Title: Biogeography lecture 5
1Biogeography lecture 5
- Animal distribution and limits to distribution
21. Compare Good's and Wallaces Areal Scales
showing global boundries.Â
- Good
- http//geo.arizona.edu/Antevs/ecol438/goodregn.htm
l - Wallace
- http//geo.arizona.edu/Antevs/ecol438/walcregn.htm
l
32. How does plant distribution vary among the US
southwest's great deserts? Name each desert,
give 2 identifying characteristics and give
example of a typical plants.
- http//geo.arizona.edu/Antevs/ecol438/namdesrt.htm
l - Great Basin Desert .Cold Desert (Steppe,
Grassland)Winter rainfall Sagebrush (Artemisia
tridentata) Shadscale (Atriplex convertifolia) - Mojave DesertWarm Desert Winter RainfallJoshua
tree (Yucca brevifolia), blackbrush (Coleogyne
ramosissima), Creosotebush (Larrea tridentata)
white bursage (Ambrosia dumosa) - Sonoran DesertHot Desert Summer
RainfallSaguaro (Cereus gigantea), paloverde
(Cercidium microphyllum)Creosote Bush (Larrea
tridentata), cholla (Opuntia spp.) - Chihuahuan DesertHot Desert Summer
RainfallCreosote Bush (Larrea tridentata), agave
(Agave spp.)Tarbush (Flourensia cernua)
4Southwest
5Overcoming Barriers - Disturbance
- Resistance to Invasion
- Successful alien invaders a fraction of total
introductions - Successful invaders depend on lower species
diversity human-made habitats
6Overcoming barriers - climate
- Palm tree distribution limited by cold climate.
- Pine trees cosmopolitan (found almost
everywhere)
7Overcoming barriers inhospitable environments
- Deserts
- Adaptation Camel hump, feet that flatten
- Behavior nocturnal fennec fox
- Tundra
- Migrate waterfowl, caribou
8How do limiting factors influence distribution?
- Tolerant species with a wide optimal range expand
into a greater range of habitats - Ex. Carp, insects, weeds, pest species
9Types of limiting factors that influence animal
distribution.
- Limiting Factors anything that makes difficult
survival, growth, or reproduction - moisture
- CO2
- light
- nutrients (aquatic)
- Oxygen
- pressure
105. How does competition influence animal
distribution? Ex 1
- barnacles (Chthamalus stellatus)
- rare in subtidal Balanus balanoides
competesThais lapillus eats - low in supertidal (upper limit set by drying)
115. How does competition influence animal
distribution? Ex 2
- starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) 'urban' bird in
North America - nesting space available (cities)
- food scarce (countryside)
- Outcompete native birds due to group behavior
126. Briefly describe each of the following ways
animals can overcome barriers. Ex 1.
- Corridors favorable habitat connecting larger
ones - Tethyan Sea (Pangean coastal faunas)
- Bering Land Bridge map
- Panama Isthmus map
136. Briefly describe each of the following ways
animals can overcome barriers. Ex 3.
- Filters blocks or slows passage of some
organisms - Arabian desert allows movement of animals between
Africa and Asia - Panama Canal freshwater separates Caribbean from
Pacific
146. Briefly describe each of the following ways
animals can overcome barriers. Ex 3
Green iguana central America Galapagos iquana
- Sweepstakes Routes severe barrier that permits
rare dispersals - Asian snails in the South Pacific
- South American animals in the Galapagos
157. What is the most important corridor in the
US? Why is it so important?Â
- The majority of North American land birds,
seeking winter homes in the tropics, that come
south through the Mississippi Flyway
168. Why might birds, reptiles and mammals migrate
south from North America?
- Animals that have moved north killer bees, red
ants- additional resources in N. America - What should limit spread of both further north?
- Animals moving south many reptiles amphibians
temp better in s. America
179. What factors may have led fish and amphibians
to migrate north from S. America?
- Hint how many amphibian and fish species exist
in S. and Central America?
1812. Define and give an example of each of the
following
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â evolutionary relic
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â evolutionary disjunction
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â climatic relic
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â endemic
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â cosmopolitan
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Provincialism
19Disjunct Distributions - Evolutionary relicts
- Linnaeus, Gray - deciduous forest disjuncts
- Magnolia was widespread during late Cretaceous
- Range reduced during Pleistocene
20Â Â Â Â Â climatic relic
- Ferns persist throughout time, but limited
distribution based on climate (warm temps
required).
21Endemic
- Endemism - isolation and stability
- occurring nowhere else, unique to a particular
area - example Sarcobatus Great Basin only
pictureTaxonomic effect Lower taxonomic ranks
tend to be more narrowly distributed
22References
- Maps and diagrams from Davis -
- Educational use only
- http//geo.arizona.edu/Antevs/ecol438/lect04.htm