Implement this lesson:
After completing ‘Rainbow of pH’ lesson, Ocean Acidification in a Cup, and/or Shell Shifts
After completing ‘Rainbow of pH’ lesson, Ocean Acidification in a Cup, and/or Shell Shifts
Students will model the carbon cycles and its main reservoirs by measuring carbons equivalent in rice.
Science and Engineering Practices
1-LS1-1 Use materials to design a solution to a human problem by mimicking how plants and/or animals use their external parts to help them survive, grow, and meet their needs.
Disciplinary Core Ideas
ESS2: Compare multiple solutions designed to slow or prevent wind or water from changing the shape of the land.
ESS3 Construct a scientific explanation based on evidence for how the uneven distributions of Earth’s mineral, energy, and groundwater resources are the result of past and current geoscience processes.
PS1.1 Develop models to describe the atomic composition of simple molecules and their structures
Crosscutting Concepts
MS-PS1-2 Cause and Effect Cause and effect relationships may be used to predict phenomena in natural or designed systems.
K.6A use the senses to explore different forms of energy such as light, thermal, and sound
K.9B examine evidence that living organisms have basic needs such as food, water, and shelter for animals and air, water, nutrients, sunlight, and space for plants
K10B identify basic parts of plants and animals
1.6(A) identify and discuss how different forms of energy such as light, thermal, and sound are important to everyday life
1.10(A) investigate how the external characteristics of an animal are related to where it lives, how it moves, and what it eats
2.9(A) identify the basic needs of plants and animals
2.9(B) identify factors in the environment, including temperature and precipitation, that affect growth and behavior such as migration, hibernation, and dormancy of living things
2.9(C) compare the ways living organisms depend on each other and on their environments such as through food chains
3.9(A) observe and describe the physical characteristics of environments and how they support populations and communities of plants and animals within an ecosystem
5.9(A) observe the way organisms live and survive in their ecosystem by interacting with the living and nonliving components.
5.9(B) describe the flow of energy within a food web, including the roles of the sun, producers, consumers, and decomposers
5.9(C) predict the effects of changes in ecosystems caused by living organisms including humans, such as the overpopulation of grazers or the building of highways
5.9(D) identify fossils as evidence of past living organisms and the nature of the environment at the time using models
A gigaton of carbon (GtC) and a petagram of carbon (PgC) are the fundamental units of measurement of carbon at planetary cycling scales. One gigaton is equal to one billion metric tons of carbon (or one petagram, which is 1015 grams). They are interchangeable, and we will use GtC and PgC interchangeable in this lesson. In this lesson each grain of rice will represent 1 gigaton of carbon (GtC).
These investigations will help you model how carbon flows from one reservoir to another.
Note: Before you begin, notice the relative abundance of carbon in each of the five reservoirs. Rock contains far more carbon than the other four reservoirs combined. Since rock is part of the slow carbon cycle, it is not part of the exchanges you will model.
Flow between the Atmosphere and Terrestrial Biosphere
The natural flux between the atmosphere and terrestrial biosphere is about 120 GtC per year in each direction. In the terrestrial biosphere, photosynthesis removes about 120 GtC from the atmosphere each year. Decomposition of biological material and respiration from plants and soil microbes returns 120 GtC to the atmosphere each year.
Flow between the Ocean and the Atmosphere
Carbon cycles between the ocean and the atmosphere at a rate of 90 GtC per year in each direction. Most of this exchange occurs by diffusion at the surface of the ocean. Notice that, until now, the carbon cycle has remained in balance, and no reservoir has a net gain or loss.
Flow from Fossil Fuels
Human use of fossil fuels (the burning of which releases carbon dioxide into the atmosphere) is changing the balance of carbon, adding an additional 9.4 (±0.5) GtC to the atmosphere each year. Land use changes, such as deforestation, remove part of the carbon sink (materials in the natural environment capable of absorbing excess carbon), thereby “contributing” that addition of 1.5 (±0.7) GtC excess carbon. Human impacts are therefore contributing almost 11 GtC per year to the atmosphere.
Not all of this carbon goes into the Atmosphere, as other reservoirs are absorbing some of this added carbon. Each year 4 GtC (represented by 4 grains of rice) from the Fossil Fuels reservoir are absorbed by the Terrestrial Biosphere, and 3 GtC (3 grains of rice) are absorbed by the Ocean reservoir. This results in a net gain in the Atmosphere reservoir of 5 GtC (5 grains of rice) per year with a budget imbalance of 0.5 GtC per year indicating overestimated emissions and/or underestimated sinks (see the equation below).
Materials:
Advanced Prep:
Procedure:
Rock
Atmosphere
Ocean
Terrestrial Biosphere
Fossil Fuels
(GtC)
65,000,000
900
41,000
2,000
4,000
Ex. 1,950,000
Ex. 27 grams
Ex. 1,230 grams
Ex. 60 grams
Ex. 120 grams
Modeling Pathway 1:
Flow between the Atmosphere and Terrestrial Biosphere
Modeling Pathway 2:
Flow between the Ocean and the Atmosphere
Modeling Pathway 3:
Flow from Fossil Fuels
Pre-experiment
Post-experiment
Watch a video on the carbon cycle:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNLUzqW8IuA
Students create a carbon cycle chart