Title: Communities and Biomes
1Communities and Biomes
2Community
- Collection of several interacting populations
that inhabiting a common environment.
3Abiotic factors and biotic factors determine an
organisms ability to survive
4Limiting Factors
- Environmental factors that affect the organisms
ability to survive in its environment. - (food availability, temperature, and predators)
5Limiting Factors
- Biotic or abiotic
- Restrict existence, numbers, reproduction or
distribution of an organism. - Factors that limit one population in a community,
may indirectly effect another - E.g. Lack of water limits grass growthreducing
seed growth, mice need seeds for food, no food,
populations reduce.
6Ranges of Tolerance
- Organisms ability to withstand fluctuations in
biotic and abiotic environmental factors - Populations varies according to its tolerance for
environmental changes.
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8Succession
- Orderly, natural changes and species replacements
that take place in communities over time.
9Succession
- Occur in stages different species at different
stages create conditions that are suitable for
some organisms and not suitable for others. - Difficult to observe happen over long periods of
time.
10Primary Succession Initial colonization of new
sites
- Lava from volcano Avalanche
- Pioneer speciesFirst species in the area (e.g.
Lichen) - Climax CommunityA stable, mature community that
undergoes little or no change in species. - Over time as a community or organisms change and
develop (additional habitats emerge, new species
move in, and old species disappear) Areas become
forest of vines, trees, and shrubs, inhabited by
birds and other forest-dwelling animals. - Gradual changes over time.
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12Pioneer species colonize
Growth continues until community becomes
fairly stable.
Pioneering organism dies, decaying into soil.
Presence of soil makes it possible for weedy
plants, small ferns, and insects to become
established
Soil builds up, seeds borne by wind blow into
soil, and begin to grow
Area becomes forest of vines, trees, and
shrubs. Birds and other animals.
13Secondary Succession
- Sequence of changes that take place after a
community is disrupted by natural disaster or
human actions.
14Secondary Succession
- Gradual changes over time
- Area previously contained life
- Land that contains SOIL
- Different pioneer species
- May have same climax community, with similar
climate. - Faster to develop because soil exist.
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16Biomes Large areas that have characteristics of
climax communities
17Biome Factors
- Altitude and Latitude
- Temperature and Precipitation
- Major limiting factors
18Biomes
- Aquatic BiomesMarine, Freshwater, Estuaries (3/4
of Earths surface covered by aquatic biomes) - Terrestrial BiomesTundra, Taiga, Desert,
Grassland, Deciduous Forest, Tropical Rain Forest.
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21Marine Biomes
- Oceans
- Photic ZonePortion of marine biome that is
shallow enough to penetrate sunlight
(coastlines-Shore, beaches, mudflats) - Aphotic ZoneDeeper waters that do not receive
sunlight. (Deep, least explored oceans) - PhosLight (Greek)
- Awithout (Greek)
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23Marine Life
- Largest amounts of biomass (living materials)
though often very small - Whales, seals, sea otters, sea cows
- Kelp, algae, sea grass
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26Estuary
- Bay, sound, fjord, salt marshes, wetlands
- Freshwater mixes with salt water (some land)
- Brackish Water ( more salt than freshwater but
less than marine) - Salinity ranges
- Amount of freshwater vs.. Saltwater
- Tides
- Biodiversity
27Estuary Life
- Eelgrass, smooth cordgrass, sea lavender
- Shiner Perch, Starry Flounder Orange Striped
Jellyfish, Purple Shore Crab, Scallop - Predatorscranes and other birds
- Decay of dead organisms is quick, nutrients
recycled through food web.
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29Tides Gravitational pull of sun and moon cause
the rise and fall of ocean tides.
30Intertidal zonePortion of the shoreline that
lies between the high and low tide lines
- Size depends on slope of the land and tide
height. - High levels of sunlight, nutrients and oxygen
(But productivity may be limited by waves/tides) - Differ in rockiness and wave actions
- Snails, sea stars, mussels, barnacles, clams,
worms, crabs
31Tide Pools Pools of water left when the water
recedes at low tide, can land lock organisms
until next tide. Vary greatly in nutrient and
oxygen levels
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33Ocean Bottom/Photic Zone
- Less affected by waves and tides
- Nutrients washed from the land by rainfall
contribute to abundant life and high
productivity. - PlanktonSmall organisms that live in waters of
photic zone.removal great impact - Autotrophsdiatoms
- Heterotrophesjuvenile stages of many marine
animals.
34Ocean Bottom/Aphotic Zone
- Almost 90 of ocean is gt than a km deep.
- Animals living there far and few, depend on
photic zone where plankton live for food
(directly or indirectly) - Fish adapted to darkness and scarcity of food
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36Freshwater Biomes
- Major abiotic factors temperature and light
- Not enough sunlight penetrates to bottom to
support photosynthesis - few aquatic plants or algae grow
- Population density lower
- Bacteria break down dead organisms and recycle
nutrients.
37Freshwater Life
- Concentric bands of species
- Cattails, sedges
- Tadpoles, aquatic insects, turtles, worms,
crayfish, beetles, dragonflies, minnows,
bluegill, carp.
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39Terrestrial Biomes
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41Tundra
- Treeless land long summer days short periods of
winter sunlight - Temperatures never rise above freezing
42Permafrost
- Underneath topsoil is a layer of permanently
frozen ground. (Mammoths)
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43Tundra Organisms
- Shallow-rooted grasses (sedges), small plants,
reindeer moss (lichen) - Soil lacking in nutrients decay process slow due
to cold temperatures. - Mosquitoes, lemmings, weasels, artic foxes,
snowshoe hares, musk oxen, caribou, reindeer.
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45Taiga/Boreal Forest
- South of tundra
- Warmer and wetter than tundra
- Climatic conditionslong, severe winters, short,
mild summers. - Canada, Northern Europe, Asia.
- Permafrost absent
- Topsoildecaying coniferous needles
Pines/evergreens (acidic and poor in minerals)
46Taiga Organisms
- PLANTS
- Northern coniferous (cone bearing) forest
- Larch, fir, hemlock, spruce trees
- Fire/Logging disrupts taiga-first trees to
re-colonize are birch, aspen, or other deciduous
species. - ANIMALS
- Raccoons, bears, lynxes, wolves, ruff-legged
buzzards, caribou, ox, artic fox
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48Desert
- Arid region
- Sparse to almost nonexistent plant life
- Less than 25 cm of precipitation annually
- Atacama Desert (Chile)one of dryest places in
the world.
49Desert Organisms
- PLANTS
- Drought-resistant treesmesquites, cacti,
creosote bush - ANIMALS
- Lizards, tortoises, snake, coyotes, hawks, owls,
roadrunners, scorpions.
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51Grasslands/Prairies/Steppes/Pampas/Savannas
- Large communities covered by grasses and similar
small plants - Yellowstone National Park
- Fewer than 10 to 15 trees per HECTARE!
- (a unit of surface, or land, measure equal to
100 areas, or 10,000 square meters equivalent to
2.471 acres-www.dictionary.com) - Most terrestrial area
- Higher biological diversity than desertmore than
100 species per acre.
52Species
- Animals herd animals, fox, prairie dogs,
coyotes, weasels, Red-tailed Hawks, bison, lions,
antelope and lynx. - Plants buffalo grass, ryegrass, foxtail, wild
oats, and purple needlegrass - Wildflowers wild indigos, clovers, sunflowers,
goldenrods, blazing stars, and asters
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54Temperate Forests
- Many types
- Precipitation 70 to 150 cm annually
- Dominated by broad-leaved Hardwood tress that
lose their foliage annually. - Soiltop layer rich in humus and deep layer of
clay. - AnimalsBlack bears, deer, squirrels,
salamanders, mice, blue jays - Plantsbirch, hickory, oak, beech and maple.
55Tropical Rain Forest
- More species of organisms anywhere
- Warm temperatures (25?C), high humidity, and
abundant rain fall, lush plant growth - Biodiversity makes important protect
- Near equator
- Precipitation 200 cm annually (some 600 cm)
56Why so many species in rain forest? Hypothesis
- Location near equatornot covered with ice during
last ice agemore time to evolve - Warm weather, do not drop leaves, year round
growing conditions for plants, creates greater
food supply, therefore supports more organisms. - Provide a multitude of possible habitats for
diverse organisms. - More layers allowing more for organisms to exist.
(Many organisms find their niche)
57Tropical Rain Forest Continued
- Nutrients are tied up in living materials (few
soil) - Decomposers do their work
- Rainforest trees have roots and mycorrhizae that
enable them to absorb nutrients. - Trees are cut for their hardwoods (mahogany), for
farming, and to produce grasslands for cattle.
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59Layers of the Rain Forests
60EMERGENT LAYER
- Highest layer.
- Tallest trees.
- Resemble umbrellas
- Researcher built towers and aerial walkways in
the trees. - Birds, butterflies and small monkeys live with
bats, snakes and bugs.
61Kapok Tree
Brazil Nut Tree
62CANOPY
- Trees 25- 35 meters
- Only a few taller trees push to make the emergent
layer - Treetops stop a lot of the light from entering
the forest. - Protects the soil from erosion from rains.
- Birds, monkeys, frogs, and sloth, as well as
lizards, snakes and many insects
63Howler Monkey
Spider Monkey
64Understory
- Trees that reach the canopy.
- Wait until a gap appears which they can then grow
into. - Small, thin trunks.
- 20 meters tall.
- This layer is the home to birds, butterflies,
frogs and snakes.
65hummingbirds
66SHRUB LAYER
- Grows between the smaller trees of the understory
and the forest floor. - ferns and small shrubs
67FOREST FLOOR
- Very dark (Estimated that only 2 of the sunlight
actually reaches the floor) - Layer of leaves, twigs and dead plants, which rot
down quickly to provide nutrients for the plants
(Home to invertebrates and microorganisms, which
quickly rot down this surface layer) - The soil is very sandy with only a thin layer of
rotting vegetation. Without the trees, the soil
quickly loses its ability to support plants and
turns to desert-like conditions.
68Rainforest floor Organisms
- PlantsFerns and Mosses
- Animalstigers and elephants in Asia, gorillas
and leopards in Africa and tapirs and jaguars in
South America.
69Amazon River Dolphin
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