1 / 10

Biomes and The Biosphere

Biomes and The Biosphere. Introduction to Ecology . Study of interactions between organisms and the environment Abiotic and biotic factors play a role in distribution and abundance of a species The Biosphere Entire portion of Earth inhabited by life. North Pole 60°N.

spence
Download Presentation

Biomes and The Biosphere

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Biomes and The Biosphere

  2. Introduction to Ecology • Study of interactions between organisms and the environment • Abiotic and biotic factors play a role in distribution and abundance of a species • The Biosphere • Entire portion of Earth inhabited by life

  3. North Pole 60°N Low angle of incoming sunlight 30°N Tropic of Cancer Sunlight directly overhead at equinoxes 0° (equator) Tropic of Capricorn 30°S Low angle of incoming sunlight 60°S South Pole Atmosphere Climate • Temperature, precipitation, sunlight, and wind • Most significant influence on distribution of organisms • Determined by sunlight intensity, air currents, presence of large bodies of water, mountain ranges • All of these vary mainly as a factor of latitude and altitude • Climograph

  4. Biomes • Major ecosystem, characterized by a particular climate and type of vegetation Tropical forest Desert Temperate grassland 30 Temperate broadleaf forest 15 Annual mean temperature (°C) Coniferous forest 0 Arctic and alpine tundra –15 400 300 200 100 Annual mean precipitation (cm)

  5. Climate and Biomes • Biomes change with altitude and latitude because vegetation is partly determined by temperature (and precipitation).

  6. 30°N Tropic of Cancer Equator Tropic of Capricorn 30°S Chaparral Tundra Key Temperate grassland High mountains Tropical forest Polar ice Temperate broadleaf forest Savanna Coniferous forest Desert Terrestrial Biomes • Tropical forests: equator, most complex, constant temperature and rainfall, canopy • Savanna: tropical grassland with scattered trees, occasional fire and drought; large herbivores • Desert: sparse rainfall • Chaparral: spiny evergreen at midlatitudes along coasts • Temperate grassland: All grasses; seasonal drought; occasional fires; large mammals • Coniferous forest: cone-bearing trees • Tundra: permafrost; very little precipitation

  7. Aquatic Biomes • Freshwater or marine (saltwater) • Physically and chemically stratified • Vertical stratification • Photic zone - light (photosynthetic organisms; phytoplankton) • Aphotic zone - little light • Benthic zone - bottom substrate • Benthos - community of organisms that live in benthic zone • Detritus - dead organic material • Distance from shore • Littoral, limnetic • Intertidal, neritic, oceanic • Open water versus bottom (pelagic vs benthic) • Chemical stratification • Changes in temperature, oxygen and nutrient content vary with depth • Thermocline - narrow stratum of rapid temperature change that separates more uniformly warm upper layer from more uniform cold deeper waters • Turnover

  8. Intertidal zone Coastal zone Pelagic zone 0 Photic zone 200 m Continental shelf Benthic zone Aphotic zone Marine zonation 2,500–6,000 m Abyssal zone (deepest regions of ocean floor) Marine biomes • Intertidal zone - area where land meets water • Neritic zone - shallow regions over continental shelves • Oceanic zone - very deep water past the continental shelves • Pelagic zone - open water of any depth • Benthic zone - seafloor bottom • Abyssal zone - benthic region in deep oceans

  9. Littoral zone Limnetic zone Photic zone Pelagic zone Benthic zone Aphotic zone Zonation in a lake Freshwater Biomes • Littoral zone • Shallow, well lit waters, close to shore, rooted plants • Limnetic zone • Well-lit, open water, farther from shore, phytoplankton and cyanobacteria • Profundal zone • Deep, aphotic waters • Lake classification • Oligotrophic - deep, nutrient poor • Eutrophic - shallow, high nutrient content

  10. Spring Winter O2 (mg/L) O2 (mg/L) 0 4 8 12 0 4 8 12 Lake depth (m) Lake depth (m) 8 8 16 16 0° 4° 4° 2° 24 24 4° 4° 4° 4° 4° 4° 4°C 4°C O2 concentration High (>8 mg/L) Medium (4–8 mg/L) Low (<4 mg/L) O2 (mg/L) O2 (mg/L) 0 4 8 12 0 4 8 12 Lake depth (m) Lake depth (m) 4° 22° 8 8 4° 20° 18° 4° 8° 4° 16 16 6° 4° 5° 4°C 4°C 24 24 Summer Thermocline Autumn Turnover in Lakes • Seasonal turnover due to changes in temperature cycles oxygen and nutrients between photic and aphotic zones

More Related