Teacher Notes
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Teacher Notes![]() West Nile Virus TransmissionSuper Value GameMaterials Included In Kit
Dry-erase markers, blue, 3
Dry-erase markers, red, 6 West Nile Virus Playing Cards, laminated, Crows, 3 West Nile Virus Playing Cards, laminated, Horses, 3 West Nile Virus Playing Cards, laminated, Humans, 6 West Nile Virus Playing Cards, laminated, Robins, 9 West Nile Virus Playing Cards, laminated, Scrub Jays, 3 Additional Materials Required
Stopwatch
Prelab Preparation
Safety PrecautionsThis laboratory activity is considered nonhazardous. Please follow all laboratory safety guidelines. DisposalWipe check marks off of the cards with a damp cloth or paper towel. All materials may be saved for future use. Lab Hints
Teacher Tips
Correlation to Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)†Science & Engineering PracticesDeveloping and using modelsAnalyzing and interpreting data Constructing explanations and designing solutions Disciplinary Core IdeasMS-LS2.A: Interdependent Relationships in EcosystemsHS-LS2.A: Interdependent Relationships in Ecosystems HS-LS2.C: Ecosystem Dynamics, Functioning, and Resilience HS-LS2.D: Social Interactions and Group Behavior HS-LS4.C: Adaptation Crosscutting ConceptsPatternsCause and effect Structure and function Systems and system models Performance ExpectationsMS-LS2-2: Construct an explanation that predicts patterns of interactions among organisms across multiple ecosystems. Answers to Prelab Questions
Sample Data{11260_Data_Table_1}
Answers to Questions
ReferencesFrom Birds to People: The West Nile Virus Story. Howard Hughes Medical Institute. http://www.hhmi.org/biointeractive/birdspeople-west-nile-virus-story (Accessed August 2014). Recommended Products
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Student Pages
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Student Pages![]() West Nile Virus TransmissionIntroductionWest Nile Virus was first found in the United States in New York City during the summer of 1999. Since then, cases have been documented across the continental United States. It is important to study disease transmission such as WNV because it can help scientists determine how infectious diseases originate, how they spread from one species to another and why cases spike and practically disappear depending on the time of the year. Concepts
BackgroundVector-borne diseases are illnesses such as viruses, bacteria and parasites that living creatures carry and pass on to other living creatures. The living creatures that carry and pass on the disease are known as vectors. Vectors are typically insects or arachnids such as mosquitos, fleas, lice, mites or ticks. For example, mosquitoes carry the infectious agents that cause West Nile Virus. Other vector-borne diseases include Lyme disease, Dengue fever, Avian influenza and rabies. Having a vector, such as a mosquito, increases the virus’s ability to spread. {11260_Background_Figure_1_West Nile virus transmission}
Different species of mosquitos have different preferred “blood meal” prey. Birds are a favorite host. Some hosts are more infectious than others. For example, crows and blue jays are much more infectious than robins. Species that are highly infectious allow the virus to replicate more easily inside their body. Therefore, if an uninfected mosquito bites a highly infectious species they are more likely to contract the virus and pass it on. Humans are much less infectious than birds. Therefore, it is difficult for the virus to replicate inside them as a host. Humans and other animals such as horses are known as dead-end hosts. Although the virus can infect humans and sometimes cause illness, it will not spread. If an uninfected mosquito bites an infected human the virus will not be transmitted to the mosquito. This is because the virus is not able to replicate enough inside a human for a mosquito to aquire the virus. Once humans obtain the virus, the only way it could be further transmitted to someone else is if they gave blood for a transfusion or donated an organ. Humans have a wide variety of reactions to contracting the virus. More than 80% of those who obtain West Nile from a mosquito will have no symptoms at all. Mild cases of West Nile infections may cause a slight fever or headache. More severe infections are marked by a rapid onset of a high fever with head and body aches, disorientation, tremors, convulsions and, in the most severe cases, paralysis or death. Usually symptoms occur from 3 to 14 days after the bite of an infected mosquito. Individuals at the highest risk for serious illness are those 50 years of age or older. Experiment OverviewIt is important to understand how disease vectors aid to spread a particular disease quickly. By studying West Nile researchers can gain a greater understanding of other similarly transferred viruses such as Dengue Fever. In this game students will play a vector (mosquito) or a host organism to simulate how West Nile Virus is transferred from one organism to another and how it effects overall populations. Materials
Dry-erase marker, blue
Dry-erase marker, red Stopwatch West Nile Virus Playing Cards, laminated Prelab Questions
Safety PrecautionsThis laboratory activity is considered nonhazardous. Please follow all laboratory safety guidelines. ProcedureRound 1
Student Worksheet PDF |