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The Role of Climate Biomes What is climate? • Weather – day to day condition of the Earth’s atmosphere at a particular time and place • Climate – average, year-after-year conditions of temperature and precipitation in a particular region The Effect of Latitude on Climate • As a result of differences in latitude and thus angle of heating, Earth has 3 main climate zones: – Polar zones – cold areas around the North and South poles – Temperate zones – between the polar and tropical zones; have seasons that range from hot to cold – Tropical zones – near the equator; almost always warm Latitude and Altitude Affect the Climate • Gets colder the higher up you go (altitude) • Gets colder the farther north/south of the equator you go (latitude) • Most of food on Earth is grown between 30-60 degrees north and south of the equator • -- Do we live in this latitude??-- Global Warming Potentials (100 year time horizon) Greenhouse gases Carbon dioxide (CO2) Methane (CH4) Nitrous Oxide (N2O) Hydrofluorocarbons (e.g., HFC 134a) Perfluorcarbon (e.g., CF4) Sulfur Hexafluoride (SF6) GWP 1 21 310 1300 6500 23,900 Acid Rain • "Acid rain" is a broad term referring to a mixture of wet and dry deposition (deposited material) from the atmosphere containing higher than normal amounts of nitric and sulfuric acids. The precursors, or chemical forerunners, of acid rain formation result from both natural sources, such as volcanoes and decaying vegetation, and man-made sources, primarily emissions of sulfur dioxide (SO2) and nitrogen oxides (NOx) resulting from fossil fuel combustion. Ozone Depletion • Stratospheric ozone depletion is a concern because the ozone layer in the stratosphere keeps 95-99% of the suns ultraviolet radiation (UV) from striking the earth. • More UV means: – – – – – – more melanoma and non-melanoma skin cancers more eye cataracts weakened immune systems reduced plant yields damage to ocean eco-ecosystems more damage to plastics Ozone Depleting Substances • Chlorofluorocarbons (CFC’s) – contains: Cl, F, C – long-lived, non-toxic, non-corrosive, and nonflammable – in 1960’s used in refrigerators, air conditioners, spray cans, solvents, foams – phase out by 1996 in developed countries Biomes • Ecosystems are grouped into a larger biome • Depends on the climate and the type of plants in that area • 2 types: Terrestrial Biomes (on land) Aquatic Biomes (in the water) The species that live In each biome are different, but may look and act similar to species in other biomes. Because of similar niches in each biome. • An ecosystem is all the living and nonliving factors that affect an organism. • A biome is a major region that is characterized by its climate,soil type(s), and the dominant plants, animals, and other organisms that live there. A biome is made up of many individual ecosystems. Types of Biomes • • • • • • • • • Tundra Desert Chaparral Temperate grassland Tropical savanna Taiga (boreal) Temperate forest Tropical rainforest Northwestern coniferous forest Tundra • Northernmost biome • Frozen layer of subsoil (permafrost) • Low-growing vegetation adapted to extreme cold and a short growing season Tundra • Arctic tundra can be found in Antarctica and the North Pole, North of the Arctic Circle. • Grass, lichen and herbs • Many insects during warm season Arctic Tundra Boreal Forest (Taiga) • Short growing season • Acidic, mineral-poor soil • Coniferous trees adapted to cold winters Taiga • The word taiga means, "marshy pine forest" in Russian. • one of the most fragile biomes. • Found in Northern Hemisphere. • Growing season very short • Nearly constant daylight in summer • Many lakes and swamps Boreal Forest Temperate Rain Forest • High precipitation • Large conifers dominate Temperate Rain Forest Temperate Deciduous Forest • Precipitation relatively high • Soils rich in organic matter • Broad-leaf trees that lose their leaves seasonally dominate Temperate Deciduous Forest Temperate Grassland • Deep, mineral-rich soil • Moderate but uncertain precipitation Temperate Grassland Chaparral • Climate of wet, mild winters and dry summers • Thickets of small-leaf evergreen shrubs and trees Chaparral smallest biome. grows between forest and grassland, or between desert and grassland biomes. Many plants and trees have leathery leaves, gnarled bark, and intimidating thorns. Often called “scrub” Chaparral Desert • Both – temperate (cold deserts) – subtropical or tropical regions (warm deserts) • Low levels of precipitation • Organisms with specialized waterconserving adaptations Desert Desert • Deserts take up 8.6 million square miles on Earth • Get less than 25 cm of rain each year • Has little or no vegetation • Driest places on earth • Often located on the dry side of mountain ranges Tropical Grassland (Savanna) • Tropical areas with low or seasonal rainfall • Widely scattered trees interspersed with grassy areas Savanna • Found near equator between tropical rain forest and desert biomes • Grass, scattered trees, shrubs, many with thorns • Many grazing animals • Have a wet and dry season • Plants and animals most active during wet season. Savanna Tropical Rain Forest • Mineral-poor soil • High rainfall evenly distributed throughout the year • High species richness, high productivity Rainforest over half of the world's plant and animal species live here. All fit into only seven percent of the world's land. Found in: Central Africa, Southeast Asia, Philippines, New Guinea, Central and South America. Rainforest • Layers: • Top – Emergent layer – tallest trees above rest of forest • Next – canopy – top of normal trees • Lower canopy – epiphytes – plants that grow on tree trunks – not soil - because light is so far from ground. • Understory – lowest level, much darker Tropical Rain Forest