Title: Chapter 5: Biological Communities: The Biome Concept
1Chapter 5 Biological Communities The Biome
Concept
2The Case of the Cactus Look-Alike
- Cactus-like plants are common in Africa.
- These plants do not belong to the cactus family,
Cactaceae - Cactaceae are native only to New World
- look-alikes may be in spurge family,
Euphorbiaceae - This situation illustrates convergence of species
descended from different ancestors.
3Convergence
- Convergence is the process by which unrelated
organisms evolve a resemblance to each other in
response to common environmental conditions - similar adaptive responses emerge in response to
particular selective conditions - an example mangroves worldwide typically have
thick, leathery leaves, root projections, and
viviparity
4(a) A tree-forming cactus in Mexico (b) an East
African euphorb tree. Both converged in response
to dry climate
5The Biome Concept
- Character (plant and animal life) of natural
communities is determined by climate, topography,
and soil (or parallel influences in aquatic
environments). - Because of convergence, similar dominant plant
forms occur under similar conditions. Biomes are
categories that group communities by dominant
plant forms. - In North America
- tundra, boreal forest, temperate seasonal forest,
temperate rain forest, shrubland, grassland, and
subtropical desert - In Mexico and Central America
- tropical rain forest, tropical deciduous forest,
and tropical savanna
6Biomes - Key Points
- Geographic distributions of biomes correspond
closely to major climate zones. - Not all biome classifications are the same
- some recognize finer or coarser detail
- various biomes intergrade continuously and
recognizing boundaries is difficult - Matching of biomes and environment occurs because
no single type of plant can endure the entire
range of conditions on earth.
7Adaptations and Environment -- Not the Whole Story
- Distributions of species are not solely a
function of relationships to physical
environment - biotic interactions shape these distributions
- chance and history play important roles
8Climate is the major determinant of plant
distribution.
- Climatic factors typically establish limits of
plant distributions - the sugar maple, Acer saccharum, in eastern North
America, is limited by - cold winter temperatures to the north
- hot summer temperatures to the south
- summer drought to the west
9Ecological Tolerances
- Several tree-sized maples in eastern North
America have distributions that broadly overlap
that of sugar maple - because of different ecological tolerances, these
other species exhibit distinctive environmental
preferences, even when their ranges overlap - black drier, better-drained soils high in
calcium - silver moist, well-drained soils
- red wet and swampy or dry, poorly-developed soils
10Related species may differ in their ecological
tolerances
11Topography in mountains creates a wide range of
moisture conditions
- each species exhibits a local and distinctive
optimum the type of site in which it does best - coast redwood dominates center of moisture
gradient - cedar, Douglas fir, madrone occur at drier end of
the moisture gradient - big-leaf maple, California bay tree occur at
wetter end of moisture gradient
12Form and function match the environment.
- Adaptations match each species to the environment
where it lives - all species are to some extent specialized
- insect larvae from ditches and sloughs survive
without oxygen longer than related species from
well-aerated streams - marine snails from the upper intertidal tolerate
desiccation better than their relatives from
lower levels - we recognize both specialists and generalists
13(a) Mesquite leaves are subdivided into leaflets
that facilitate dissipation of heat
(b) Paloverde leaflets are tiny thick stems are
responsible for photosynthesis
(c) Limberbrush has broad, succulent leaves
produced for only a few weeks
14Other Considerations
- Certain species make their environments more
favorable for themselves - decaying foliage of evergreen species of poor
soils produces organic acids, leaching minerals
from soil - Availability of moisture is the single most
important climatic factor defining biomes - because heat influences moisture stress,
temperature and precipitation together are the
determinants of boundaries of major biomes
15Climate defines the boundaries of terrestrial
biomes.
- A widely adopted climatic classification is that
of Heinrich Walter - Walters scheme is based on the annual course of
temperature and precipitation - focuses on conditions of moisture and temperature
stress that determine plant form - recognizes 9 zones, from Equatorial (Tropical
rain forest) to Polar (Tundra)
16Walters climate zone classification
17Whittakers Scheme 1
- Whittaker related major biomes to annual
temperature and precipitation. - The biomes fall in a triangular area with corners
representing following conditions - warm-moist
- warm-dry
- cool-dry
- Whittakers scheme is similar in many respects to
Walters - Whittaker starts with vegetation and relates
climate
18Whittakers Scheme 2
- Equatorial and tropical climate zones (mean
temperatures between 20oC and 30oC) - precipitation ranges from 0 to 400 cm/yr
- Temperate climate zones (mean temperatures
between 5oC and 20oC) - precipitation ranges from 0 to 300 cm/yr
- Boreal and polar climate zones (mean temperatures
less than 5oC) - precipitation typically below 200 cm/yr
19Whittakers biomes
20Whittakers Scheme - Other Considerations
- Fire shapes vegetation toward drier end of
spectrum within each temperature range - typically in grassland and shrub biomes where
- moisture is intermediate (sufficient productivity
for fuels to accumulate) - seasonal droughts occur (fuels dry out
sufficiently to burn) - fire favors grasses and forbs over woody plants
- species of these systems are adapted to or are
specialized for frequent fires
21Walters Climate Diagrams
- Walters climate diagrams relate monthly
temperature and precipitation through the year - 20 mm of monthly precipitation is equated with
10oC in temperature - vertical scales permit ready identification of
periods of water deficit and water abundance - Localities within the same climate zone have
similar climates worldwide.
22Global distribution of major biomes
23Temperate Climate Zones
- Temperate zone is characterized by temperatures
between 5o-20oC at low elevations, with frost
throughout the zone - found between 30oN and 45oN in North America and
between 40oN and 60oN in Europe - biomes differentiated by
- total amounts and seasonality of precipitation
- length of frost-free season or growing season
24Temperate Seasonal Forest Biome 1
- Develops under moderate climates with winter
freezing - growing season is 130-180 days
- precipitation exceeds evapotranspiration
- Found principally in eastern North America,
Europe, and eastern Asia. - Vegetation is dominated by deciduous trees with
understory of small trees and shrubs, often
abundant herbs.
25Temperate Seasonal Forest Biome 2
- Warmer and drier parts of the temperate seasonal
forest biome are dominated by needle-leaved
trees, typically pines - found principally in North America along the
Atlantic and Gulf coasts and at higher elevations
in the western states - needle-leaved forests typically develop under
conditions of drought and nutrient stress - fires may be frequent and species can resist fire
damage
26Temperate Rain Forest Biome
- Develops primarily in warm temperate climates
- mild winters, heavy winter rains, summer fogs
common - Found principally in the northwestern US,
adjacent British Columbia, southern Chile, New
Zealand, Tasmania. - Vegetation is dominated by tall evergreen trees,
such as Douglas fir and coastal redwood - extensive during Mesozoic era
- not as diverse as its tropical counterparts
27Temperate Grassland/Desert Biome 1
- Found in continental climate zones
- summers are hot and wet winters are cold
- growing season is 120-300 days
- fires are a dominant influence
- Extensive grasslands develop, called prairies in
North America, steppes in central Asia. - Vegetation is dominated by grasses and forbs
- fire is frequent and most species have
underground fire-resistant stems
28Temperate Grassland/Desert Biome 2
- Grasslands grade into deserts in arid continental
climates - winters are cold and summers hot
- precipitation is 25-50 cm/yr
- fires are infrequent because of low fuel
accumulation - grazing can exert strong pressure on vegetation
- Grasslands are widespread in the western US, from
Great Basin southward. - Vegetation is dominated by shrubs, such as
sagebrush, or small trees, such as piñon pine and
juniper.
29Woodland/Shrubland Biome
- Develops in Mediterranean-type climate (cool, wet
winter, warm dry summer) - fires are frequent and most plants have
adaptations to fire (resistant seeds or root
crowns) - Typically found at 30-40o latitude, west coasts,
common in southern Europe, southern California,
central Chile, Cape region of South Africa. - Vegetation is dominated by sclerophyllous
evergreen shrubs.
30Subtropical Desert Biome
- These are highly variable systems found under
extreme aridity - develop at 20o-30o north and south latitude
- rainfall is sparse (less than 25 mm)
- creosote bush is common in subtropical American
deserts, with associated cacti, shrubs, and small
trees - subtropical deserts typically have summer
rainfall, with high species diversity, prominent
annual flora
31Boreal and Polar Climate Zones
- These zones have average temperatures below 5oC.
- Boreal forest (taiga) develops between
temperatures of 5oC and -5oC. - Tundra develops at temperatures below -5oC.
32Boreal Forest Biome
- Climate is extremely cold, with temperatures as
low as -60oC in winter - average annual temperature is below 5oC,
precipitation 40-100 cm/yr - growing season is 50-100 days
- Boreal forest is centered on a broad belt at
50-60oN latitude across North America and
Eurasia. - Also called taiga, vegetation of low diversity
dominated by evergreen needle-leaved trees,
typically spruce and fir.
33Tundra Biome
- Exceedingly cold climate, with brief, but active,
growing season in summer - soils are permanently frozen, thaw to depth of
0.5-1 m during brief summer growing season - precipitation is less than 60 cm/yr, but soils
may be saturated because of impeded drainage - Found at high latitudes, north of boreal forest
belt (but superficially similar systems occur in
alpine zones). - Tundra is a treeless expanse of dwarf, prostrate
woody shrubs.
34Equatorial and Tropical Climate Zones
- Located within 20o of the equator.
- Daily temperature variation exceeds monthly
variation through the year. - Environments are largely distinguished by
differences in the seasonal pattern of rainfall. - Frost is not a factor plants and animals cannot
tolerate freezing.
35Tropical Rain Forest Biome
- Climate is continually warm and moist
- precipitation is in excess of 200 cm/yr,
biseasonal, but never less than 10 cm in any
month - Occupies three important regions, in
South/Central America, West Africa, Indo-Malayan
region. - These are exceedingly diverse forests, dominated
by evergreen or seasonally deciduous broad-leaved
trees, featuring diverse growth forms including
climbing lianas (woody vines) and epiphytes
(plants that grow on the branches of other
plants).
36Tropical Seasonal Forest/Savanna Biomes 1
- climate is seasonally dry, but sufficient
moisture to support forest - progressively drier tropical habitats support dry
forests, thorn scrub, and true deserts - Occur worldwide within the tropics, but typically
beyond 10oN or S of the equator. - Tropical seasonal forests have a preponderance of
deciduous species.
37Tropical Seasonal Forest/Savanna Biomes 2
- Savannas are grasslands with scattered trees.
- These are typical of large areas of semiarid
tropics, especially at high elevations in East
Africa. - Rainfall is strongly seasonal
- 90-150 cm/yr but driest 3-4 months receive less
than 5 cm each - fire and grazing play important roles in
maintenance of these system
38A pause
39Rain forests today
- More than one half of tropical forests have
already been destroyed - Rainforests once covered 14 of the earth's land
surface now they cover a mere 6 and experts
estimate that the last remaining rainforests
could be consumed in less than 40 years. - each day at least 80,000 acres (32,300 ha) of
forest disappear from Earth. At least another
80,000 acres (32,300 ha) of forest are degraded.
Hundreds of species driven to extinction - FAO estimates that 10.4 million hectares of
tropical forest were permanently destroyed each
year in the period from 2000 to 2005, an increase
since the 1990-2000 period, when around 10.16
million hectares of forest were lost - Experts estimates that we are losing 137 plant,
animal and insect species every single day due to
rainforest deforestation. That equates to 50,000
species a year. As the rainforest species
disappear, so do many possible cures for
life-threatening diseases. Currently, 121
prescription drugs sold worldwide come from
plant-derived sources. While 25 of Western
pharmaceuticals are derived from rainforest
ingredients, less that 1 of these tropical trees
and plants have been tested by scientists. - There were an estimated ten million Indians
living in the Amazonian Rainforest five centuries
ago. Today there are less than 200,000.
40(No Transcript)
41Deforestation for cattle grazing
42Modification of the Biome Concept for Aquatic
Ecosystems
- The biome concept in its strict sense does not
exist for aquatic ecosystems - biomes were developed for terrestrial ecosystems,
where growth form of dominant vegetation is
distinguishing factor - aquatic ecologists have tended to develop
independent classifications for aquatic systems,
focused predominantly on physical factors
43Aquatic Ecosystems - Streams
- Streams form wherever precipitation exceeds
evaporation, draining excess water. - Streams may be divided into principal habitats
- riffles (where water runs over rocky substrate)
- pools (deeper stretches of slow-moving water)
- Streams exhibit continuous change in conditions
from headwaters downstream, captured in river
continuum concept. - Streams exhibit downstream drift of
organisms/material.
44Conditions of a stream differ in pools and riffles
45Aquatic Ecosystems - Lakes
- Lakes form in any kind of depression (typically
effects of glaciation or geological activity). - May be divided into principal habitats
- littoral zone (shallow zone with rooted
vegetation) - limnetic zone (open water beyond littoral zone)
- benthic zone (bottom sediments, habitat for
burrowing animals and microorganisms)
46Ecological zones in a lake
47Aquatic Ecosystems - Estuaries
- Are special environments at the mouths of rivers,
especially where outflow is partially enclosed
(such as barrier islands). - Unique because they are the interface between
fresh and salt water habitats - typically highly productive because of influx of
nutrients and their rapid exchange between
sediments and surface waters - often edged by extensive tidal marshes with
emergent vegetation
48Estuaries
49Aquatic Ecosystems - Oceans
- Oceans are enormously complex systems, with
conditions varying with temperature, depth,
current, substrate, tides. - Oceans are often classified according to depth
- littoral zone (between high and low tides,
exhibits dramatic zonation) - neritic zone (beyond low tide to edge of
continental shelf, often subdivided into photic
and aphotic zones, typically productive) - oceanic zone (deeper waters, also divided into
photic and aphotic zones, typically unproductive)
50Oceans ecological zones
51Aquatic Ecosystems - Coral Reefs
- Coral reefs are special oceanic systems
- develop in shallow waters of warm oceans
- may develop around volcanoes, which may subside
or erode, leaving a ring-like atoll - are typically highly productive
- nutrients released from erosion on landward side
- nutrients forced up as deeper-water currents
encounter the reef - are typically highly diverse
52Coral reefs in the Red Sea
53Summary 1
- Climate has profound effects on dominant plant
forms. Each region has characteristic vegetation
differing in growth form, leaf morphology, and
seasonality of foliage. - Major vegetation types can be used to classify
ecosystems into biomes associated with major
climatic classes. - Walters approach classifies regions on the basis
of climates having characteristic vegetation.
54Summary 2
- Whittakers approach classifies regions on the
basis of vegetation having characteristic
climates. - Principal climatic zones (tropical, temperate,
boreal, polar) and their biomes are distinguished
first on the basis of temperature, then
precipitation, and its seasonality. - Aquatic systems are not classified into biomes,
but we distinguish streams, lakes, estuaries,
oceans, and coral reefs.
55As usual
- Do quiz for chapter 5 due Monday
- Reminder quiz chapters 1 to 4, March 17 (for
BIOL 207) and March 18 (for PDHP 212)