Provided by: Yale School of the Environment |Published on: April 23, 2024
Articles/Websites Grades 9-12, ap-college
Synopsis
This article examines the spread of Beech Leaf Disease (BLD) in the United States and how this disease destroys the leaves of beech trees.
Students will learn that BLD is spreading quickly in specific parts of North America and this disease drastically reduces the photosynthetic rate of infected leaves.
Students can listen along with an embedded audio recording of the article.
This article highlights the importance of genetic diversity in populations to help species survive diseases, parasites, or environmental changes.
This article contains eye-catching pictures that illustrate BLD's impact on beech leaves.
Additional Prerequisites
Students should understand leaf structure and function.
Some students may benefit from having the terms nematode, photosynthetic, foliar, and others defined before reading the article.
Differentiation
This article can supplement a classroom activity where students analyze plant diseases throughout the United States.
Advanced students can use this article to connect to lessons about biodiversity, genetic diversity within species, or selection pressures on populations.
This article can support a lesson on various threats to present-day forest ecosystems, and how humans can conserve these valuable ecological spaces.
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All resources can be used for your educational purposes with proper attribution to the content provider.