7 th Grade Science Organisms Adaptations and their Ecosystems.
VCE Biology Unit 2 Area of Study 01 Adaptations of Organisms
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Transcript of VCE Biology Unit 2 Area of Study 01 Adaptations of Organisms
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VCE Biology Unit 2Area of Study 01
Adaptations of OrganismsSurviving a major disturbance
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Surviving a major disturbance
Fire• Victoria – major fires in 1851, 1898, 1905, 1906, 1912, 1914,
1919, 1926, 1932, 1939, 1942, 1943, 1944, 1952, 1962, 1965, 1968, 1969, 1972, 1977, 1980, 1983, 1985, 1997, 1998, 2002, 2003, 2005-2006, 2006-2007 and 2009Department of Sustainability and Environment “Fire and Other Emergencies”http://www.dse.vic.gov.au/dse/nrenfoe.nsf/childdocs/-D79E4FB0C437E1B6CA256DA60008B9EF?open
• Most Australian plants are adapted to fire.
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Bushfire, La Trobe Valley, February 2009
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Surviving a major disturbance
Epicormic buds of eucalypts• Flammable oils in leaves result in rapid hot fire• Destroys crowns of trees but only chars the
trunks• Bark is good insulator against heat• Bark protects underlying cambium layer• Cambium layer produces regenerative growth of
bark and woody tissue
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Surviving a major disturbance
Epicormic buds of eucalypts (continued)• Epicormic buds, which lie under the bark of stems
and roots, allow sprouting and re-growth• For plant stem to survive, both cambium layer and
epicormic buds must survive• Epicormic buds are kept dormant by growth
inhibitors produced by the crown of the tree
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Lady Talbot Drive, Marysville, August 2008
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Lady Talbot Drive, Marysville, February 2009
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Lady Talbot Drive. Marysville. April 2010
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Lady Talbot Drive, Marysville, April 2010
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Surviving a major disturbance
Lignotubers – underground protection• When all above ground parts of tree has been
destroyed, plants that have lignotubers, rhizomes (underground stems) or root suckers can regenerate from subterranean buds
• A lignotuber is a swelling at the base of the stem where dormant buds lie.
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Lignotubers
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Surviving a major disturbance
Tough wattle seeds• In Australian forests, Acacia species make up
most of the understorey• Acacia seeds have hard outer seed coats and
can survive high temperatures and require heat to germinate.
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Acacia seeds
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Acacia seedlings after fire
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Surviving a major disturbance
How do animals live with fire?• Small animals killed by fire, but fire burns in a mosaic pattern
and unburnt areas are left.• Predator birds patrol in front of fire front to catch prey• Butcherbirds eat animals exposed by lack of undergrowth• Parrots eat seeds and young plants in the regenerating forest• Some animals live underground to escape fire and predators
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Tarra Bulga National Park, December 2009
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Just north of Tarra Bulga National Park, December 2009
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Just north of Tarra Bulga National Park, December 2009