In this activity, you will be using quadrats along transect lines to take biodiversity measurements of the plant species in three distinct habitats near your classroom. Begin by splitting into groups. Four works best.
Select one person in your group to be the data recorder. The other three will be the data collectors.
Next, take one quadrat, or hula hoop, per group and place it on one side of one transect, or rope, next to a knot to allow identification of the plant species encircled by your quadrat. HYPOTHESES: For this experiment, the alternative hypothesis is that the alpha diversity will be smaller than gamma, meaning that there will be differences in the species that are present in each different habitat. The null hypothesis for this activity is that the alpha and gamma will be equal, meaning that there will be no species diversity difference between the communities sampled.
Each data collector must survey and identify the different plant species or any morphologically distinct varieties within your group's quadrat, giving the name of each plant type that you identify to the data recorder. It may seem like there are only a couple of species present at first, but look closer. It may take several minutes to find them all.
In addition to recording the species name, the data recorder must also write a short description in the table, so that each species can be identified again in subsequent quadrats.
Click Here to download Table 1
Once all of the species within a quadrat have been identified, pick up your hoop and move on to the next knot along the same transect.
Continue surveying and moving to the next knot until you have completed the entire rope transect.
Once you have completed the rope, move to a transect in a different habitat, and begin identifying the different species within each quadrat along the new transect, until each group has identified plants along three lengths of rope, one in each habitat, for a total of 15 quadrats surveyed.
When all of the species data have been collected, carry the transects and quadrats back to the classroom.