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Explore Biodiversity Using a Homemade Bug Vacuum!

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Summary

Active Time
20-30 minutes
Total Project Time
20-30 minutes
Key Concepts
Biodiversity, ecology, habitat
Credits
Teisha Rowland, PhD, Science Buddies
Sabine De Brabandere, PhD, Science Buddies
A picture of a beetle

Introduction

It might seem impossible to estimate how many different bugs live in a nearby field, or how many types of birds live in a forest, but wildlife biologists often have to try to determine the number of different species in a given habitat. This plays an important role in helping us understand how healthy the environment is. In this activity, you will get to take on the role of a wildlife biologist by examining the biodiversity of bugs and other small invertebrates (such as spiders, centipedes, and roly-polies) in your neighborhood or backyard using a homemade bug vacuum!

This activity is not recommended for use as a science fair project. Good science fair projects have a stronger focus on controlling variables, taking accurate measurements, and analyzing data. To find a science fair project that is just right for you, browse our library of over 1,200 Science Fair Project Ideas or use the Topic Selection Wizard to get a personalized project recommendation.

Materials

  • Plastic container with lid, approximately one-cup or half-pint size
  • Single hole punch or leather awl. (Use caution and have an adult help with sharp objects.)
  • Two flexible drinking straws. (Wider ones are better, as they will allow larger bugs to be caught.)
  • Tape
  • Pen or pencil
  • Nylon stocking that can be cut up
  • Scissors
  • Clear plastic wrap
  • Access to an area in your yard, a field, or other outdoor place where you think bugs might live. Tip: These types of small invertebrates can often be found under rotting wood, stones, and decaying leaves. If it is hot and dry outside, more bugs may be found in shady and/or moist areas.

Prep Work

  1. With the help of an adult, make a hole in the side of the plastic container using a single hole punch or carefully using a leather awl. The hole should be about a half inch below the top rim of the container. Make sure that when the container has its lid on, it does not block the hole.

  2. Using the same technique, make a hole opposite the first one, again about a half inch below the container's top rim.
  3. Insert the mouth end of a flexible straw into one of the holes. Stick the straw about an inch into the container. If the straw does not fit tightly into the hole, wrap tape around the straw until it fits snugly into the hole. If the straw is too large for the hole, gently push a pen or pencil through the hole to widen it until the straw just fits. Make sure the connection between the straw and the hole is snug.
    Think about:
    Why do you think the connection between the straw and the hole needs to be snug?

  4. Cover the mouth end of the second straw with a small piece of nylon stocking. Use tape to secure the stocking piece to the straw. If necessary, overlap two layers of the stocking so that air can pass through, but bugs cannot.
    Think about:
    Why do you think it is important to cover one straw like this?
  5. Insert the covered end of the second straw into the second hole in the plastic container. Again, make sure the fit is snug, and stick the straw about an inch into the container.

  6. Cut out the center of the plastic container's lid. You can do this by folding the lid in half and cutting out the center so that only a half-inch border around the lid's rim remains. This will be the observation window of your bug vacuum.

  7. Stretch a piece of clear plastic wrap over the top of the plastic container.

  8. Snap the container's lid back on to hold the plastic wrap in place. Make sure there are no holes in the plastic wrap, or your subjects could escape!

Instructions

  1. Bring your bug vacuum to an area in your yard, a field, or other outdoor place where you think bugs might live.

  2. If you want, you can use sticks and/or rocks to mark off a small area that is roughly four feet by four feet. This will help you define the area you are surveying for bug biodiversity.
    Think about:
    What types of bugs do you think you will find here?
  3. Carefully search the small area for bugs. You will need to have a search pattern so that you do not crush the resident bugs before you suck them up, and also so you know what parts you have checked already. (For example, you could start at one corner of your area and walk along its edge, looking into the area you are surveying, and then carefully check the area inside, only walking on places you have already collected bugs from. Alternatively, you could break your area up into smaller sections and check each one at a time.)
    Think about:
    Do you see many bugs?
  4. When you find a bug, take your bug vacuum and gently place the filterless straw so that the end is very close to the bug. Place the other straw with the nylon filter in your mouth and breathe in forcefully. This, like a household vacuum, will suck in the bug. Repeat this process until the bug has been transferred into the plastic container chamber.
  5. Repeat this process until most of the bugs in your small surveying area have been collected. Tip: Do not forget to check for bugs under wood, rocks, and leaves—but get ready for them to quickly scatter!
  6. Examine the bugs you collected by looking at them through the plastic wrap window of the bug vacuum.
    Think about:
    How many different types of bugs did you collect? How many of each type did you collect? Can you identify the different types of bugs you caught?
  7. Scientists say an area has a large biodiversity when a large variety of life is found in the area.
    Think about:
    Based on your data, do you think there is a lot of biodiversity in the area you chose to survey?

Cleanup

Release the bugs back outdoors, preferably close to the area in which you found them.

What Happened?

Did you find many different types of bugs in the area you surveyed? Were there many ants, beetles, earwigs and/or other bugs—or things that looked like bugs?

If you surveyed an area that has good biodiversity, you should have found many different types of bugs. If you did not, the area may have been too small or conditions may not have been right for supporting a diverse population of bugs. Some of the most common types of bugs in North America include various flies, beetles (including ladybugs), butterflies and moths, ants, bees, wasps, earwigs, grasshoppers, and crickets, among many others. You may have also found spiders, pill bugs (also called roly-polies), wood lice, centipedes and/or millipedes. These are not technically insects but, like bugs, they are small invertebrates. Spiders are arachnids and pill bugs and wood lice are a type of crustacean called isopods. Depending on the exact type of area you surveyed, you may have found different types of bugs, because different species prefer various conditions.

Digging Deeper

Ecology is the study of living things and the habitats they inhabit. A habitat is the natural environment in which particular species live. It is defined by physical factors like the temperature range, moisture, light exposure, soil type, availability of food, etc. In ecology, the more different species that live in a given habitat, the healthier it is considered to be. The degree of species variety found in a habitat is referred to as its biodiversity. In a given habitat, the plants and animals normally rely on one another—for their entire life cycles. For example, if berries from a bush are eaten by a field mouse, the mouse will help transport the seeds inside the berries to different locations, thereby allowing more berry bushes to grow. The mouse might then be eaten by a bird of prey, like a hawk, and on and on the chain goes. This web of relationships is called an ecosystem. The greater the biodiversity, the larger the ecosystem, and the healthier the habitat is thought to be.

Wildlife biologists study and monitor the health of habitats and ecosystems. One way they do this is to survey (identify and count) groups of plants and animals to determine how much biodiversity is in a habitat. In this activity, you preformed your own local biodiversity survey by making a "bug vacuum" to collect as many species of bugs that you could find.

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For Further Exploration

  • Research which species of bugs live in your area, then repeat this activity using bug guidebooks and websites to identify the samples you collected. Did the kinds of bugs you expected to find in your backyard match your results?
  • Compare two or more different habitats, such as a field and a forest. Do different locations have different bugs? Which habitat has more bug biodiversity? Why do you think this is?
  • Try changing the conditions in your survey area, such as by sprinkling the ground with water before doing your survey or waiting until just after it has lightly rained. Does changing conditions like this affect the biodiversity you find?

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Links

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