ACC Module 4 of Madame Berthe Lemur Mouse Discussion
The purpose of this discussion is to explore the IUCN Red List of threatened species, used by governments and organizations around the globe to identify species’ conservation status.
You will have the opportunity to develop skills/knowledge in:
- Utilizing terminology and concepts related to biodiversity
- Identifying the causes of the sixth mass extinction
- Recognizing opportunities and challenges for species recovery efforts
Complete the following tasks for this discussion:
- Visit the IUCN Red List (Links to an external site.) and research one species.
- Then, post the following:
- The species common name and scientific genus and species
- The habitat and ecology
- It’s conservation status
- One interesting thing you learned about this species
- Threats to this species
- Conservation details
- Your source
- Finally, respond to two other students comparing the species and threats you both highlighted in your post. Were they similar? What was different?
Use the following criteria/tips for success:
- You have until the following week’s Friday discussion deadline to reply to another student. Peer reviews are 40% of the grade for the discussion.
- Reference the grading rubric for this assignment
- Here is an example post. I researched the incredible scaly-foot snail, Chrysomallon squamiferum. It’s habitat is deep, marine benthic (at 3,000 meters deep!). It is listed as endangered. What could threaten something that lives 10,000 feet underwater?! It’s threatened by underwater mining of polymetallic sulphide mineral resources at hydrothermal vents off the coat of Mauritius in the Indian Ocean. I learned that this species is particularly vulnerable to extinction because hydrothermal vents count as fragmented habitat. They are extremely far apart on the seafloor (1,000s of kilometers) and scientists don’t even know if species can get from one to another. Once a community is destroyed all of the unique species that evolved at that vent could be lost. Unfortunately, there are no conservation actions at this point for this species. Deep sea resource extraction is Source (Links to an external site.)
ACC Module 4 of Madame Berthe Lemur Mouse Discussion
General Writing FAQs
I’m having trouble writing my essay for class. What should I do?
Essays can be a challenging type of writing, and the OWL provides many useful resources on writing essays. For our collection of resources on essay writing section.
Writing is so tough! I feel like I can never come up with enough good ideas. Can you help me?
We recommend constructing a list of topics and drafting some theses about those topics, after which we would be more than happy to aid you in your initial stages of the writing process. For ways to start invention work, we suggest reviewing our resource on invention.
So, I’m a graduate student and now it’s time for me to tackle my thesis/dissertation. This is such a daunting task! Help!
While the Purdue OWL doesn’t currently have resources that pertain to thesis/dissertation writing, you may find it useful to review the website published Professor S. Joseph Levine at Michigan State University.
This is a general, non-discipline-specific guide to getting yourself organized and ready to write the dissertation. You are strongly advised to bring specific questions about your research and the type of document your discipline demands to a professor on your dissertation committee.
I have to write a critical analysis for one of my classes. Please advise!
First, you’ll want to prepare by reading all the material thoroughly and thinking about some of the different issues raised in your reading. You’ll want to do what’s called a “critical read” of the material, where you don’t just accept the information, but—after you understand it—you question it. Then, select one of the ideas, which has lingered in your mind because you disagree or are uncomfortable with it, or because you agree with it but believe it needs much more thought. Narrow down your ideas into a question about this idea that you might want to investigate in your paper. Ask yourself what your feelings are about this issue, and what reasons you might use to support your feelings. If you like what you have come up with, then you are ready to form a preliminary thesis. If you do not like it then go back and consider another question from your reading.
Write down a preliminary thesis statement that specifies your topic, states your ideas about this topic, and suggests the arrangement of your paper’s argument. Make sure you refer back to your reading and choose details that support your arguments. If you use quotations or refer to the text, it should only be to support your own ideas.
Then try writing a first draft and leaving it for a day. Then go back, reread and revise as necessary.
I paid one of my friends to write my essay for me. When the teacher found out, he/she failed me, and he/she said that I had violated academic integrity by committing plagiarism. I thought that plagiarism was only if I copied something. I paid for this; why isn’t this essay mine?
While you may have paid for the work done on the essay, the work is still not yours. It does not represent your intellectual effort or your original ideas, nor does it represent your abilities with written English. Under most commonly accepted definitions of plagiarism used in most North American academic institutions, plagiarism is not limited to copying text. It also includes, but is by no means limited to: “ghost writing”—having someone else write for you; purchasing a text—online or from a friend; patchwriting—copying together various parts of different texts in new ways; borrowing a paper from a friend or fraternity/sorority archives; or turning in unaltered work from a previous course.
How do I create a “proper” bulleted list?
Consistency is the most important aspect here. If the writer of a text is inserting a bulleted list within a longer, non-bulleted text, and the bulleted text forms a sentence, so to speak, the first letter is usually not capitalized. Here is an example.
In all of Virginia Woolf’s major texts of fiction, she includes:
– stream of consciousness,
– references to her family, and
– feminist issues.
The other way to do it is as follows.
All of Virginia Woolf’s major texts of fiction include the following:
– Stream-of-consciousness texts
– Family references, especially so her mother
– Issues directly related to feminism
It is important, in the last type, to precede the bulleted list with a
complete sentence. It is also very important to remember parallelism. In
other words, make sure you begin each bulleted list with either a noun or
an action verb, but not one or the other. Again, consistency is the key.
Also, remember that as in an outline, there should never be only one bullet item; you should only use bullets with an actual list.
What is an absolute phrase?
An absolute phrase is a phrase that modifies a noun and is connected to a sentence without the use of a conjunction. An absolute phrase could be removed from a sentence and the sentence would still make sense. Here are some examples:
Marsha looked worried, her fears creeping up on her.
In this sentence above, “her fears creeping up on her” is the absolute phrase. “Creeping” modifies the noun “fears.” While the word “creeping” modifies the noun “fears,” the absolute phrase, “her fears creeping up on her,” modifies the complete sentence, “Marsha looked worried.”
I have grammar homework for my language arts/ESL grammar class. I need help with number 27, which deals with appositives. Here’s what question number 27 says…
Unfortunately, OWL staff are unable to answer large numbers of questions that require detailed responses.
If you require more in-depth grammatical information, we recommend books such as the following:
English Grammar in Use by Raymond Murphy
The Gregg Reference Manual by William Sabin
Rhetorical Grammar by Martha Kolln
While we understand that some of these books may be expensive, it is possible that your school library, or your local public/municipal library may have these books in their references section.
Science