders
in basements, garages, windows, corners of rooms, under boards or
rocks, or on or under porches, or you can order spiders from school
science suppliers (you can also order fruit flies). Place each
spider in a paper cup and secure with plastic wrap (do not leave the
spider in the cup for more than an hour). Although most spiders
prefer not to bite people, never handle the spider with bare hands.
In particular
avoid two families of spiders—the female black widow spider
and the brown recluse or the violin spider, shown below.

Note: not drawn to scale.
In Control Chamber 1, fruit flies will lay eggs on the fruit, and
the number of individuals in their population will increase. The
spider will control the fruit fly population by eating any fruit
flies that make it through the trap. In this chamber, a healthy
balance between the population of fruit flies and the spider will
exist until the fruit is consumed. In the "no fruit" Chamber 2,
fruit flies will not inhabit the chamber, and in the "no fly"
Chamber 3, the fruit will become moldy. In each of these chambers
the spider will eventually starve to death if it is not fed or
released. Students will quickly be able to predict this outcome. In
the interest of the spider, either feed it a small insect such as an
ant or small cricket or release it within 10 days. In the "no
spider" Chamber 4, the population of fruit flies will continue to
increase until the fruit is consumed. At this point the remaining
fruit flies will die if not released.
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