Download LAND BIOMES

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
LAND BIOMES
LAND BIOMES
 A biome is a
particular physical
environment that
contains a
characteristic
assemblage of plants
and animals.
LAND BIOMES
 Different biomes are
not separated by a
defined line.
 Transitional areas
exist between
biomes.
TROPICAL RAIN FOREST
 Has more species than all
other land biomes combined.
 Tops of tall trees (70 m high)
form the dense canopy.
 The understory is the second
layer of smaller trees below
the canopy.
TROPICAL RAIN FOREST
 Hot and wet year-round with thin, nutrient poor soils.
 Found in parts of South and Central America, SE Asia,
parts of Africa, southern India, and northeastern
Australia.
TROPICAL RAIN FOREST
 Plants in the Rain
Forest include broadleaved evergreens,
ferns, climbing plants
and vines, and
bromeliads.
TROPICAL RAIN FOREST
 Wildlife includes
sloths, monkeys,
jaguars, parrots,
toucans, ants,
beetles,
piranhas, and
anacondas.
SAVANNA
 Receives more seasonal
rainfall than deserts but
less than tropical dry
forests
 Characterized by a grass
covering with isolated trees
and small groves of trees
SAVANNA
 Warm temperatures,
compact soil, frequent
fires, seasonal rainfall
 Found in southern
Brazil, northern
Australia, and makes
up a large part of
eastern Africa
SAVANNA
 Plant-life includes tall,
perennial grasses
 Sometimes there is a
presence of droughttolerant and fireresistant trees or shrubs
SAVANNA
 Predators like lions,
leopards, cheetahs,
hyenas, and jackals
SAVANNA
 Herbivores like
elephants, giraffes, and
zebras
SAVANNA
 Other wildlife include
baboons, eagles,
ostriches, storks, and
termites
DESERT
 Annual precipitation is less than 25 cm a year
 Organisms can tolerate the extreme conditions
DESERT
 Low precipitation,
variable temperatures,
soils rich in minerals
but poor in organics
 Found in Africa, Asia, the
Middle East, United States,
Mexico, South America,
and Australia
DESERT
 Plants include cacti and other succulents (thickened
leaves for water storage), creosote bush, and other
with short life cycles
DESERT
 Predators include
mountain lions, gray
foxes, and bobcats
DESERT
 Herbivores such as mule
deer and kangaroo rats
DESERT
 Bats and birds like
hawks, owls, and
roadrunners
DESERT
 Desert reptiles include
lizards, rattlesnakes,
and tortoises
Temperate Deciduous Forest

Contain a mix of
deciduous and
coniferous trees
Temperate Deciduous Forest

Cold to moderate
winters; warm
summers; year-round
precipitation; fertile
soils (rich in humus,
which is decaying
organic matter)

Found in eastern
United States;
southeastern Canada;
most of Europe; and
parts of Japan, China,
and Australia
Temperate Deciduous Forest

Plants include
broadleaf
deciduous trees,
some conifers,
flowering shrubs,
herbs, mosses, and
ferns
Temperate Deciduous Forest

Wildlife including
deer, black bears,
bobcats, squirrels,
raccoons, skunks,
and turkey
BOREAL FOREST (Taiga)
Coniferous Forest


Dense evergreen
forests of
coniferous trees
along the northern
edge of the
temperate zone
Also known as the
taiga
BOREAL FOREST (Taiga)
Coniferous Forest

Long, cold winters;
short, mild
summers;
moderate
precipitation with
high humidity

Found in North
America, Asia, and
Europe
BOREAL FOREST (Taiga)
Coniferous Forest

Plant-life
includes
spruce and
fir trees,
some
deciduous
trees, small
berrybearing
shrubs
BOREAL FOREST (Taiga)
Coniferous Forest

Lynx,
timberwolves,
moose, and
beaver are some
of the wildlife
TUNDRA

Characterized
by
permafrost
(layer of
permanently
frozen
subsoil)
TUNDRA

Strong winds, low
precipitation, short
and soggy
summers

Found in northern
North America,
Asia, and Europe
TUNDRA

Ground-hugging plants such as mosses,
lichens, sedges, and short grasses are the
dominant plants in the tundra
TUNDRA

Musk ox, Arctic
foxes, caribou and
lemming reside in
the tundra
POLAR ICE CAPS

Icy polar regions
that border the
tundra are cold
year-round

Polar bears, seals,
insects, mites, and
penguins reside in
the polar regions
Related documents