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Global Ecology and Human Impacts. Chapter 27. LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1. Define biome Describe the nine major terrestrial biomes, including their climate, soil, and characteristic plants. KEY TERMS. BIOME
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Global Ecology and Human Impacts Chapter 27
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 1 • Define biome • Describe the nine major terrestrial biomes, including their climate, soil, and characteristic plants
KEY TERMS • BIOME • A large, relatively distinct terrestrial region characterized by a similar climate, soil, plants, and animals
Biomes 1 • Tundra • Northernmost biome • Frozen layer of subsoil (permafrost) • Low-growing vegetation adapted to extreme cold • Short growing season
Biomes 2 • Boreal forest • Acidic, mineral-poor soil • Coniferous trees adapted to cold winters • Short growing season • Temperate rain forest • Receives high precipitation • Large conifers dominate
Biomes 3 • Temperate deciduous forest • Occurs where precipitation is relatively high and soils are rich in organic matter • Broadleaf trees that lose their leaves seasonally
Biomes 4 • Temperate grassland • Deep, mineral-rich soil • Moderate but uncertain precipitation • Temperate grassland • Wet, mild winters and dry summers • Thickets of small-leaf evergreen shrubs and trees
Biomes 5 • Desert • Found in both temperate (cold deserts) and subtropical or tropical regions (warm deserts) • Low levels of precipitation • Plants with specialized water-conserving adaptations
Biomes 6 • Savanna • Tropical grassland • Low or seasonal rainfall • Widely scattered trees interspersed with grassy areas
Biomes 7 • Tropical rain forest • Mineral-poor soil • High rainfall evenly distributed throughout year • High species richness and productivity
ELEVATION ZONES LATITUDE ZONES High elevation North Pole Snow/ice Polar region Alpine tundra Arctic tundra Subalpine coniferous forest Boreal forest Deciduous forest Temperate forest Low elevation Midlatitudes Fig. 27-12, p. 551
Windward side Leeward side Dry air Moist air Fig. 27-13, p. 552
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 2 • Identify the biomes that make the best agricultural land • Explain why they are superior
Biomes and Agriculture • Best agricultural lands have fertile soil and enough precipitation to grow crops • Temperate deciduous forests were among first biomes converted to agricultural use • Moist temperate grasslands are so well suited to agriculture that few remain
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 3 • Define environmental sustainability
KEY TERMS • ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY • Ability of the natural environment to meet humanity’s needs indefinitely without going into a decline from human-caused stresses
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 4 • Identify the various levels of biodiversity: genetic diversity, species richness, and ecosystem diversity
Biological Diversity 1 • Genetic diversity • Genetic variety within a species, both among individuals within a given population and among geographically separate populations • Species richness • The number of species of archaea, bacteria, protists, plants, fungi, and animals
Biological Diversity 2 • Ecosystem diversity • The variety of ecosystems (forests, prairies, deserts, lakes, coastal estuaries, coral reefs, other ecosystems) • Biological diversity is important because it provides ecosystem services
KEY TERMS • ECOSYSTEM SERVICES • Important environmental services that ecosystems provide • Examples: clean air to breathe, clean water to drink, fertile soil in which to grow crops
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 5 • Distinguish among extinct species, endangered species, and threatened species
KEY TERMS • EXTINCTION • Elimination of a species, either locally (no longer living in an area where it used to be found, but still found in other areas) or globally (no longer living anywhere in the world)
KEY TERMS • ENDANGERED SPECIES • A species whose numbers are so severely reduced that it is in imminent danger of extinction throughout all or a part of its range
KEY TERMS • THREATENED SPECIES • A species in which the population is small enough for it to be at risk of becoming extinct but not so small that it is in imminent danger of extinction
KEY TERMS • ENDEMIC SPECIES • Localized, native species that are not found anywhere else in the world • Many endangered and threatened species are endemic species
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 6 • Discuss important causes of declining biological diversity
KEY TERMS • BIOLOGICAL DIVERSITY • Variety of living organisms considered at three levels: genetic diversity, species richness, and ecosystem diversity
KEY TERMS • HABITAT FRAGMENTATION • Division of habitats that formerly occupied large, unbroken areas into smaller pieces by roads, fields, cities, and other human land-transforming activities • The most important cause of declining biological diversity
KEY TERMS • INVASIVE SPECIES • A foreign species that, when introduced into an area where it is not native, upsets the balance among organisms living there and causes economic or environmental harm • An important cause of declining biological diversity
LEARNING OBJECTIVE 7 • Define conservation biology • Compare in situ and ex situ conservation measures
KEY TERMS • CONSERVATION BIOLOGY • A multidisciplinary science that focuses on the study of how humans impact species and ecosystems and on development of ways to protect biological diversity
KEY TERMS • RESTORATION ECOLOGY • Scientific field that uses principles of ecology to help return a degraded environment as closely as possible to its former undisturbed condition • An aspect of in situ conservation
Conservation Measures • In situ conservation • Efforts to preserve biological diversity in the wild • Urgently needed in world’s biodiversity hotspots • Ex situ conservation • Conserving individual species in human-controlled settings