Ecosystems and Communities - Ch. 6 PDF
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Summary
This document summarizes key concepts in ecosystems and communities, covering succession, climax communities, and various biomes. It includes factors impacting different ecosystems from deserts to tropical rainforests, as well as aquatic systems. The summary uses examples and describes the different features of each biome to provide a clear picture of environmental characteristics.
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“In wilderness I sense the miracle of life, and behind it our scientific accomplishments fade to trivia” Charles Lindbergh “All good things are wild and free” Henry David Thoreau Ch. 6 - Communities and Ecosystems Succession: communities proceed through a series of regular changes over...
“In wilderness I sense the miracle of life, and behind it our scientific accomplishments fade to trivia” Charles Lindbergh “All good things are wild and free” Henry David Thoreau Ch. 6 - Communities and Ecosystems Succession: communities proceed through a series of regular changes over time Climax community: stable, long-lasting community resulting from succession major disturbances renew succession→ Primary succession: begins w/total lack of organisms - rock Very slow ex: volcanic islands→ Secondary succession: rapid, begins w/disturbance of an ecosystem ex: hurricane hits an island, fire, flood Most wildlife habitat mgt mimics secondary succession→ Climax Community Characteristics: maintain mix of species over time E at equilibrium, increased biodiversity What is the historical climax community? Human settlement of N. America altered climax communities exotic species introductions – cheat grass Disease – Dutch elm more plastic definition of climax community→ Biomes: terrestrial climax communities at large scales→ 2 major factors that impact biomes: 1. Precipitation: total amt, form (rain/snow) 2. Temperature: tropical vs temperate regions→ Other non-human factors: fire, wind, soil type, flora/fauna Elevation: vegetation shifts w/ elev. correspond to latitudinal shifts→ Desert 80-128” of rain/year highest biodiversity of any biome more than rest of biomes combined! Under severe threat from logging, cattle grazing, urban sprawl, biofuels (cane/date palms), poverty Mgt: difficult to restore tropical rainforest, must be preserved→ Temperate Deciduous Forest temperate - seasonal hot/cold deciduous trees - drop leaves in fall 30-60 in of rain/yr; Durant = 41”/yr less diversity of tree species, but more indvls - dominant species (oak, beech) Mgt: selective logging/thinning, prescribed burning in some cases, preservation in others→ Taiga northern latitudes - evergreen, coniferous forests - a.k.a boreal forest short summers, long winters, lot o’ snow Conservation: selective logging→ 10-40 in rain/yr lakes, ponds, bogs present Spruce-fir wildlife often migratory→ Tundra – “arctic prairie” - lacks trees “frozen” soil layer = permafrost shallow H2O = nesting birds alpine tundra - high altitude Preservation critical: tundra plants slow growth rates (decades) → Arctic/Antarctic biomes Global warming, ozone layer issues, whaling→ Aquatic Systems Factors affecting aquatic ecosystems: 1. Light penetration 2. H2O temp 3. Nature of bottom substrate 4. Amt of dissolved minerals Plankton: small, drifting organisms Phytoplankton: photosynthetic plankton (algae/ bacteria) found in the: Euphotic zone: upper layer of water body that sunlight penetrates (~150 m)→ upwellings and river deltas - high nutrient availability for photosynthesis = Primary Productivity! Zooplankton: animals that feed on phytoplankton→ benthic: organisms that live on the ocean bottom ex: kelp, coral reefs, mangroves abyssal ecosystem: deep ocean system; rain of detritus from euphotic zone Estuaries: marine ecosystems of shallow, partially enclosed areas w/inflow of freshwater brackish: part saltwater, part freshwater Nurseries: ex = flounder, shrimp - young→ Freshwater Ecosystems Lakes/Ponds emergent plants: plants along shore that are rooted on bottom (ex: cattail, water lily)→ submerged plants: rooted on bottom, but stay below surface (ex: coontail) Littoral zone: shallow area w/veg near the shore Limnetic zone: area of lake w/out rooted vegetation (open water)→ Oligotrophic: cold, deep, nutrient poor lakes Eutrophic: shallow, warm, nutrient rich lakes Streams-Rivers attached veg = periphyton speed of water impt; slow rivers begin to accumulate material and fill in→ swamps and marshes: both wetlands; wetland interface between aquatic/ terrestrial systems Swamps: wetlands w/trees that can tolerate permanently or semi-permanently flooded conditions→ Marshes: wetlands dominated by grasses-reeds Shift toward terrestrial systems over time→