* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download bio 1.1 biomes student version
Arctic ecology wikipedia , lookup
Biodiversity action plan wikipedia , lookup
Ecological resilience wikipedia , lookup
Ecosystem services wikipedia , lookup
River ecosystem wikipedia , lookup
Reforestation wikipedia , lookup
Tropical Africa wikipedia , lookup
Habitat destruction wikipedia , lookup
Pleistocene Park wikipedia , lookup
Latitudinal gradients in species diversity wikipedia , lookup
Restoration ecology wikipedia , lookup
Ecological fitting wikipedia , lookup
Habitat conservation wikipedia , lookup
Reconciliation ecology wikipedia , lookup
List of ecoregions in North America (CEC) wikipedia , lookup
Lake ecosystem wikipedia , lookup
Tropical rainforest wikipedia , lookup
Biogeography wikipedia , lookup
Human impact on the nitrogen cycle wikipedia , lookup
Theoretical ecology wikipedia , lookup
Biosphere 2 wikipedia , lookup
Biological Dynamics of Forest Fragments Project wikipedia , lookup
UNIT 1 Sustaining Earth’s Ecosystems Overall goal of the Unit: By the end of unit 1, you will be able to discuss the significance of natural phenomena and human factors within an ecosystems. Learning Outcomes for UNIT 1: • What are the abiotic and biotic elements in ecosystems • How does carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and phosphorus cycle within the ecosystem? • Explore ecosystems with similar characteristics in different geographical locations • What are the effects of altering an abiotic factor • Describe species adaptation • Create food webs and pyramids • Describe the mechanisms and possible impacts of bioaccumulation • Explain traditional ecological knowledge (TEK) • Discuss the impact of natural phenomena, foreign species, disease, pollution, habitat destruction, and exploitation of resources on ecosystems Important Unit 1 Vocabulary abiotic acid precipitation/rain adaptation adaptive radiation algae annual precipitation annual temperature aquatic bacteria bioaccumulation biodegradation biodiversity biomagnification biome biosphere biotic carbon exchange carbon sink carbon store Carbonate carnivore cellular respiration climate climatograph climax community commensalism community competition consumer (primary, secondary, tertiary) DDT decomposers deforestation denitrification detrivore ecological hierarchy (organism, population, community, ecosystem) ecological pyramid (pyramid of biomass, pyramid of energy, pyramid of numbers) ecological succession (primary, secondary) ecology ecosystem elevation estuary Extinction food chains food pyramids food webs foreign species fossil fuel grazing habitat heavy metals herbivore host keystone species latitude legumes lichen Lightning mutualism native species natural selection niche nitrification nutrients omnivore parasitism PCBs pesticide pH phosphorus photosynthesis phytoplankton pioneer species predation producer Proliferation soil degradation stability symbiosis terrestrial top consumer/predator/ carnivore toxin trophic levels zooplankton Introduction • http://video.nationalgeographic.com/video/player/kids/animalspets-kids/mammals-kids/hippo-fishclean-kids.html UNIT 1 Sustaining Earth’s Ecosystems • Chapter 1: Biomes and ecosystems are divisions of the biosphere (p. 6 – 53) • 1.1 Biomes Words to Know abiotic adaptation Biome Biotic climate climatograph ecosystems Biosphere terrestrial Learning Goals for 1.1 • define abiotic, biotic, biome, and ecosystem • identify distinctive plants, animals, and climatic characteristics of Canadian biomes (tundra, boreal forest, temperate deciduous forest, temperate rainforest, grasslands) • identify biotic and abiotic factors in a given scenario or diagram • identify factors that affect the global distribution of the following biomes (8): tropical rainforest, temperate rainforest, temperate deciduous forest, boreal forest, grasslands, desert, tundra, polar ice • using examples, explain why ecosystems with similar characteristics can exist in different geographical locations (i.e., significance of abiotic factors) Think Pad… • Scientists study the biosphere by breaking it down into smaller divisions. Place the following terms in order of size of division: Biome, habitat, biosphere, ecosystem 1.1 A. Biomes • __________________: anywhere on Earth living things exist. _____________ are regions with similar __________ and similar ___________ components (ex. BC and New Zealand are similar biomes) ___________ = living things ___________ = non-living things See pages 8 -10 Abiotic and Biotic Examples of Biotic Components Examples of Abiotic Components _____________ are classified based on many qualities, such as water availability, temperature, and interactions between biotic and abiotic factors. We will study types of biomes called “___________________, or land-based biomes There are __________ types of biomes: Boreal forest, desert, grassland, permanent ice, temperate deciduous forest, temperate rainforest, tropical rainforest and tundra. See pages 8 -10 Activity 1.1A Observing Patterns in World Biomes What to Do What did you find out? Reading Check Page 12 B. Factors That Influence the Characteristics and Distribution of Biomes • Think Pad… Factors That Influence the Characteristics and Distribution of Biomes • Certain characteristics help to identify biomes. ________________ and _______________ are two of the most important _____________ factors. See pages 10 - 13 Practice Problems Practice Problems page 13 Other Factors That Influence the Characteristics and Distribution of Biomes include _______________, ___________________ and __________________ ___________________ • __________________ is the distance north and south from the equator. ______________ influences both temperature & precipitation. Ex. The tropical zone has very warm temperatures and high precipitation because: The sun shines straight down & warm air holds more moisture than cooler air. See pages 14 - 15 • ____________________ is the height above sea level _____________ elevations have ________ air, and therefore ____________ heat is retained. Windward sides of mountains are wet, leeward sides are very dry. • _____________ ____________ carry warmth and moisture to coastal areas. Where warm currents meet land, temperate biomes are found. Reading Check Page 15 C. Climatographs • ________________: the average pattern of weather conditions over a period of several years. A climatograph shows the __________ _______________ and _____________________ for a location over a period of 30 years or more. • Biomes are often defined using information in climatographs. See pages 16 - 17 Climatographs Examine the differences between Tofino and Osoyoos See pages 16 - 17 D. Adaptations and Biomes • Biomes are often identified with characteristic biotic factors. For example, a cactus in the desert, or a caribou on the tundra. Many of these characteristic factors have special adaptations that allow the organisms to better survive and reproduce in that biome. See pages 18 - 19 Adaptations and Biomes (continued) Types of adaptations: 1. ________________ __________________ - a physical feature that helps an organism survive. ex. A wolf has large paws to help it run in snow. 2. ________________ _________________ - a physical or chemical event inside the body of an organism that allows it to survive. ex. A wolf maintains a constant body temperature. 3. _______________ _________________ - a behaviour that helps an organism to survive. ex. Wolves hunt in packs to capture large prey. Reading Check Page 19 AND 29 1.1 Summary • Biomes of the World (8) • Factors that influence the Characteristics and distribution of biomes (Temperature, Precipitation, latitude, levation, ocean currents) • Climatographs (ave. temperature an precipitation) • Adaptations (structural, physiological, beehavioural)