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Plant Ecology - Chapter 18. Biomes. Terrestrial biomes. Defined by the physiognomy of the predominant vegetation. Boundaries?. No sharp boundaries between biomes Intergrades. Importance of climate. Prevailing climate is most important factor in determining what kind of biome will develop
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Plant Ecology - Chapter 18 Biomes
Terrestrial biomes • Defined by the physiognomy of the predominant vegetation
Boundaries? • No sharp boundaries between biomes • Intergrades
Importance of climate • Prevailing climate is most important factor in determining what kind of biome will develop • Precipitation, temperature are most important
Desert biomes • <10 inches (<25.4 cm) of rain per year • Cool • Temperate • Tropical
Grassland biomes • 10-30 inches (25.4-76.2 cm) of rain per year • Tundra • Temperate grassland • Tropical savanna
Forest biomes • >30 inches (>76.2 cm) of rain per year • Taiga or coniferous forest • Temperate deciduous forest • Tropical rain forest
Climatograph • Temperature, precipitation not sole determiners • Overlap among different biomes on plot suggests that other factors also are important • Seasonality of precipitation • Temperature fluctuations around mean • Soil composition (based on geology)
Deserts • Lands where evaporation exceeds rainfall • High evaporation rate • 7-50X precipitation
Deserts • Occur in 2 distinct belts between 15-35° N & S latitude • Result primarily from worldwide circulation of air masses (dry over deserts) • ~25% of world’s land mass
True deserts • <10 inches of rain per year • Semi-deserts may have 2-3X that, but have high evaporation rates • Low humidity results in very hot days, but cool or cold nights • Life is keyed to rainfall events • Infrequent, but usually heavy when they occur
Desert life • Plants are either drought evaders or drought resistors
Evaders • Plants survive dry periods as seeds, but germinate, grow, and reproduce after rainfall
Resistors • Plants develop deep roots to become independent of rainfall events (woody shrubs) or are succulents to store water in stems (cactus)
Grasslands • Tropical savannas - grasslands with scattered individuals trees • Central S. Amer., Central & S. Africa
Savannas • 3 distinct seasons • Cool-dry, hot-dry, warm-wet • Frequent fires suppress trees, maintain grasses and forbs • Herbaceous, low-growing annuals & perennials (dicots) • Regrow from roots or seeds every year
Temperate grasslands • Similar to tropical savanna, but occur in cooler regions • N. Amer. prairie (French for plains) • Russian steppe • Hungarian pusztas • S. Amer. pampas • African veldt
Temperate grasslands • At one time covered 42% of world land surface • Much under cultivation today • Excellent soils • Rich topsoil layer
Temperate grassland climate • High rates of evaporation • Periodic severe drought • Rainfall ~25-75 cm/year • Too light to support forest, but too heavy to encourage desert
Temperate grassland grasses • Sod-forming • Kentucky bluegrass • Bunch grasses • Big, little bluestem
Temperate grasslands • Most require periodic fires for maintenance, renewal, elimination of incoming/invading woody growth
Tundra • Northernmost limits for plant growth, and at high altitudes • Plants generally low-growing • Mat or shrubby
Arctic tundra • Encircles north pole • Brief warm summers with nearly 24 hrs of sun/day • Presence of permafrost • Water-logged soils - low evaporation • Shrubs, sedges grasses, mosses, lichens
Alpine tundra • At high elevations at all latitudes • Variable daylength, many of the same restrictions, plant species
Tropical forests • Equatorial, mean temp. ~25°C, 12 hrs sunlight per day • Rainfall highly variable-determines type of tropical forest present
Types of tropical forests • Thorn forests - furthest from equator, prolonged dry season
Types of tropical forests • Tropical deciduous forest • More rainfall nearer equator, distinct wet, dry seasons • Lose leaves during dry seasons
Types of tropical forests • Tropical rain forest • >250 cm of rain per year • Perpetual midsummer conditions • Uninterrupted plant growth
Tropical rain forests • Contain as many species of plants and animals as all other types of ecosystems combined • 4 mi2 area - 750 species of trees, 1500 species of flowering plants
Tropical rain forests • Typically stratified into 5 layers • Each layer has characteristic plants, animals • May reach height of 80 m
Tropical rain forest soil • Very poor - little or no topsoil • Easily weathered • Subsoil with iron-based clay - laterite • Major problems with slash-and-burn agriculture
Tropical rain forests today • Deforestation
Deforestation • Loss of forests at present rate will mean disappearance within next 15-25 years • Major problems will result from climate change, loss of species of medicinal, economic importance
Temperate deciduous forest • Eastern N. Amer, N. Europe and east • Moderate temps., moderate moisture levels • 5-6-month growing season
Temperate deciduous forest • Dominated by broad-leaved deciduous trees • Relatively nutrient-rich soil provides for good growth • Typically have 4 layers present • Ground, shrub, sapling, canopy • Rich diversity of plant, animal life
Taiga • Boreal forest, coniferous forest • Harsh winters with lots of snow
Taiga • Dominated by conifers - spruce, pine, fir, hemlock • Best suited for short growing season because they are not deciduous • Can carry out photosynthesis whenever temps. rise above freezing • Needle shape, waxy cuticle conserve moisture
Taiga soils • Thin, acidic, develop slowly • Pine needles break down slowly in cool climate
Taiga animals • Primarily seed, insect eaters, or those that feed on plants in or near water • Squirrels, birds, elk, moose, deer, beaver, porcupine, grizzlies, wolves