pdf, 322.92 KB
pdf, 322.92 KB
pdf, 174.93 KB
pdf, 174.93 KB

There’s a lot more to the rainforest than meets the eye! A whole world lies beyond our senses. Using the power of augmented reality, 360° camera views and interactive infographics, we bring rainforest ecology to life, enabling pupils to see the invisible relationships, systems and processes at play.

We have developed two experiences, which can be used by teachers in different ways: ‘Living Lens’ and ‘Weather Maker’.

The Living Lens
Living Lens experience
Using their ‘Super Senses’, animals can see parts of the world that are invisible to us. The adaptations that they possess help them to locate their food and survive in the rainforest.

Mosquitos sense heat and carbon dioxide (CO₂), helping them track their food: warm-blooded animals. Bats hear ultrasound and navigate in the dark using echolocation. Bees can see ultraviolet (UV) light. UV patterns on flowers guide them to their food.

The Living Lens experience helps pupils to understand the relationships between plants and their animal partners, understanding how plants signal to animals and the ‘Super Senses’ that animals use to detect them.

The Weather Maker
Weather maker AR experience
Trees have their feet in the ground and heads in the sky. The Weather Maker experience shows pupils the role that trees and forests play in global cycles.

As part of the water cycle, trees literally pull water up their internal plumbing systems (xylem) as it evaporates out of the leaves as water vapour. This forms vast, white, sun-reflecting clouds that help cool the climate and make rain that waters lands near and far. Hence the name – ‘rain’ forests.

As part of the carbon cycle, trees capture CO₂ from the air and turn it into sugar (by adding sunlight and water). This process, called photosynthesis, releases oxygen as a by-product ‒ handy! Microscopic fungi called ‘mycorrhiza’ form a symbiotic relationship with the plant root systems, receiving sugars from the plants and in return helping the plants to absorb water and nutrients from the soil. The forest trees, soil life and soil compost (dead stuff) are massive carbon stores. The more solid carbon compounds in the forest, the less CO₂ in the air- helping us to fight climate change.

The Rainforest Dashboard interactive infographic helps pupils to see the role that rainforests have in the creation of weather and the regulation of the global climate. The ‘environmental conditions’ graph allows pupils to observe how various parameters change in the rainforest over a 24-hour period and is filterable so that pupils can investigate different parameters.

https://www.edenproject.com/learn/schools/the-invisible-rainforest-for-schools

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