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8/30/11. Topic: Lec. 2 Intro to Ecology. HW: Read Chapter 52/ Print and complete Reading guide 2 (posted on SL) Quiz Tomorrow on CH 1: 5 quick questions. Bellwork: Which themes do you believe would be the most difficult to study? Why is it necessary to identify these themes?.
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8/30/11 Topic: Lec. 2 Intro to Ecology HW: Read Chapter 52/ Print and complete Reading guide 2 (posted on SL) Quiz Tomorrow on CH 1: 5 quick questions. Bellwork: Which themes do you believe would be the most difficult to study? Why is it necessary to identify these themes?
Please insert your rubric in your lab book (first page) • Pass lab books forward.
Bright blue marble floating in space Ch 52 Intro to Ecology
A BIOME is the largest geographic biotic unit, a major community of plants and animals with similar life forms and environmental conditions. What is a biome?
How are biomes formed? Biomes are distributed across the Earth based primarily on climate. Therefore, in areas that are far apart, you will sometimes find similar plants and animals because the climate is similar. One factor affecting climate is latitude. Typically, the farther you move north or south of the equator, the colder the temperature gets. Another factor affecting climate is elevation. The higher you go in elevation, the colder the temperature gets. Biomes usually found at cold latitudes far from the equator are sometimes also found on high mountains at low latitudes. Typically, a climb of 100 feet in elevation is equivalent to traveling 600 miles northward.
Environmental factors • Abiotic factors • non-living chemical & physical factors • temperature • light • water • nutrients • Biotic factors • living components • animals • plants
Marine coral reef benthos intertidal
Lakes Oligotrophic – nutrient poor & O2 rich Eutrophic – nutrient rich & poor O2 Littoral Zone – shallow, well lit waters close to shore Limnetic zone – farther from shore deeper area
Wetlands • Basin Wetlands • Riverine Wetlands • Fringe Wetlands
Estuaries • Transition area btwn river & sea; seawater flows in & out according to tide
Tropical rainforest distribution: equatorial precipitation: very wet temperature: always warm characteristics: many plants & animals, thin soil
Savanna distribution: equatorial precipitation: seasonal, dry season/wet season temperature: always warm characteristics: fire-adapted, drought tolerant plants; herbivores; fertile soil
Desert distribution: 30°N & S latitude band precipitation: almost temperature: variable daily & seasonally, hot & cold characteristics: sparse vegetation & animals, cacti, succulents, drought tolerant, reptiles, insects, rodents, birds
Temperate Grassland distribution: mid-latitudes, mid-continents precipitation: seasonal, dry season/wet season temperature: cold winters/hot summers characteristics: prairie grasses, fire-adapted, drought tolerant plants; many herbivores; deep, fertile soil
Temperate Deciduous Forest distribution: mid-latitude, northern hemisphere precipitation: adequate, summer rains, winter snow temperature: moderate warm summer/cool winter characteristics: many mammals, insects, birds, etc.; deciduous trees; fertile soils
Coniferous Forest (Taiga) distribution: high-latitude, northern hemisphere precipitation: adequate to dry (temperate rain forest on coast) temperature: cool year round characteristics: conifers; diverse mammals, birds, insects, etc.
Arctic Tundra distribution: arctic, high-latitude, northern hemisphere precipitation: dry temperature: cold year round characteristics: permafrost, lichens & mosses, migrating animals & resident herbivores
Alpine Tundra distribution: high elevation at all latitudes precipitation: dry temperature: cold year round characteristics: permafrost, lichens, mosses, grasses; migrating animals & resident herbivores
Chaparral distribution: midlatitude precipitation: rainy winters, dry summers temperature: cool winters, warm summers characteristics: grasses, shrubs, small trees, deer, amphibians, birds, reptiles, insects
Question to Ponder… • What biome does San Ramon, CA fall under?