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ANIMAL HABITATS. Chapter 10. SUCCESSION. Succession – the concept that communities proceed through a series of recognizable, predictable changes in structure over time Climax community – a relatively stable, long-lasting community that is the result of succession. SUCCESSION.
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ANIMAL HABITATS Chapter 10
SUCCESSION • Succession – the concept that communities proceed through a series of recognizable, predictable changes in structure over time • Climax community – a relatively stable, long-lasting community that is the result of succession
SUCCESSION • Primary succession – a successional progression that begins with a total lack of organisms and bare mineral surfaces or water • Secondary succession – a successional progression that begins with the destruction or disturbance of an existing ecosystem
BIOMES • Biomes – terrestrial climax communities with wide geographic distribution • Patterns of precipitation and temperature are two primary abiotic factors that have major impacts on the kind of climax community that develops in any part of the world
MAJOR BIOMES OF THE WORLD • Desert • Temperate grassland • Savanna • Chaparral • Tropical dry forest • Tropical rain forest • Temperate deciduous forest • Temperate rain forest • Taiga, northern coniferous forest, boreal forest • Tundra
DESERT • Low precipitation (<10 in. per yr.) • Temperature – hot daytime / cold at night
TEMPERATE GRASSLAND(Prairie) • 10-30 inches of rainfall • Hot summers / cold winters
SAVANNA • 20 – 60 inches of rain but long droughts • Tropical – no cold weather
CHAPARRALMediterranean Shrublands • Wet, cool winters / long dry summers
TROPICAL DRY FOREST • Several months of heavy rainfall followed by long dry period
TROPICAL RAINFOREST • Always warm / rains almost every day
TEMPERATE DECIDUOUS FOREST • 40 – 60 inches rainfall / has summer – winter changes of seasons / trees lose leaves in winter / place them in spring
TEMPERATE RAINFOREST • 50 – 120 inches of rainfall / cool throughout most of year
TAIGA / NORTHERN CONIFEROUS FOREST-BOREAL • Short, cool summer / long winter with heavy snowfall
TUNDRA • North of the taiga with extremely cold winter / permafrost - < 10 inches rain
MAJOR AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS • Marine ecosystems – saltwater areas such as bays, gulfs, seas, and oceans • Freshwater ecosystems – ponds, lakes, streams, and rivers
PELAGIC MARINE ECOSYSTEMS • Pelagic – open ocean environment; organisms float or swim • Plankton – small, weak swimmers that drift with the currents • Phytoplankton – plant-like plankton; they are photosynthetic (euphotic zone) • Zooplankton – animal-like plankton
PELAGIC MARINE ECOSYSTEMS • Meroplankton – temporary plankton such as larval fish, crabs, shrimp, etc. • Holoplankton – permanently planktonic • Neritic – nearshore, shallow areas of the ocean • Intertidal – area between the high and low tide levels
BENTHIC MARINE ECOSYSTEMS • Benthic – live on, in, or near the bottom • Coral reef ecosystems – corals grow in clear, shallow, tropical seas • Mangrove swamp ecosystems – tropical forest ecosystems that grow in shallow water • Abyssal ecosystem – benthic ecosystem that occurs at great depths in the ocean
ESTUARINE ECOSYSTEMS • Estuary – semi-enclosed body of water where freshwater and saltwater mix
FRESHWATER ECOSYSTEMS • Lentic – stationary, non-flowing bodies of freshwater (ponds and lakes) • Lotic – flowing freshwater environments such as rivers, creeks, and streams