Expand mobile version menu

Real-Life Activities

Real-Life Communication

Ecologists need to be able to communicate clearly and tailor their message to the right audience. "You really have to understand who you are talking to," says Matthew Hunter, a consulting wildlife ecologist. "In one audience, you want to speak with simpler terms. And with others, you get more technical."

You are an ecologist who has been invited to speak to a high school biology class.

You decide to talk to them about the Gaia theory. You want to brush up on it, so you go to the Internet and find this:

The Gaia theory, generally speaking, suggests that the Earth is analogous to a living organism, or a "super-organism." That is, the biosphere is like a living system that has self-correcting feedback systems, much like a living cell, plant or animal.

In its more sophisticated form, the Gaia theory suggests that there are levels of organization (subcellular, cellular, organs, tissues, organism, population and biosphere) and that biological causality occurs between all these levels.

Following from this assumption is the idea that strict reductionism -- reducing systems to the levels of physics and chemistry -- will never sufficiently explain life. Life has "emergent properties" that only appear at these levels of interaction. They disappear when reduced to their component parts.

The Gaia theory is a young theory. It is sometimes criticized because, in its most cartoonish form, it can seem mystical. It is too early to determine whether it will stand the test of time, like Darwin's theory of evolution via natural selection. A good theory generates hypotheses that can be tested. If these tests generally support the theory, the theory lives on. If the tests don't support the theory, it gets left behind.

You understand the above passage, since you're a trained scientist. Yet you figure the students might like some analogies to help them understand the Gaia theory better. You decide to list three ways how the "living organism of the Earth" is similar to the students' own "living organism" -- their own bodies.

Contact

  • Email Support
  • 1-800-GO-TO-XAP (1-800-468-6927)
    From outside the U.S., please call +1 (424) 750-3900
  • North Dakota Career Resource Network
    ndcrn@nd.gov | (701) 328-9733

Support