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Climate Change Exercise

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Predictions for tree species at Grizzly Bear Forest, assuming all ... Chestnut blight fungal pathogen introduced from Asia (NYC, 1904) Likely 100 mature ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Climate Change Exercise


1
Climate Change Exercise
  • Median 84
  • See answer key http//www.montana.edu/phiguera/G
    EOG302/Assignment_II_key.pdf

2
Climate Change Exercise
3
Climate Change Exercise
4
Climate Change Exercise
5
Climate Change Exercise
6
Climate Change Exercise
5. Predictions for tree species at Grizzly Bear
Forest, assuming all winter precip falls as
snow   21st Century SAR averages Commit .6 -
.8 Between 39cm and 52cm B1 1 decreasing
to .6 65 to 39cm A2 .75 decreasing to .35
49 to 23cm     Probable Consequences if SAR
averages prove accurate Commit Scenario As
mean winter precipitation shifts into the 40s
mountain hemlock probability of occurrence drops
to .15 to .30. Consequently, whitebark and
lodgepole pine occurrence probability rises to
near 1. B1 Scenario Similar transition as Commit
scenario from mountain hemlock occurrence of
.8-.6 to .4 -.2. Corresponding rise in whitebark
and logdepole probability to .8 - .95. A2
Scenario As winter moisture falls to levels near
23cm whitebark pine probability falls to .8 and
lodgepole drops slightly from peak probability
but increases in proportion. 
7
Climate Change Exercise
  • 8. Potential limitations
  • The Grizzly Bear forest is a small portion of the
    area analyzed by the CCSM3 models. Due to the
    relatively small area of the Grizzly Bear forest
    and the spatial resolution (1.4 degrees) of the
    models, some local variability present in the
    area may not have been accounted for, making
    detailed inferences inadvisable.
  • The time period analyzed by the CCSM3 models
    could be a fraction of the lifespan of some
    individual trees.  Because many conifers tend to
    have lifespans greater than 100 years, the
    effects of the predicted snowfall amounts may not
    be readily observable until decades or centuries
    after the end of the model predictions (although
    the results may be still be similar).
  • The figure from McKenzie et al.  does not specify
    the impacts of abiotic and biotic limiting
    factors on the arboreal populations. Since the
    figure does not indicate if the degree to which
    the relative proportions of lodgepole pine,
    whitebark pine, and mountain hemlock are affected
    by biotic and abiotic factors, it is difficult to
    know if the ranges occupied are functions of just
    precipitation or precipitation and competitive
    exclusion.
  • 4. The amount of precipitation that falls as
    snow is not specified by McKenzie et. al. This
    limitation was discussed in 5, but it still
    bears mentioning that the percentage of
    precipitation that falls as snow currently is
    unknown. Similarly, the models do not account
    for mid-season melts which could impact the
    functionality of winter snow as a reservoir.
  •  

8
Climate Change Exercise
  • Common names of trees are not capitalized, unless
  • it is named after a person e.g. Douglas-fir,
    Engelmann spruce

9
Speciation and Extinction2 March, 2009
  • Systematics
  • Macroevolution
  • Speciation
  • Extinction
  • Species selection

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin's_finches
9
10
3. Speciation
  • Diversification
  • character displacement divergence of a feature
    of two similar species where their ranges
    overlap reduces competition

10
Textbook Fig. 7.3
11
3. Speciation
  • Adaptive radiation
  • diversification of species into a wide range of
    ecological niches numerous decedents from a
    single ancestor
  • Example
  • Hawaiian
  • honeycreepers
  • Galapagos
  • finches

11
Textbook Fig. 7.21 see also Fig. 7.14
12
Speciation and Extinction2 March, 2009
  • Systematics
  • Macroevolution
  • Speciation
  • Extinction
  • Species selection

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Darwin's_finches
12
13
4. Extinction
  • Extinction as an ecological process
  • Starts at the population level
  • Probability-of-extinction increases non-linearly
    as population size decreases

Death rate ½ birth rate
time to extinction (years)
Death rate birth rate
Death rate 2 x birth rate
Birth rate 1.0 (for all lines)
13
Population size ()
14
4. Extinction
  • Recent extinctions
  • Passenger Pigeon (Ectopistes migratorius)
  • Original population in the
  • millions, perhaps billions
  • Hunting (1870s), 2000-3000/day
  • 1914 last bird (Martha) died in
  • Cincinnati zoo
  • American chestnut (Castanea dentata)
  • One of the most abundant tree in eastern
    deciduous forests
  • Chestnut blight fungal pathogen introduced from
    Asia (NYC, 1904)
  • Likely lt100 mature
  • trees remaining

14
15
5. Species selection
  • Species selection
  • Analogous to natural selection, but at the
    species level species with certain
    characteristics increase while other decrease of
    become extinct.

Dispersal Mode
Duration in fossil record
16
5. Species selection
  • Examples differential survival and proliferation
    of placental mammals after the K-T mass
    extinction.

Placental mammals (infraclass Eutheria)
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