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BOY SCOUT RANK ADVANCEMENT
Scout
| Tenderfoot Scout | Second Class Scout
| First Class Scout Star, Life, Eagle
| Merit Badges Required for Eagle Scout Rank
| Merit Badges
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Environmental
Science Merit
Badge |
- Make a timeline of the history of environmental science in
America. Identify the contribution made by the Boy Scouts of America
to environmental science. Include dates, names of people or
organizations, and important events.
- Define the following terms and describe the relationships among
them: population, community, ecosystem, biosphere, symbiosis, niche,
habitat, conservation, threatened species, endangered species,
extinction.
- Do ONE activity in EACH of the following categories (using the
activities in this merit badge pamphlet as the bases for planning
and carrying out your projects):
- Ecology
- Conduct an experiment to find out how living things
respond to changes in their environments. Discuss your
observations with your counselor.
- Conduct an experiment illustrating the greenhouse effect.
Keep a journal of your data and observations. Discuss your
conclusions with your counselor.
- Air Pollution
- Perform an experiment to test for particulates that
contribute to air pollution. Discuss your findings with your
counselor.
- Conduct a study to test the effects of acid rain on
plants. Discuss your findings with your counselor.
- Water Pollution
- Conduct an experiment to show how living things react to
thermal pollution. Discuss your observations with your
counselor.
- Conduct an experiment to identify the methods that could
be used to mediate (reduce) the effects of an oil spill on
waterfowl. Discuss your results with your counselor.
- Land Pollution
- Conduct an experiment to illustrate soil erosion by water.
Take photographs or make a drawing of the soil before and
after your experiment, and make a poster showing your
results. Present your poster to your patrol or troop.
- Perform an experiment to determine the effect of an oil
spill on land. Share your journal and discuss your
conclusions with your counselor.
- Endangered Species
- Do research on one endangered species found in your state.
Find out what its natural habitat is, why it is endangered,
what is being done to preserve it, and how many individual
organisms are left in the wild. Prepare a 100-word report
about the organism, including a drawing. Present your report
to your patrol or troop.
- Do research on one species that was endangered or
threatened but which has now recovered. Find out how the
organism recovered, and what its new status is. Write a
100-word report on the species and discuss it with your
counselor.
- Resource Recovery
- Perform an experiment on packaging materials to find out
which ones are biodegradable. Discuss your conclusions with
your counselor.
- Find out if your local community has a recycling program
in effect. If it does, find out what items are recycled, and
who pays for recycling. If your community does not have a
recycling program, write questions for and conduct a survey
on recycling. Include questions about attitudes toward
recycling, what should be recycled, and your community's
willingness to support a recycling program. Discuss your
findings with your counselor.
- Build an ecosystem in a bottle. Include soil, plants, fungi, and
small animals found in your local environment. Maintain the
ecosystem for at least seven days after completing construction of
the ecosystem. Observe it daily, and keep a record of your
observations. Discuss your observations with your counselor.
- Choose an outdoor area to study. In your study area, do ONE of the
following:
- Mark off three study plots of four square yards each, and
count the number of species found there. Then estimate how much
space is occupied by each species found in the plots. Make a
chart, graph, or table to compare the plots. Write a report that
adequately discusses the biodiversity and population density of
your study area. Discuss your report with your counselor.
- Make four visits to the study area, staying for at least 30
minutes each time, to observe the living and nonliving parts of
the ecosystem. Keep a journal of your observations, including a
discussion of differences noted during the four visits. Write a
report on your observations and discuss it with your counselor.
- Propose a hypothetical construction project in your community and
prepare a limited environmental impact statement for the project.
Study the area to see what the impact of the project might be upon
the living and nonliving parts of the ecosystem.
- Develop a plan that would help solve an environmental problem,
reduce an environmental impact, or affect environmental awareness in
your community. Include plans for a specific project that could be
done by your patrol or troop.
- Discuss three possible careers in the field of environmental
science. Identify the education that you would need to pursue ONE of
these careers.
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