I am an NSF IGERT PhD student at the Biology Dept. of Northern Arizona
University and am partnering with the Museum of Northern Arizona in
Flagstaff, AZ on an educational, outreach program that will explore the
concept of ecological communities using examples from the Colorado Plateau
region.


The program will engage elementary students at the museum for an hour and a
half through a series of activities. I am looking for material for one
activity, which will introduce students to the cottonwood community through
imagery and artwork.

We are currently looking for inspiring, high quality images of cottonwoods
and members of the community that we can include in a laminated “picture”
notebook. The book is currently divided into 5 general “habitats’: tree
canopy, leaf, bark/trunk, soil, and aquatic habitats.


The following is a list of possible organisms:


   - Canopy – Birds nesting or hunting for resources, mites and galls, deer
   browsing, etc
   - Leaf community – endo- or ectomycorrhizae, bacteria, microinvertebrates

   - Bark - microinvertebrates, microbes, beaver
   - Soil community – springtails, nematodes, protozoa, worms, mites,
   beetles, isopods, fungi, bacteria, etc.
   - Aquatic community – leaf packs in water, decaying leaves, leaves with
   microinvertebrates, fish predating on insects, invertebrate larvae and
   adults


Our preference is for field photography - organisms to be set against
cottonwoods within their appropriate niche. However, we realize that this is
difficult to capture some organisms, such as soil microbes – in the field.
We are also open to good microscopic images or even SEM images of organisms.



The notebook will be used in the museum only. No profits will be generated
from construction of the book. Any images will be credited accordingly.


You may respond to me privately via this e-mail address.


Thanks,



Amy Welty-Bernard

PhD/graduate student

Biology Department

Northern Arizona University


e-mail: [email protected]

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