Title: Chapter 3 Communities, Biomes, and Ecosystems
1Chapter 3Communities, Biomes, and Ecosystems
23.1
3I. Communities
- A. What is a community?
- B. Limiting factors any biotic or abiotic
factor that restricts the numbers, reproduction,
or distribution of an organism
4Examples of Abiotic Limiting Factors
- 1. Nutrients
- 2. Water
- 3. Space
54. Sunlight5. Climate6. Temperature7. Soil
Chemistry8. Fire
6Examples of Biotic Limiting Factors
- Food
- Competition
- Disease
- Predation
7C. Range of Tolerance
- 1. There is an upper and lower limit for any
environmental factor - 2. Tolerance ability of an organism to survive
when subjected to biotic or abiotic factors
8a. Example oxygen level
9b. Amount of sun
10c. Amount of water
11II. Succession Change over time
- A. Ecological succession is the change in an
ecosystem that happens when one community
replaces another as a result of changing abiotic
and biotic factors. - there are two types (primary and secondary)
121. Primary Succession
- a. The establishment of a community in an area
of exposed rock that does not have any topsoil.
(usually happens very slowly at first)
13b. examples
- (1) volcano making new land.
14(2) Avalanche exposes rock.
15c. Pioneer Species
- (1) First species to colonize an area.
16(2) Example-Lichens
172. Secondary Succession
- a. The orderly and predictable change that takes
place after a community of organisms has been
removed but the soil has remained.
18- b. Pioneer species mainly plants that begin to
grow in the disturbed area are the first
species to start secondary succession - Like these baby pines
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20B. Succession Occurs Because of COMPETITION!
21d. Climax Community
- (1) A stable mature community that undergoes
little or no change. - (2)Can develop from bare rock.
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243.2
25I. Terrestrial Biomes Effects of Latitude and
Climate
- A. Ecosystems on land are grouped into biomes
based on the plant communities within them. - B. Biomes are a large group of ecosystems that
share the same type of climax communities.
26C. Two keys to understanding terrestrial biomes
include
- 1. Latitude from 0o at equator to 90o at the
poles (see page 65)
27- 2. Climate average weather conditions,
including temperature and precipitation
28II. Major Land Biomes
29A. Tundra
- Precipitation 15-25 cm per year
- Temperature -34oC to 12oC
- Plants Treeless, grasses, shrubs (shallow roots)
- Permafrost is present.
- Animals birds, wolves, fish, polar bears,
caribou
30B. Boreal forest (taiga)
- Great northern coniferous forest
- Precipitation 38-51cm per year
- Temperature -68oC to 32oC
- Plants Spruce, fir and some deciduous trees
small shrubs - Animals Birds, moose, deer, beavers, wolverines,
mountain lions
31C. Temperate Forest (Deciduous)
- Precipitation 75-150cm per year
- Temperature -30oC to 30oC
- Plants oak, maple, beech (deciduous trees lose
their leaves) shrubs thick humus - Animals Squirrels, rabbits, skunks, birds, deer,
foxes and bears
32D. Temperate Woodland/Shrubland (Chaparral)
- Precipitation 25-43cm per year
- Temperature 10oC to 40oC
- Plants evergreen shrubs, sagebrush
- Animals fox, coyote, bobcat, jackrabbit lizard,
snakes, birds
33E. Grassland (Temperate Grasslands)
- Precipitation 50-89cm per year
- Temperature -40oC to 38oC
- Plants Grasses and herbs
- Animals Horses, deer, mice, coyote, birds,
bison, snakes, and grasshoppers
34F. Desert
- Precipitation 15-26cm per year
- Temperature high of 20oC to 49oC
- low 2oC to 26oC
- Plants Cacti, Joshua trees, succulent
- Animal lizards, rats, tortoises, bobcats,
pygmies, antelope, toads
35G. Tropical Savanna
- Precipitation 50-150cm per year
- Temperature 24oC to 49oC
- Plants Grasses and scattered trees
- Animals lions, hyenas, cheetahs, elephants,
zebra and giraffes)
36H. Tropical Seasonal Forest
- Precipitation 130-180cm per year
- Temperature 20oC to 25oC
- Plants Deciduous and evergreen trees orchids
and cacti - Animals Monkeys, kangaroos, koalas, rabbits,
frogs, spiders
37I. Tropical Rainforest (high biodiversity
medicines!)
- Precipitation 125-660cm per year!
- Temperature 20oC to 34oC
- Plants broadleaf evergreens, bamboo, fig, and
coconut trees - Animals elephants, orangutans, bats, toucans,
sloth, cobra
38J. Mountains
- As altitude increases precipitation and
temperature change - So, plant and animal life varies with elevation
39K. Polar regions
- Precipitation snow and ice
- Temperature average -30oC in winter
- Plants some areas
grow vegetables in summer - Animals penguins in Antarctica,
whales seals in water
403.3
41I. Aquatic Ecosystems
- How inappropriate to call this planet Earth when
it is quite clearly Ocean. Sir Arthur C.
Clarke
42A. By the numbers
- Earth is 71 water 29 land
- Water is 97.5 Saltwater 2.5 Fresh
- Of the 2.5 Fresh water
- 68.9 Frozen in glaciers
- 30.8 Groundwater
- 0.3 Lakes, Rivers, Streams
43B. Freshwater
- 1. Plants and animals adapted to low salt
content - 2. Unable to survive in high salt concentration
443. Rivers and Streams
- a. Water flows in one direction
- b. Headwater ? mouth ? into larger body of water
- c. Sediment material deposited by water, wind,
or glaciers - Examples silt, mud, and sand
-
454. Lakes and Ponds
- a. Oligotrophic lake nutrient-poor few
plant/animal species (good for game fish) - b. Eutrophic lake nutrient-rich abundant life
46c. Lakes divided into three zones
- (1) Littoral closest to shore
- (2) Limnetic open water area sunlit and full
of plankton - (3) Profundal deepest area cold and low in O2
47C. Transitional Aquatic Ecosystems
- 1. Wetlands marshes, swamps, and bogs
- High levels of biodiversity
- 2. Estuaries where fresh and salt mix
- Among most diverse ecosystems, rivaled only by
rain forests and coral reefs!
48 D. Marine EcosystemsSaltwater
491. Intertidal Zone
502. Open Ocean Ecosystem
- a. Photic zone 0 to 200m Sunlit
- Autotrophs Phytoplankton and Zooplankton
- b. Aphotic zone no sun dark and cold
- c. Benthic zone ocean floor
- Sand, silt, dead organisms
- d. Abyssal zone deepest region of ocean
51Phytoplankton
- Found in the photic (euphotic) zone.
- Where light can penetrate.
52Zooplankton
- Found in the aphotic zone and euphotic (photic)
zone. - Aphotic-light does not penetrate.
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54 553. Coastal Ocean a. Most people live near the
coast
56- 53 of us live within 200 km (124 mi) of the
ocean - 67 of us live within 400 km (249 mi) of the
ocean
574. Coral Reef
- a. High biodiversity
- b. Provides natural barriers for continents
- c. Coral polyps most have mutualistic
relationship with algae called zooxanthellae