Chapter 6: Kinds of Ecosystems - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 38
About This Presentation
Title:

Chapter 6: Kinds of Ecosystems

Description:

Temperate Deciduous Forest. Sufficient moisture change of ... Many conifers as well as deciduous. Can have trees up to 800 years old, over 300 feet tall ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:81
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 39
Provided by: highered
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Chapter 6: Kinds of Ecosystems


1
Chapter 6 Kinds of Ecosystems Communities
  • Succession Primary Secondary
  • Biomes Terrestrial Aquatic

2
Start with bare rock - glacier, volcano fig. 6.2
3
Pioneer Organism Lichens fig 6.1Grow right on
rock, break down rock to start forming soil
4
(No Transcript)
5
Floating Bog figure 6.4Stage 4 in previous
figure. Eventually succeeds to a climax forest
6
Soil remains - plowed field, fire fig. 6.5
7
Figure 6.6
8
Biomes
  • Types of Climax Communities Vegetation mainly
    determined by Climate
  • Climate mainly determined by temperature
    moisture

9
(No Transcript)
10
(No Transcript)
11
(No Transcript)
12
Desert
  • 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
  • Gobi Desert

14
Grassland Prairie, Steppe
  • Fairly dry (10-30 inches of rain)
  • Hot summers, mild-cold winters
  • Fire or flooding and/or dryness prevent trees
    from establishing

15
Grassland Prairie, Steppe
  • Good soil for agriculture
  • See box on page 118 Grassland succession
  • Prairie restoration project at SJC (by Lake Banet)

16
Grassland Succession
17
Grassland Succession (continued)
18
Savanna
  • Hot grassland with scattered or patches of trees
  • e.g., Serengeti
  • Seasonal rainfall Monsoons gt 2 seasons dry,
    wet
  • Grades into Tropical Deciduous Forest

19
Tropical 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)

20
Tropical 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!

21
Temperate Deciduous Forest
  • Sufficient moisture change of seasons (4
    well-defined seasons)
  • Fertile soil for agriculture

22
Temperate 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

23
Boreal Forest Taiga
  • Long, cold winters, short cool summers
  • Lots of snow
  • Conifers
  • Grades into tundra at higher latitudes

24
Tundra
  • 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

25
Aquatic Ecosystems
  • Marine (salt water)
  • Fresh (Lakes Streams)
  • Brackish Estuaries

26
Figure 6.19All production (photosynthesis) in
(shallow) euphotic zone true light
27
Marine 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)

28
Open Ocean
  • Average ocean depth over 10,000 feet gt no light
    penetrates
  • Most of ocean has low productivity, similar to a
    desert

29
Estuaries
  • 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

30
Chesapeake Bay
31
Freshwater Ecosystems
  • Lakes Streams

32
Lakes
  • 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

33
Causes 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

34
Classification 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)

35
Oligotrophic Lake Mmmm...
36
Eutrophic Lake yucky...
37
Mesotrophic Lake typical...
38
Streams
  • 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
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com