Title: Chapter 6: Kinds of Ecosystems
1Chapter 6 Kinds of Ecosystems Communities
- Succession Primary Secondary
- Biomes Terrestrial Aquatic
2Start with bare rock - glacier, volcano fig. 6.2
3Pioneer Organism Lichens fig 6.1Grow right on
rock, break down rock to start forming soil
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5Floating Bog figure 6.4Stage 4 in previous
figure. Eventually succeeds to a climax forest
6Soil remains - plowed field, fire fig. 6.5
7Figure 6.6
8Biomes
- Types of Climax Communities Vegetation mainly
determined by Climate - Climate mainly determined by temperature
moisture
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12Desert
- Less than 10 inches of rain per year
- Sahara, Atacama, SW US, Kalahari, Australian
- Not necessarily hot - e.g., Gobi, NW US, Poles
- High biodiversity low biomass
13 14Grassland Prairie, Steppe
- Fairly dry (10-30 inches of rain)
- Hot summers, mild-cold winters
- Fire or flooding and/or dryness prevent trees
from establishing
15Grassland Prairie, Steppe
- Good soil for agriculture
- See box on page 118 Grassland succession
- Prairie restoration project at SJC (by Lake Banet)
16Grassland Succession
17Grassland Succession (continued)
18Savanna
- Hot grassland with scattered or patches of trees
- e.g., Serengeti
- Seasonal rainfall Monsoons gt 2 seasons dry,
wet - Grades into Tropical Deciduous Forest
19Tropical Rainforest
- Wet and hot all year round
- Near equator in S Central America, Africa, SE
Asia, Pacific Islands - Highest biodiversity biomass (more species than
rest of world combined)
20Tropical Rainforests Farming
- Soil quality is quickly depleted after
deforestation due to high moisture temps gt
leaching of nutrients - Slash Burn agriculture on small scale is only
sustainable kind - Read Box on page 121 - Farming
- Conclusion This biome cant support large human
population!
21Temperate Deciduous Forest
- Sufficient moisture change of seasons (4
well-defined seasons) - Fertile soil for agriculture
22Temperate Rainforest
- Pacific NW mild temps, 80 inches rain annually,
fertile soil - Many conifers as well as deciduous
- Can have trees up to 800 years old, over 300 feet
tall - Over 90 of old-growth forest has been logged
23Boreal Forest Taiga
- Long, cold winters, short cool summers
- Lots of snow
- Conifers
- Grades into tundra at higher latitudes
24Tundra
- Very short summers (or high altitude gt alpine
tundra) - Lower layer of soil is permanently frozen gt
permafrost gt no trees, also lots of swamps,
ponds - Insects, migratory birds, hardy mammals
25Aquatic Ecosystems
- Marine (salt water)
- Fresh (Lakes Streams)
- Brackish Estuaries
26Figure 6.19All production (photosynthesis) in
(shallow) euphotic zone true light
27Marine ecosystems
- Most productive in shallow water (few 100 feet)
gt close to shore - The most productive marine ecosystem is a coral
reef fig 6.21 gt - Needs shallow, warm, clear water
- Very susceptible to sediment pollution (turbidity)
28Open Ocean
- Average ocean depth over 10,000 feet gt no light
penetrates - Most of ocean has low productivity, similar to a
desert
29Estuaries
- Shallow, partially enclosed bays where fresh and
saltwater mix gt brackish water - E.g. Chesapeake Bay, Mississippi Delta
- Get lots of nutrients from in-flowing streams
shallow water (lots of sunlight) gt very
productive ecosystem (3rd most on earth) - Susceptible to pollution because of coastal
cities
30Chesapeake Bay
31Freshwater Ecosystems
32Lakes
- Geologically short-lived features
- Classified by nutrient levels
- Physical measures of health include
- Dissolved oxygen (O2) levels DO
- Organisms cant get oxygen from H2O
- Low DO indicates pollution
- Biological oxygen demand BOD
- nutrients fertilize algae gt algae dies gt
bacteria decompose algae gt creates higher BOD gt
depletes dissolved O2 gt Eutrophication - Very clean lakes have low BOD, but so do dead
ones
33Causes of Eutrophication
- Sediment from streams carries nutrients,
especially true in agricultural regions or where
wastewater not properly treated - Sediment also makes lake shallower gt ages the
lake - Eventually becomes bog then dry land Recall
secondary succession figure 6.3
34Classification of Lakes
- Oligotrophic
- Deep, cold, nutrient-poor (low productivity)
- High DO, low BOD
- Typical pure, clean mountain lake (young)
- Eutrophic
- Shallow, warm, nutrient-rich (over-fertilized)
- Low DO, high BOD (unless dead)
- Typical scummy farm pond (old)
- Mesotrophic Somewhere in between
- Most recreational lakes lots of fish, but clean
enough for swimmin (middle-aged)
35Oligotrophic Lake Mmmm...
36Eutrophic Lake yucky...
37Mesotrophic Lake typical...
38Streams
- Flowing water makes them easier to clean up than
lakes - Upstream Faster flowing gt Higher DO, lower BOD
- Picks up sediment nutrients downstream water
flows more slowly gt lower DO