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Terrestrial Biomes & Aquatic Ecosystems. LARGE ECOSYSTEMS. Human-classified divisions Same types of climates = similar types of vegetation Similar vegetation = similar biome ≠ exact same flora, fauna, or physical abiotic makeup Terrestrial Ecosystems or Biomes 10 Types
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LARGE ECOSYSTEMS • Human-classified divisions • Same types of climates = similar types of vegetation • Similar vegetation = similar biome • ≠ exact same flora, fauna, or physical abiotic makeup • Terrestrial Ecosystems or Biomes • 10 Types • Aquatic Ecosystems • 3 types
Terrestrial Biomes • Large area characterized by its climate and the plants and animals that live in the area – contains related ecosystems. Tundra Chaparral Polar Ice Temperate Grassland Taiga/Coniferous Forests Savanna Mountainous regions Desert Temperate Deciduous Forest Tropical Rainforest
Tundra (Polar and Alpine) • Tundra = “treeless plain” • Flat terrain with low shrubs, grasses, sedge, mosses, lichens; low biodiversity • One-fourth of Earth’s terrestrial surface • Present in northernmost latitudes (≥ 60° N) • Desert-like rainfall (30-50 cm or 12-20 in per year) but bogs and marshes in summer rainy season due to permafrost
Tundra (cont’d) • Permafrost – condition of permanent frozen soil beginning ~ 1 meter (m) below surface and extending down to 500 m • Water can not drain • Plants produce in short 50-day season • Year-round: Arctic lemmings, hares, foxes • Summer migratory animals seeking food • No reptiles or amphibians
Taiga • Also known as the Boreal or northern forests – covered with coniferous trees such as firs, pines, spruces, and cedars (dominant vegetation) – located south of tundra • Largest biome on Earth; low biodiversity • Winters: very cold and snowy • Summers: warm, rainy, and humid • Large mammals, fur-bearing animals • Very few reptiles and amphibians
Temperate Deciduous Forest • Majority of eastern US, as well as continental western Europe and east Asia • Deciduous trees (with seasonal leaf loss) including maples, beeches, oaks, and hickories, as well as understory of woody shrubs and vines and herbaceous plants • Much precipitation (75 to 200 cm /yr) (3-8x that of tundra) • Milder winters, warm to hot summers • Great variety of animals, including reptiles and amphibians
Temp. Deciduous Forest (cont’d) • Abundance of pines (evergreens) in the SE US is only temporary • “Succession” – as ecosystem “ages,” new flora species replace previous ones (e.g., grass to low shrubs and vines to evergreens to hardwoods); as flora change so will fauna • Here, climax successional stage is oak/hickory forest
Temperate Grassland • Areas of predominantly tall, mixed, or short grasses sandwiched between temperate deciduous forests and deserts • Annual precipitation of 25-100 cm • Extremely fertile soil (US Midwest farms) • Natural grasslands destroyed for agriculture; very little left in world • Short grass prairie – crops and cattle
Savanna • Subtype of grassland: tropical grassland in Southern Hemisphere (Africa, South America, and Australia) • Seasonal drought, warm climate, dotted with stands of trees, and home to typical large mammals (e.g. in Africa, elephants, giraffes, zebras, lions, spring boks, cape buffalo, etc.)
Desert: “Got Water?” • Desert – area receiving < 25 cm annual precipitation; evaporation > precipitation • Deserts may be cold, temperate, or hot • Flora and fauna specialized to survive with little water – collect and conserve • Soils poor because lack of water = very little biomass, or net productivity, low organics = inability to hold water • Concentration of inorganic salts high
Tropical Rainforest • Large warm equatorial areas, abundant annual precipitation (200-450 cm and even to 1000 cm for some) with high biomass productivity and biodiversity • 7% of Earth’s land mass under massive destruction; can not be replaced • Poor, acidic soil: plants uptake quickly-decomposed organic nutrients
Polar Ice and Mountains • Polar Regions: • Cold, dry, devoid of terrestrial plant life • Animals capable of living in frigid conditions and basis of survival on highly productive marine ecosystem • Mountains: • Increase in altitude similar to northern latitudes (cooler climate and conifers) • Rain shadow on lee side (desert area)
Chaparral • Not a grassland • Punctuated with low-growing evergreen shrubs, pines, and scrub oaks • Lands on Western coast lines with Mediterranean type climate (wet mild winter/ hot dry summer, ocean winds)
Biome Ecological Concerns • Tundra/Taiga– ore mining, oil drilling, ecosystem fragmentation, global warming/species changes • Temperate Deciduous Forests – human destruction for resources and population • Temperate Grasslands – very little remaining, non-native grass species; agriculture • Deserts – In US, human encroachment • Tropical Rain Forests - human destruction for resources and population; expansive loss of species, biomass net productivity
Aquatic Ecosystems • Marine • Intertidal Areas • Coral Reefs • Estuaries – fresh water from streams and rivers spills into oceans • Sargasso Sea (middle of Atlantic Ocean – floating rafts of algae called sargassum) • Polar Ice – Arctic Ocean and ocean around Antarctica Freshwater • Stream and River; Pond and Lake Wetland • Marshes and Swamps
Marine Ecosystems Photic zone = surface to 100 m down; photosynthesis occurs Saltwater oceans cover ¾ of Earth’s surface. Fig. 32.34
Marine Ecosystems, cont. • Intertidal Zone: the place where the ocean meets the land; area is exposed to the air for part of the day; sea grasses, periwinkle snails, and herons are common in intertidal mudflat; sea stars and anemones live on rocky shores; clams, crabs, snails, and conchs are common on sandy beaches • Neritic Zone: Ocean floor starts to slope downward as you move away from shore; water is warm and receives a lot of sunlight; plankton and seaweeds common; sea turtles, dolphins, corals, sponges, and colorful fishes dominate – CORAL REEFS!
Marine Ecosystems, cont. • Oceanic Zone: Sea floor drops sharply; contains deep water of open ocean; many unusual animals are adapted to this zone, such as whales, squids, fishes that glow, sharks, etc. • Benthic Zone: Ocean floor; deepest parts do not get any sunlight and are very cold; animals, such as fishes, worms, sea urchins, and crabs, have special adaptations to the deep, dark water
Marine Ecosystem ESTUARY - • Coastal point of contact between freshwater and saltwater; mix = “brackish” water • Constant mixing stirs up nutrients for photosynthesizers; animal life abundant • As productive as tropical rainforests and coral reefs • Concerns: • Although protected, human pollution and encroachment threaten health of estuaries
Marine cont’d • Abundance of life is generally greater: • Nearer coast (intertidal zone) due to stirring action of waves and nearer surface from light • In polar regions rather than tropical regions (abundant food – plankton - for large organisms) • In tropical coral reefs along shallow coastlines
Marine cont’d • Ecological Concerns: • Overfishing and industrial fishing techniques that destroy deep water habitats • Human pollution of the coastal waters (sewage, construction erosion, chemical use, etc.) • Human physical destruction of sensitive ecosystems such as coral reefs, tidal pools
Freshwater Ecosystems Inland freshwater streams, ponds, and lakes cover 2.1% of Earth’s surface.
Freshwater Ecosystems Littoral Zone - area of water closest to edge of lake or pond; cattails, rushes, algae, water lilies; small animals, snails, insects, clams, worms, frogs, salamanders, turtles, fish, and snakes Open-Water Zone – the zone of a pond or lake that extends from the littoral zone and that is only as deep as light can reach – bass, lake trout, and other fishes Deep-Water Zone – the zone of a lake or pond below the open-water zone, where no light reaches – carp, catfish, worms, crustaceans, fungi, and bacteria
Freshwater cont’d • Natural lake nutrient concentrations (phosphorus often is limiting factor) • Shallow, nutrient rich = eutrophic • Abundant aquatic photosynthesis and animals (cloudy, murky water) • Occurs naturally over long periods of time • Deeper, nutrient poor = oligotrophic • Few nutrients to aid photosynthesis, little animal life (clear water)
Freshwater Concerns • Artificial eutrophication of lakes: nutrient rich sewage, fertilizers, construction erosion, etc. feed algae • Algal bloom leads to accumulation of dead algae; decomposition by oxygen-using bacteria; fish kills • Clean Water Act has helped, but battle not over (Pollutants regulated under the CWA include "priority" pollutants, including various toxic pollutants; "conventional" pollutants, such as biochemical oxygen demand (BOD), total suspended solids (TSS), fecal coliform, oil and grease, and pH; and "non-conventional" pollutants, including any pollutant not identified as either conventional or priority. The CWA regulates both direct and indirect discharges. )
Wetland • Land remaining wet for at least part of the year (bog, marsh, swamp, tidal marshes) and very productive • Most are inland, freshwater • Soils and plants can capture pollutants, act as wastewater system and clean up • Play important role in flood control • Concerns: • Federal protection requires restoration, but many destroyed • Loss of migratory bird habitat
Marshes and Swamps • Marshes • Treeless wetland ecosystem where plants grow; found in shallow areas along shores of lakes, ponds, rivers, and streams; grasses, reeds, bulrushes, wild rice, muskrats, turtles, frogs, and birds dominate • Swamps • Wetland ecosystem in which trees and vines grow; found in low-lying areas and beside slow-moving rivers; flooded part of the year; willows, bald cypresses, oaks, poison ivy, water lilies, orchids, fish, snakes, and birds dominate