* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Biomes - davis.k12.ut.us
Survey
Document related concepts
Transcript
Chapter 3 Biomes/ Pollution • Describe how water is a limiting factor in various ecosystems/biomes. • Planet Earth Series BIOMES• Large areas that have a dominant plant type (climax community) and a certain Climate (pattern of moisture and temperature due to the position of the Sun) Limiting Factor • An abiotic or biotic factor that restricts populations. • Water limits types of plants that grow in a biome. Succession • 1st: Lichens/Bacteria are pioneer species. These will create soil in a rocky area. • 2nd: Mosses may grow • 3rd: Grass, then shrubs, then bushes • 4th: Finally pines and oak trees. – Shade will kill off smaller species. Acid from needles kills some types of plants. Beech or Maple or bigger trees or conifers take over, depending on the climate. This is called succession and happens over hundreds of years. Primary Succession Plants take over a place where no soil was before -Volcanoes Hawaii Mount Saint Helens Late 1980s 2004 Secondary Succession • Fire, flood, windstorm disrupt a community and new plants grow where soil existed before. Desert• Dominant plant is a cactus (prickly, Joshua tree, shrub and low growing grasses. Few trees if any- Juniper, Cedar – less than 25 cm of moisture, 0-40 C • Seasonal desert: (Utah) Rainy season, Cold desert (Gobi in China) • Hot desert (Sahara (size of cont US, Kalihari in Africa, Southern Utah) • Common widespread animals include rattlesnake, Kangaroo, kangaroo rat, tortoise, bat, tarantula, tarantula wasp, Gila monster, Anole can undergo asexual reproduction in Arizona during droughts. – Show video Desert (Jeroboa, Phennig, Camel, Lizard, Scorpion) and Report on Tuareg of Sahara, Navajo and Hopi Indians, San of Kalarahi desert, Aborigene of Australia. Sahara Desert Mojave Desert Escalante Desert Chaparral• Mediterranean, California, South Australia, and Chile • May-oct: 1 cm, Nov-Apr rainy. 10-30 C temps. • Chamise, manzanita, scrub oak, olive tree, sage (flammable oils), bay. – Leaves have leathery coating to resist water evaporation. • Quail, Chipmunks, Lizards, Coyote, Mule deer, Birds (scrub jay), Insects , include the Cicada hissing. San Diego Chaparral • Cold: -30 c to 10 c, like desert in precip. Permafrost, thin soil. • Tough Mosses, Lichens, Grasses with tiny flowers. Bogs and marshes. • Insects, mollusks, worms, caribou, Polar Bear, Arctic Fox, Musk Ox, Reindeer – Research oil exploration in tundra. Tundra- North of Arctic Circle. Alaska Tundra Utah Tundra Taiga/Conifer Forest/ Boreal Forest • -20 to 15 C, mostly snow, less than 20 cm precip/year • 50-60 day growing season, Long winters, dark in winter, more than 12 hours of sun in summer • Leaves modified to needles to protect against low temperature and evaporation of water. Cone shape sheds snow. Needles are acidic so when they fall they kill other plants. Conifer Forest • Redwood, Pine- Ponderosa, Scotch, Bristlecone, Hemlock, Spruce, FirBlueberries, few ferns and mosses • Bear, Grizzly, Wolf, Moose, Elk, Voles, Grouse, Pika, Wolverines, Lynx, Snowshoe Hare. 1,000,000 lakes in Canada and Siberia provide habitat for fish, insects. Birds migrate 5,000 kilometers from South America to breed in summer. Salt Lake is a stop-over for Canada Geese, Pelicans, Sand Piper. Video: Boreal Forest Boreal Forest Grassland • Savannah Precip: dec-apr 16 cm, may-nov 86 cm Tropical temperatures • Temperate Grassland: -10 to 40 C, most fertile soil. • Not enough water to support trees (25-75 cm), although few are found. • Acacia trees, Baobab. Corn, Wheat, Soybean. • Giraffe, Lion, Cheetah, Buffalo, Hawks, Antelope, Lubber grasshoppers, burrowing owls commensalistic with prairie dog. Cows overgraze. • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TlRkxQgMJJI Grassland Deciduous Forest • Four seasons, leaves fall in fall. (videodisc 1759,1889-1981) • Abundant rainfall and snowfall. Four seasons. Precip 70-250 cm/yr Show • Climatogram. Summer 30 C and Winter 5 C. • Oak, Maple, Beech, Birch. Doesn’t filter much light so abundant plants on forest floor. • Bear, Deer, Moose, Fox, Wolf, Mice, Squirrel, Racoon, Opossum, Birds Deciduous Forest Tropical Rain Forest • 200-400 cm of rain every year, 28 C +10 year round (overhead sun) • More species than all other places combined (90% life) 1 hectare has 100 species of trees. High biodiversity. Low soil fertility from rain leaching, acidic soil (low pH) • Matter decays very rapidly due to plentiful fungi,bacteria and moisture Rain forest Rain Forest continued • Winds flow from Africa to South America (easterly) • Canopy, Upper story, understory, • Very specific niches to avoid competition. Some bats pollinate only one flower. • Vines, Tall trees, Low ferns, Epiphytes (bromeliads), rotten smelly flower. • Black panther, Tiger, Gorilla, Monkeys, Beetles, Poison dart frog, • Nocturnal and Diurnal creatures. https://www.youtube.co m/watch?v=Ae6wft4O_EU Marine (salty) • Intertidal Zone- pounding waves, clingy plants, hard shelled invertebrates, air & water respiration • Neritic Zone- from tidal to open sea. Kelp, algae, fish of all kinds • Open Sea Photic Zone- 30 to 200 meters below surface. Kelp, algae • (75%photosynthesis of earth) Protists, diatoms, fish, whale, dophin, sea otter, walrus • Deep Sea- high pressure, cold, dark, Giant squid, Huge mouth fish with fangs, zooplankton, Detritus feeders. Marine zones Abyssal creatures Estuary (brackish) • Where freshwater combines with salty water • 2ndor 3rd most diverse biome on earth Aquatic • Mangroves, Swamp, Lagoon • Sunlight, many fish and invertebrates, birds, Crocodiles and Alligators • Swamp-trees • Marsh- reeds, fish, migratory birds like duck, geese, pelican Riparian • - near rivers and streams.