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Geography 417 California for Educators Lesson One California’s Biogeography Plants and Animals • Why is this important? – Conditions that encourage or prevent native plants and animals offer a blueprint for what can be done agriculturally in the state. – Many of the cues given to us are not heeded and ecological problems can result. – California has some of the greatest natural diversity in the world. Preliminary Definitions • Ecology: The study of interactions between life-forms and their environment • Ecosystem: a total assemblage of components living and non living that compose the interactive sphere of a group of organisms • Biome: the largest category of ecosystem, perhaps stretching over half a continent More Definitions • Biogeography: the study of the variation in ecosystems from place to place. • The distributions of biomes and ecosystems is largely a factor of conditions of heat, moisture and topography (all condition soil chemistry). • The characteristics of biomes are largely a factor of climate, so it is important that you integrate knowledge from last chapter. Habitats • A habitat is the home environment most typical for a given species. • Habitats are characterized by special soil, topographic, light and heat conditions. • Various habitats are possible in a small geographic space. • Each plant/animal may occupy a certain place/niche in a habitat, sometimes exclusive to that species. Habitat (cont’) • A group of organisms that live together is called a community and these communities often assemble themselves in predictable patterns called associations (Hickory-Oak). • A biome is a very large associative community. Habitats (fig) The Foo d W e b • Energy is transferred through an ecosystem network called the food web or food chain. • Plants and algae, because they are at the bottom of the food chain are known as primary producers. • Primary producers convert sun energy into carbohydrates through a process known as photosynthesis. F o o d W e b (c o n t’ ) • With each transfer of sun energy through the food web, energy is lost in a process called respiration. • An enormous amount of energy, originally in the system is lost with each move up the chain (can be 10-50% each link). • Wasted energy is mostly lost as heat and cannot be recovered by ot h e r s p e c i e s . • Requires that producers be most numerous and consumers be fewest in a food chain. Energy Loss up the Food Chain (fig) Biomass • Biomass is a measure of plant and animal matter frequently used to characterize the basic nature of an ecosystem. • Measured as the dry weight of all the organic matter in a given unit of space. • Forests have the most biomass, mostly because trees get so big. • Some systems lose a great deal of biomass annually to consumers and decomposers • • • • • What Factors Contribute to the Creation of Biomes / Communities? Water Availability Heat and Cold Slope and Aspect Soil Chemistry Other plants and animals Water Need • Xerophytes are plants that are adapted to insufficient water conditions • They include plants that live in dry climate but also plants that grow in well drained soils. • Many have thick (storage), waxy leaves that reduce transpiration or no leaves at all. • Some xerophytes have deep roots, others have extensive but shallow roots. • Many xerophytes have irregular life-cycles or dormancy periods during extra dry times. California Precipitation Tropophytes • Plants that respond to seasonal patterns in moisture availability by dropping leaves and going dormant. • Deciduous trees are good examples, but grasses also have dormancy periods. Sclerophylls • Characterize the woody plants with thick leathery leaves that are well adapted to drought conditions • The Live Oak is such a plant. • Some are “evergreen broadleaf” trees because they do not drop their leaves during a dry season, but retain them in case moisture returns. • Common in California Xeric Animals • A variety of adaptive strategies have evolved in animals living in dr y c l i m a t e s . • In addition to the brine shrimp, what are some others? Climatic Variance in CA • Availability of water (drought/freeze) (2” - 80”+) – Relative Humidity • Length of Growing Season (5 weeks - 365 days) – from last spring freeze to 1st winter freeze California Temperature Organisms and Temperature • Temperature regulates a number of the functions of plants and animals as well. • Temperature helps organisms know when to mate, enter metamorphosis, shed leaves, etc. • Temperature also indirectly affects plants by regulating evaporation and transpiration rates and by affecting soil characteristics. • Deciduous/Evergreen Behavior – cold, low sun, or drought Temperature (cont’) • Many plants cannot survive freezing temperatures. • Cold blooded animals have no internal mechanism for regulating temperature so must use the environment to do so. Many must migrate or become dormant during cold weather. • Hibernating animals use the constancy of soil temperatures to help them survive during a dormant period in cold weather. • Warm blooded animals have a variety of mechanisms for regulating temperatures and can survive in a broader range of climates. Other Climate Factors • Intensity of light and duration of light are other important factors regulating plant life. • Some plants adapt to shade by growing very large leafs, others grow to heights not reached by other plants. • Photo period (length of day) helps plants know when to engage in various processes. • Wind is another physical process that organisms use to determine appropriate “behavior”. Altitudinal Zonation • Changes in altitude create changes in temperature and moisture which in turn create differences in vegetative cover. • figure Vertical Zonation of Vegetation Geomorphic Factors • How steep a hillside is and which direction it faces can affect the prevalence of a species. • (slope and aspect) • Can you think of examples? Edaphic (Soil) Factors • Soil characteristics, like how much sand or clay is in it, affects what type of plants can grow in a place (nutrient content, moisture content) and in turn may affect what sort of animals reside there. Bioclimatic Frontier • By using a variety of measures, we can frequently figure out the physical boundaries, or limits of a species range. • Can you think of a plant or animal which you are familiar with its frontier? • • • • Interactions Among Species Species may live together in a variety of arrangements. Species may compete for scarce resources. One may predate (eat) another. One might live off another (parasite) – Is predation and parasitism always bad? More Interactions • Alleopathy is the production of poisons that reduce competition by nearby plants. – Common among some desert plants • Symbiosis is?? – Commensalism: epiphytes – Protocooperation-not necessary but helpful – Mutualism-each party needs the other Ecological Succession • Ecosystems often go through stages (seres) of development, culminating with a stable arrangement of organisms called a climax community. • Explains the process whereby a field cleared by humans or fire will eventually return to “natural” state. • Other landscape items also engage in succession. Succession (cont’) • After a disturbance, the first group of organisms to emerge are called pioneers. • Pioneers are mostly annual weeds, but they provide important shade and nutrients to the soil. • Weeds give way to taller grasses and woody shrubs, which in turn give way to pine trees and eventually (in some cases) to hardwoods. Succession (cont’) • Climax forests are often susceptible to fires, disease or pest invasions which in turn renew the process. • Some forests need fire for regeneration. • Along with the slow changes in plant life, animal life changes in response to the prevailing vegetative patterns. Ecological Succession Natural Vegetation • Natural Vegetation is what you might find in a place if humans had not interfered with the natural succession. • Only in a few biomes is the natural regime still largely in tact. • Few areas in the midlatitudes are natural • Exotic plants also alter the natural vegetation pattern • What is “natural” up for debate. California Vegetation Zones (fig) California Forests (fig) California Landcover (fig) Terrestrial Ecosystems: Biomes • Great ecosystems of the world that include generally (and with sub-categories called formation classes): • • • • • • • • • • • • Forests Savanna Grassland Desert Tundra Natural Vegetation of the World West (map) Calif. “Biomes” Needleleaf/Coastal forests Chaparral and Coastal Shrublands Oak Mixed Woodlands Short grass prairie Semi desert Desert scrub The Littoral Biomes and California Biomes may be inappropriate to the study of biogeography in California because the immense variation in ecosystems in this relatively small territory and because biomes are too large to capture some of the great variance within California’s biomes. Coastal Sand Ecosystems Includes both the littoral strand (beach) and dunes region. Temperature Soil (nutrient, drainage) Salinity Humans Introduced species May support several species of trees, marsh The Littoral • More than 1,000 miles of coastline, much of it still largely intact as a result of environmental law and the California Coastal Act of 1976. • Coastal Lagoons and Marshes - stops on the Pacific flyway for migrating birds. More than 90% have been destroyed. • Environmental Issues: Much of SoCal littoral has been dramatically modified and developed. • Sea Otters - 16,000 200 hundred years ago. By 1900, hunted to virtual extinction. Today there are roughly 1,500. • Fisheries - Monterey’s Cannery Row (sardines), Various tuna fisheries may be threatened. • Offshore Drilling - Santa Barbara Channel oil spill of 1968. El Segundo Blue Butterfly (fig) Scrub Forests • Dryland and Desert “forests” • Several types in California Coastal Scrub • “Soft chaparral, coastal sage” • Common in coastal areas below 2500 ft, so they share habitat with ? • Thin band along coast in north, more widespread in south; Climates range from moist to near desert • Many pyrophytic species Northern Coastal Scrub Mainly low elevation near coast Often found on old stabilized dunes Southern coastal sage scrub Medium-sized or small drought deciduous shrubs, with grayish-green leaves. Often these plants are aromatic with a sage-like or minty odor Formerly widespread in coastal southern California Grows in dry coastal areas with moderate temperatures Referred to as soft chaparral or sage scrub Chaparral • Covers 10% of the state • Climate, soil conditions make it more common in Southern CA. • Pyrophytic and famous • Controlled burning • Manzanita • Toyon and Hollywood • Animals of the chaparral? Bears? • • • • • Chaparral Widespread throughout California Occupy low dry slopes in north, cover much of southern mountains Known as hard chaparral - woody shrubs 10-15 ft high Common species include chamise, ceanothus, manzanita Many species fire adapted - root sprout, volatile oils (Manzanita) Sclerophyll Forest • We know this as chaparral shrub forest • Composed exclusively of short, drought resistant trees with tough leaves and thick bark and low branches. • Mostly really woodland and dominated by shrubs and grasses called a scrub forest. • Only found in California in the US, but in many Mediterranean regions and Australia. • Chaparral or dwarf forest in CA Sclerophyll Forests (map) Sclerophyll Forests (map) Chaparral (fig) Chamise (fig) Manzanita (fig) California Lilac (fig) Northern Coastal Scrub Communities (figs) Southern Coastal Scrub Communities (figs) Coastal Sage Scrub (figs) Laurel sumac (Malosma laurina), California sagebrush (Artemisia californica), White sage (Salvia apiana) in Diegan Coastal Sage Scrub Desert Biome • Semi-desert is drier than steppe and has little grass, but many tough little xerophytic plants such as sagebrush. • In the tropics similar climates produce great thorn tree deserts. • Some deserts have very specially adapted plants like the cactus or desert flowers. • Some deserts have virtually no plant life. • • • • Deserts West (map) Deserts West (map) High Deserts Significant seasonal and diurnal swings Evapotranspiration exceeds the 10in rain Poor soils Piñon Pine and Juniper grow in higher elevations where soil/moisture are better • Joshua Trees are indicative of the Mojave or high desert. Desert Survival Strategies Xerophytic Adaptations Schlerophyllous adaptations - small, waxy leaves or thorns replace leaves Succulents - stems modified to spongy water storage structures Ephemerals (obligate seeders) - fast reproductive cycle Deep tap roots - connect to perennial water. Wide spacing with shallow roots - collect sparse rainfall • • • • • Great Basin Sagebrush Dry areas with cold winters Mainly found east of Sierra and Cascades and east slopes of Southern California Mountains Often overlap with lower elevation range of Pinyon-Juniper Some sage older than 200 years Cold, dry climate Great Basin Sagebrush (fig) Joshua Tree (fig) Desert (fig) Creosote Bush Scrub (fig) Lower Scrub Deserts • Cover 30% of the state, mostly in the Southeastern region, but elsewhere • Soils, heat, drought, cold • No trees, • Sagebrush-scrub-creosote bush • King Clone= 11,000+ years old. • Jojoba • Barrel cactus, cholla, saguaro • ephemerals Grassland Biome • One type is the tall grass prairie that once extended from Illinois to the middle parts of Kansas, Iowa, Nebraska etc. Great farming. • Beyond that was short-grass prairie, which has much less vegetative cover and is created by drier conditions. Also known as steppe and is often used agriculturally. • Jumpers, diggers and racers. Grasslands West (map) Grasslands West (map) California’s Grasslands • Once covered 13% of the state • Where? Why? – Precipitation and soil porosity • What has this region been adapted by humans to function as ? • Effect of grazing non-native animals? Grassland Communities and Marshes • Formerly covered most of Sacramento, San Joaquin and Salinas Valleys • Habitat for as many as 50,000 - 100, 000 Native Americans • Huge areas of marsh and bunchgrasses - pronghorn antelope, elk, cougars, & bears • Areas with moderately low precipitation, hot summers • Have been modified earlier and more extensively than any other plant community • We don't know what native grasslands really like because alien grasses and grazing animals were introduced early by Spanish • Mediterranean species well adapted to conditions Grassland Communities and Marshes (fig) Forest Biome • Include six varieties of forest: • • • • • • • • • • • • • Low Latitude Forest (not in US) Monsoon Forest (wet-dry CA) Subtropical Evergreen Forest (not in CA) Midlatitude Deciduous Forest (CA) Needleleaf Forest (CA) Sclerophyll Forest or Scrub Forest (CA) • See above Savanna Biome Found in wet-dry climates. Few trees, lots of grassland and abundant shrubs. Multiple species with a variety of adaptive strategies apparent. Fire resistant and animal resistant. Many rain-green species that go dormant. Many grazing species and predators. Famous in Africa, but common as Oak Woodlands in California Oak Woodlands • Sometimes lumped in with Savanna, because these are open forests mixed with grasslands, wet-dry climates. • Common on edges of Great Valley • North slopes or wetter zones uphill or where soil moisture is held better by soil • Includes both deciduous and evergreen oaks, some are drought deciduous • Produce acorns • Much of native range destroyed Oak Woodlands (fig) Oak Woodlands (fig) Oak Woodlands (fig) Mixed Evergreen Forests • Occupies a zone between dry oak forests and the wetter needle leaf forests. • Many are winter deciduous Needleleaf Forests • Includes several important forest sub-types in California • Coniferous (or cone-bearing) Forest is a generally synonymous term • Needleleaf forest are generally found where conditions are too difficult for hardwood trees. • Generally are the most important commercial forests and are therefore most often controversial. Needleleaf Forests (map) Coastal Coniferous Forest Communities Closed-Cone Conifers Cones remain unopened on branches for years Occur in widely scattered stands, mainly in coastal mountains - fog may be important factor Distributions more widespread in past Include Monterey pine, cypress, bishop pine Torrey pine Coastal Coniferous Forests • Part of the temperate rainforest famous in Oregon and Washington • Cool temperatures, abundant precipitation, high humidity, soil conditions • Fog drip? • Understory, canopy • Douglas Fir, Coastal Redwood • Only 10% old growth forest remains Coast Redwoods • Tallest trees on earth • What allows them to grow so high? Foggy summers help prevent water loss and drip up to 20” of precipitation to forest floor. • What protections have they and other trees do not? • Why don’t other trees live to be 2000 years old? • Northern Spotted Owl 1990 Coastal Redwood Forest Sequoia sempervirens Ancient relict species once much more widespread Occur only in areas with mild temperatures and moisture available year round from Southern Oregon to Monterey Mild, wet winters North Coast Coniferous Forest Temperate rain forest Southern extension of Pacific Northwest forests Very wet, mild temperatures Coastal Redwoods Mountain Conifers • Include a variety of sub-biomes within California • They are classified generally by altitude, which affects what other ecologic factors necessary to create a particular habitat? Douglas Fir/Giant Sequoia (figs) Conifers (fig) Mixed Evergreen Forest Communities Contain conifers and broadleaf trees (black oak, aspen) Range from moister mountain regions of southern California to drier slopes in north Montane Coniferous Forest Communities Cover most mid-elevation ranges of west slope of Sierra Nevada and Cascades, higher Southern California mountains Strong elevational gradients in composition Giant sequoias endemic to west slope of Sierra Nevada (sequoia giganteum) Fire adapted - bark and seedlings need ash. Douglas Fir (Pseudotsuga menziesii) - natural hybrid of firs and pine. Christmas tree smell. Huge commercial harvest. Oregon state tree. Lower Montane Forests • Includes some of the worst soils, poorest rainfall of the mountain biomes and therefore some of the hardiest trees. • Ponderosa Pine and Jeffrey Pine. • Pacific Yew and Cancerous tumors • Multiple species in California, which is odd for needleleaf forests. Pinyon-Juniper Woodland • Widespread in Northeast, east of the Sierra Nevada and higher desert mountains of Southern California • Open woodland with abundant bare soil • Generally range around 4000-8000' Pinyon-Juniper Woodland (fig) • • • • • • • • Higher Montane Forests Better moisture, but often rockier, well drained soils predominate Red Fir on lower slopes Lodgepole Pine higher up Quaking Aspens Subalpine Forests The highest ecosystem in California From 6000 ft to the tree line Flag trees and snow pack height. Mountain Hemlock may be the most common species, may look like a shrub • Bristlecone pines are the oldest trees on earth some are more than 4,600 years old • • • • • • • • • • Alpine Regions Above the tree line. What kind of plants are found here? What are the limitations to growth in this region? Similar to where else in the world? Why are there fewer alpine regions the further south you travel? Bristlecone Pine (fig) Tundra Biome Specially adapted plants form during the summer months Very little root system and resistant to hard freezes. Mostly grasses, lichen, mosses etc. Also found in high elevations Few animal species but great numbers. Ecologic Islands • Frequently small places with special conditions may support radically different plant/animal communities than nearby neighbors. • What factors would contribute to this ? • Serpentine communities • Riparian communities • Desert Wash, Oases, Fan Palm • Halophyte communities • http://www.cnps.org/gallery/gallery.htm Fan Palm (fig) Saltbush Scrub (fig) Riparian Vegetation Widespread along California Rivers and Streams Year round water, or at least groundwater Sycamore and Cottonwood Trees, Mule Fat Riparian Vegetation (fig) • • • • • Introduced Species Eucalyptus Palm Trees Tamarisk Grass Tumbleweed • Crayfish • Horses, Burros • • • • • • Threatened or Endangered Southern California Species 133 Federally listed endangered plants 46 Federally listed threatened plants 2 proposed additions 74 Federally listed endangered animals 41 Federally listed threatened plants 6 proposed additions • Includes: California Condor, 5 salmon species, 3 trout, 5 steelhead, desert tortoise, 3 sea turtles, bald eagle, peregrine falcon, Cali gnatcathcer, Cali condor, Sierra Nevada red fox, wolverine, sea otter, 7 whales, 2 bighorn sheep, Stellar sea lion, 4 foxes, Guadalupe fur seal. California Condor (fig) Bald Eagles 1972 Endangered Species Act DDT