Environment Diversity/Biomes (Chapter 39)faculty.sdmiramar.edu/bhaidar/Bio 107 Documents... ·...

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Environment Diversity/Biomes (Outline) (Chapter 39) 1. Compare and contrast ecology, ecosystem, community, and biome. 2. The abiotic chemical and physical factors and the biosphere 3. Aquatic biomes and abiotic and biotic factors affecting the organism in aquatic ecosystems 4. Terrestrial biomes and factors contributing to their climates 5. The eight major terrestrial biomes and their vegetation

Transcript of Environment Diversity/Biomes (Chapter 39)faculty.sdmiramar.edu/bhaidar/Bio 107 Documents... ·...

Page 1: Environment Diversity/Biomes (Chapter 39)faculty.sdmiramar.edu/bhaidar/Bio 107 Documents... · Chaparral. Biome • Dominated by spiny shrubs (Southern California) • Characterized

Environment Diversity/Biomes (Outline) (Chapter 39)

1. Compare and contrast ecology, ecosystem, community, and biome.

2. The abiotic chemical and physical factors and the biosphere3. Aquatic biomes and abiotic and biotic factors affecting the

organism in aquatic ecosystems4. Terrestrial biomes and factors contributing to their climates5. The eight major terrestrial biomes and their vegetation

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Atom

Molecules

Organelle

Cell

Tissue

Organ

Organ system

Organism

Population

Community

Ecosystems

Bioshpere

The Hierarchical Structural Organization of Life

Anatomy&

Physiology

EcologyStudy of interactions of

living organisms with their surrounding environment

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Ecology

• The scientific study of interactions among organisms and their environment, such as the interactions organisms have with each other and with their abiotic environment

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Environmentalism

• The broad philosophy, ideology and social movement that views living things other than humans, and the natural environment as a whole, are deserving of consideration in reasoning about the morality of political, economic, and social policies.

• The advocacy of the preservation, restoration, or improvement of the natural environment; especially: the movement to control pollution

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• Rachel Carson a pioneer who documented her concerns about the global dangers of pesticide abuse in her 1962 book Silent Springwww.rachelcarson.org

Environmental awareness is relatively new

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Ecosystems and Biomes

– The biosphere consists of ecosystems composed of • biotic living communities and • abiotic nonliving physical and chemical factors

– Biomes are particular ecosystems with distinct communities and climate• Aquatic biomes: fresh water and marine• Terrestrial biomes: 8 eight major ones, each with

own climate and characteristic plant life

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Primary producers fuel biomes

Section 39.1

• primary producers use an energy source (usually sunlight) to build organic molecules as food to support all other organisms:– Plants on land (terrestrial ecosystems)– Phytoplankton in water (aquatic ecosystems)

Figure 39.1

(a): ©David Nardini/Taxi/Getty Images; (b): ©Kevin Schafer/Alamy;(c): ©Kristy-Anne Glubish/Design Pics/Corbis RF; (d): ©PHOVOIR/FCM Graphic/Alamy RF

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Abiotic FactorsSome abiotic factors important in ecosystems include:

• Light (solar energy)• Moisture (water)• Temperature• Nutrient availability• Other aquatic factors:

o Oxygen availability (aquatic ecosystems)o Salinity (aquatic ecosystems)

• Other terrestrial factorso Fireo Wind

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Earth’s Water

Section 39.4

Water distribution on Earth

- Oceans: 97%- Fresh water: 3% o Glaciers and the

polar ice sheets ~2/3 of this fresh water

o Groundwatero Soilo atmosphere. o Surface water: lakes

and rivers

Figure 39.18

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Aquatic Ecosystems

– Oceans cover about 75% of the Earth’s surface– Major factors shaping aquatic communities

Light and the availability of nutrients are the• Salt water (Marine )• Fresh Water

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Edge of Continents

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Continental Shelves

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Marine Biomes: Key Factors• Sunlight and where they live: solid bottom or in open

water• Three ones:

I. Intertidal zoneII. Photic zone (light)

Continental shelf (solid floor)Pelagic zone (open water)

III. Aphotic zone (light)TwilightNo light

Benthic (sea floor) Open water

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High waterLow water

Oarweed (to 2 m)

Brain coral(to 1.8 m)Intertidal

zone

Continental shelf

Benthic realm

Photiczone

Apho

tic zo

ne

Pelagic realm

Sea pen(to 45 cm)

(seafloor)

Brittle star(to 60 cm)

Sponges (1 cm to 1 m)

PhytoplanktonZooplankton

Octopus(to 10 m)

Sea spider(1 to 90 cm)

Glasssponge(to 1.8 m)

Sea cucumber(to 40 cm)

Rat-tail fish(to 80 cm)

Tripod fish(to 30 cm)

Man-of-war(to 50 m)

Blue shark(to 2 m)

Turtle(60 to 180 cm)

Sperm whale(10 to 20 m)

Hatchet fish(2 to 60 cm)

Gulper eel(to 180 cm)

Anglerfish(45 cm to 2 m)

200 m

“Twilight”

1,000 to4,000 m

No light

6,000 to10,000 m

Marine Biomes

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The intertidal zone: where water meets land – Salt marshes, sand, rocky beaches, and tide pools– Often flooded by high tides and then left dry during

low tides

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• The pelagic zone: open ocean– Phytoplankton and zooplankton– Supports highly motile animals such as fishes,

squids, and marine mammals

• The benthic zone: bottom of the ocean– supports organisms based upon water depth and

light penetration

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• The photic zone: where light penetrates and photosynthesis occurs

• The aphotic zone: dark region of the ocean – most extensive part of the biosphere– Habitat for a diverse and dense populations

.

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• Coral reefs: in warm tropical waters above the continental shelf– support a huge diversity of invertebrates and fishes

• Coral reefs are easily degraded by: – Pollution– Global warming– Native and

introduced predators

– Human souvenir hunters

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Freshwater Ecosystems• Include: lakes, ponds, rivers, streams, and wetlands• Abiotic factors are: Current, sunlight, O2 level, and

nutrients

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Wetlands

• Transitional Btwnaquatic & land

• Highly variable• Examples

– Wet mossy bogs and tropical swamps

– Seasonally wet vernal pools

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Lost Wetlands of Los Angeles

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Estuary is the body of water where rivers meet oceans

– The saltiness ranges from <1% to 3% – They provide nursery areas for oysters, crabs, and many

fishes– Rapidly dwindling due to development

Delta is the land mass Formed by river sediments

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Terrestrial Ecosystems• Eight major types of biomes• Distinguished by predominant vegetation• Biomes are influenced by regional climate

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Climate• Prevailing long-term weather patterns results in a

variety of ecosystems. • Climate is determined by

1. Solar energy 2. The Earth’s rotation around the sun

– The Earth’s tilt causes the seasons– Wind patterns

3. Ocean Currents warms & cools coastal areas- created by winds, planet rotation, unequal heating of surface waters,

and the locations and shapes of continents

4. Mountains

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Low angle ofincoming sunlight

Sunlight strikesmost directly

Low angle ofincoming sunlight

Atmosphere60°SSouth Pole

Tropic ofCapricorn30°S

0° (equator)

30°NTropic ofCancer

North Pole60°N

Solar radiation varies with latitude due to the uneven heating of Earth’s surface

Solar energy and earth’s tilt

23.5°N

23.5°S

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Trade winds

Ascendingmoist airreleasesmoisture

Trade winds

Descendingdry airabsorbsMoisture-(westerlies)

Temperatezone

Temperatezone

Tropics

Doldrums0°

Uneven heating causes rain and winds

Descendingdry airabsorbsMoisture-(westerlies)

Air circulation patterns influence climate

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Earths wind patterns – In the tropics, Earth's rapidly moving surface deflects

vertically circulating air, blowing winds from east to west (Trade Winds)

– In temperate zones, the slower-moving surface blows winds from west to east(The westerlies)

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Ocean currents influence climate

Section 39.2

• Earth’s prevailing winds cause major ocean currents.(warm = red; cool = blue)

• Warm and cool ocean currents influence coastal climates.

Figure 39.5

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Greenland

NorthAmerica

Europe

Africa

Gulf Stream

PacificOcean

AtlanticOcean

South America

Atlantic Ocean currents

The Day After Tomorrow (Movie 2004)

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EastWinddirection

PacificOcean

CoastRange

SierraNevada

Rain shadowDesert

Rainfall is affected by location of mountains, prevailing winds, and ocean current patterns

If the climate in two geographically separate areas is similar, the same type of biome may occur in both places

• elevation, the top of a mountain is generally cooler than its bottom• block wind and clouds on their upwind side.

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Biome Types in relation to temperature and rainfall

http://www.learner.org/courses/envsci/unit/text.php?unit=4&secNum=2

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30°N

Tropic ofCancer

60°N

Arcticcircle

Equator

Tropic ofCapricorn30°S

Tropical forestSavannaDesertChaparral

Temperate grasslandTemperate broadleaf forestConiferous forestTundra

High mountainsPolar ice

Terrestrial Ecosystems (Biomes)Earth’s Climate and Biomes

www.aresearchguide.com/biomes.htmlhttp://www.blueplanetbiomes.org/world_biomes.htm

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Tropical Rain ForestsSeveral types in the warm, moist belt along the equator– Most diverse ecosystem on Earth– Poor soil growth depend on fast decomposition– Large-scale human destruction of tropical rain forests endangers

many species and may alter world climate

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Savannas Drier grasslands with scattered trees in tropical

areas and some non-tropical• Fire-adapted vegetation

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DesertsDriest of all terrestrial ecosystems– characterized by low and unpredictable rainfall– Desertification is a significant environmental problem

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The Chaparral Biome• Dominated by spiny shrubs (Southern California) • Characterized by cool, rainy winters and dry, hot

summers• Poor soil low to

moderate diversity– Chaparral vegetation is adapted to periodic fires

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Temperate GrasslandsFound in the interiors of the continents, where

winters are cold (croplands of the world)– Excellent soil with moderate to high diversity– Drought, fires, and grazing animals prevent trees from growing– Farms have replaced most of North America’s temperate

grasslands

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Temperate Broadleaf ForestsSufficient moisture to support growth of large trees• trees drop leaves in winter• soil excellent with moderate diversity – Almost all the original broadleaf forests in North America

have been drastically altered by agriculture and urban development

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Coniferous Forests or Taiga/Boreal• The largest terrestrial biome on Earth• Evergreen with poor soil and low to moderate

diversity (dominated by a few species of trees)• Characterized by long, cold winters and short,

wet summers

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The Arctic TundraLies between the taiga and the permanently frozen

polar regions– A treeless biome characterized by long, bitter-cold winters

cold, wind, and permafrost (continuously frozen subsoil)– plants very

low to ground minimal root system