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Ecology & the Biosphere

Ecology & the Biosphere. Chapter 18. Biomes. Major terrestrial or aquatic life zone Aquatic biomes Occupy roughly 75% of Earth ’ s surface Freshwater Marine Terrestrial biomes Classified based on vegetation type. Aquatic - Freshwater.

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Ecology & the Biosphere

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  1. Ecology & the Biosphere Chapter 18

  2. Biomes • Major terrestrial or aquatic life zone • Aquatic biomes • Occupy roughly 75% of Earth’s surface • Freshwater • Marine • Terrestrial biomes • Classified based on vegetation type

  3. Aquatic - Freshwater • Typically have a salt concentration of less than 1% • Standing water • includes lakes and ponds • Flowing water • rivers and streams • Wetlands • Cover less than 1% of Earth • Contain a mere 0.01% of its water • Harbor about 6% of all described species • Are used for drinking water, crop irrigation, sanitation, and industry

  4. Photic zone Benthic realm Aphotic zone

  5. Aquatic - Marine • Typically have a salt concentration around 3% • Oceans • Intertidal zones • Coral reefs • Estuaries

  6. High tide Low tide Pelagic realm (open water) Man-of-war (to 50 m long) Turtle (60–180 cm) Oarweed (to 2 m) Sea star (to 33 cm) Photic zone Brain coral (to 1.8 m) Phyto- plankton Zoo- plankton Blue shark (to 2 m) 200 m Sponges (1 cm–1 m) Sperm whale (10–20 cm) Intertidal zone Continental shelf “Twilight” Hatchet fish (2–60 cm) Sea pen (to 45 cm) Octopus (to 10 m) Aphotic zone Gulper eel (to 180 cm) 1,000– 4,000 m Sea spider (1–90 cm) Benthic realm (seafloor from continental shelf to deep-sea bottom) Rat-tail fish (to 80 cm) Brittle star (to 60 cm) Anglerfish (45 cm–2 m) No light Glass sponge (to 1.8 m) Tripod fish (to 30 cm) Sea cucumber (to 40 cm) 6,000– 10,000 m

  7. Terrestrial • Tropical Forest • Savanna • Desert • Chaparral • Temperate Grassland • Temperate broadleaf forest • Coniferous forest • Tundra • Polar ice

  8. 30º N Tropic of Cancer Equator Tropic of Capricorn 30º S Key Temperate broadleaf forest Tropical forest Savanna Coniferous forest Arctic tundra Desert High mountains (coniferous forest and alpine tundra) Chaparral Temperate grassland Polar ice Figure 18.27

  9. Tropical Rainforest • occur in equatorial areas • temperature is warm • days are 11–12 hours long year-round • 200-400 cm rain • 79-157 inches

  10. Savannas • dominated by grasses and scattered trees • warm year-round • Experience 30-50 cm rainfall • 12–20 inches • dramatic seasonal variation

  11. Deserts • driest of all biomes • Less than 30 cm • 12 inches • May be very hot or very cold • 140 to -22 F

  12. Temperate Grasslands • mostly treeless • 25-75 cm rain per year • 10–30 inches • Experience frequent droughts and fires • characterized by grazers including bison and pronghorn in North America

  13. Temperate Broadleaf Forest • Occurs throughout midlatitudes • sufficient moisture to support the growth of large trees • 75-150 cm rain • 30-60 inches • Includes dense stands of deciduous trees in the Northern Hemisphere

  14. Coniferous Forest • “Temperate rainforest” • dominated by cone-bearing evergreen trees • Includes the taiga • largest terrestrial biome on Earth

  15. Tundra • Covers expansive areas of the Arctic between the taiga and polar ice • characterized by • Permafrost • permanently frozen subsoil • Bitterly cold temperatures • High winds

  16. Polar ice • high latitudes • north of the arctic tundra in the northern hemisphere • Antarctica in the southern hemisphere • Only a small portion of these land masses is free of ice or snow • Even in summer!

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