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Climate and Biodiversity

Climate and Biodiversity. Dust Storm from Africa’s Sahara Desert. What Factors Influence Climate?. An area’s climate is determined mostly by : Solar radiation Earth’s rotation Global patterns of air and water movement Gases in the atmosphere Earth’s surface features.

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Climate and Biodiversity

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  1. Climate and Biodiversity

  2. Dust Storm from Africa’s Sahara Desert

  3. What Factors Influence Climate? An area’s climate is determined mostly by: • Solar radiation • Earth’s rotation • Global patterns of air and water movement • Gases in the atmosphere • Earth’s surface features.

  4. Many Different Climates • Weather – local area of short-term physical conditions such as humidity, wind speed, cloud cover, etc. • Climate- an area’s general pattern of atmospheric conditions over longer periods of time – usually decades or thousands of years. • Temperature and precipitation determine climate • Latitude and elevation determine average temperature and precipitation

  5. Generalized Map of Earth's Climate

  6. Solar Radiation

  7. Earth’s Rotation • As the Earth rotates around its axis, its equator spins faster than the polar regions. • As a result, heated air masses rising above the equator cause the formation of cells distinguished by differing direction of air movement (prevailing winds)

  8. Energy Transfer by Convection

  9. Global Air Circulation • Caused by three factors • Uneven heating of earth’s surface • Rotation of the earth • Variations in properties of air, water, and land • Six cyclical convection cells

  10. Cell Formation

  11. Earth’s Prevailing Winds

  12. Cold deserts Westerlies Forests Northeast trades Hot deserts Forests Equator Southeast trades Hot deserts Forests Westerlies Cold deserts Fig. 5-3, p. 77

  13. Global Air Circulation

  14. Moist air rises, cools, and releases moisture as rain Polar cap Arctic tundra Evergreen coniferous forest Temperate deciduous forest and grassland Desert Tropical deciduous forest Equator Tropical rain forest Tropical deciduous forest Desert Temperate deciduous forest and grassland Polar cap Fig. 5-5, p. 78

  15. Global Ocean Currents (1) • Affects regional climates • Warm and cold currents created by differences in water density • Altered by earth’s rotation and continents • Redistributes heat, mixes ocean waters, and distributes nutrients and oxygen

  16. Global Currents (2) • Loop of deep and shallow ocean currents • Moves energy around the globe • Ocean and atmosphere closely linked

  17. Earth’s Conveyer Belt

  18. Warm, less salty, shallow current Cold, salty, deep current Fig. 5-6, p. 79

  19. Animation: Global Ocean and Winds Currents Examine global surface currents.

  20. El Niño(El Niño Southern Oscillation or ENSO) • El Niño is characterized by unusually warm ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific, as opposed to La Niña, which characterized by unusually cold ocean temperatures in the Equatorial Pacific. El Niño is an oscillation of the ocean-atmosphere system in the tropical Pacific having important consequences for weather around the globe.

  21. El Niño

  22. El Niño • Among these consequences are increased rainfall across the southern tier of the US and in Peru, which has caused destructive flooding, and drought in the West Pacific, sometimes associated with devastating brush fires in Australia. Observations of conditions in the tropical Pacific are considered essential for the prediction of short term (a few months to 1 year) climate variations.

  23. La Niña • Opposite of the boy, colder than normal ocean temps. • La Niña causes mostly the opposite effects of El Niño, for example, El Niño would cause a wet period in the Midwestern U.S., while La Niña would typically cause a dry period in this area.

  24. Earth’s Surface Features and Climate • Heat absorbed and released more slowly by water than by land • Large bodies of water moderate climate • Movement of moist ocean air across a mountain • Rain and snow on windward side • Rain shadow on leeward side – e.g. Death Valley

  25. Rain Shadow Effect

  26. On the leeward side of the mountain range, air descends, warms, and releases little moisture. On the windward side of a mountain range, air rises,cools, and releases moisture. Prevailing winds pick up moisture from an ocean. Fig. 5-7, p. 80

  27. How Does Climate Affect the Nature and Location of Biomes? • Differences in average annual precipitation and temperature lead to the formation of tropical, temperate, and cold deserts, grasslands, and forests, and largely determine their locations.

  28. Climate Affects Biomes • Major biomes related to climate • Biomes consist of a mosaic of patches of communities • Average temperature and precipitation determine the biome

  29. Earth’s Major Biomes Fig. 5-8, p. 81

  30. Correlation Between Latitude and Elevation

  31. Elevation Mountain ice and snow Tundra (herbs, lichens, mosses) Coniferous Forest Latitude Deciduous Forest Tropical Forest Tropical Forest Tundra (herbs, lichens, mosses) Deciduous Forest Coniferous Forest Polar ice and snow Fig. 5-9, p. 81

  32. Climate Determines the Biome

  33. Polar Tundra Subpolar Temperate Coniferous forest Desert Grassland Deciduous forest Tropical Chaparral Desert Savanna Rain forest Tropical seasonal forest Scrubland Fig. 5-10, p. 82

  34. Three Major Types of Deserts • Tropical deserts – Sahara, Namib • Temperate deserts – Mojave • Cold deserts – Gobi

  35. Climate Graph of Tropical United Arab Emirates Desert

  36. Climate Graph of Temperate Arizona Desert

  37. Climate Graph of Cold Gobi Desert

  38. Fig. 5-11, p. 83

  39. Three Major Types of Grasslands • Tropical grasslands – savanna • Temperate grasslands – prairie • Short-grass vs. tall-grass • Cold grasslands – tundra • Permafrost soils

  40. Savanna Grassland

  41. Montana Prairie Grassland

  42. Arctic Tundra Grassland

  43. Fig. 5-12, p. 85

  44. Loss of a Temperate Grassland Fig. 5-13, p. 86

  45. Three Major Types of Forests • Tropical rain forests • Temperate deciduous forests • Evergreen coniferous forests

  46. Tropical Forest

  47. Temperate Deciduous Forest

  48. Evergreen Coniferous Forest (taiga, boreal forest)

  49. Fig. 5-14, p. 87

  50. Tropical Rain Forest Ecosystem

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