Chapter 34 The Biosphere 34.1 The biosphere is the global

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Chapter 34
The Biosphere
34.1 The biosphere is the global ecosystem
I. The Study of Ecology
A. ecology: scientific study of the interactions among organisms
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B. ________________- any living part of an environment, ex: prokaryotes,
protists, animals, fungi, and plants. _________________: nonliving physical
or chemical condition in an environment.
C. Ecologists study the relationships among biotic and abiotic factors at five
increasingly broad levels:
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______________________________________________________________
D. _______________________: the smallest unit of ecological study, Ex: blue
sweetlip fish in a coral reef environment.
E. population: a group of individual organisms of the _________________
living in a particular area, Ex: A group of sweetlip fish in the reef
environment
F. __________________: all the organisms living in an area, Ex: All living
things in a coral reef including fish, coral animals, microscopic algae, and all
other organisms living in and around the reef.
G. ecosystem: community of living things
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__________________________, Ex: Coral reef’s living and nonliving
inhabitants
H. biosphere: all the parts of the planet that are inhabited by living things; sum
of all Earth's ecosystems, broadest category,
1. Closed system where nothing enters or leaves except light and heat.
II. Patchiness of the Biosphere
A. The biosphere is not spread out uniformly around the planet.
B. All these environmental variations are due mainly to differences in abiotic
factors such as
______________________________________________________________
______________________________________________________________
C. habitat: an organism's specific environment, with characteristic abiotic and
biotic factors
III. Key Abiotic Factors
A. ____________________- the sun provides light and warmth, and is the
energy source for almost all ecosystems on Earth. The sunlight powers
photosynthesis in land and in the water (only on top layer).
B. Water – All organisms contain water (human contain 70%), water can
dissolve gases and solutes such as salt, terrestrial (land) organisms have
adaptation to control water (pine tree needles), water organisms must control
osmosis (movement of water)
C. _________________________ – most life between 00C – 500C, too low and
metabolisms slow, too high and enzymes denature (lose shape), except for
some prokaryotes (deep-sea vents)
D. Soil – product of abiotic forces such as ice, rain, wind.
______________________________________________________________
E. ______________ – effects distribution and activity of organisms, Ex: stirs up
lakes, pollinates plants
F. Severe Disturbances – fire, hurricane, drought, floods, volcanoes, etc. allow
some organisms to adapt Ex: brush growing after a fire
34.2 Climate determines global patterns in the biosphere.
I. Uneven Heating of the Earth’s Surface
A. because of Earth's spherical shape, different locations on Earth's surface
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1. __________________________ – low latitudes, high angle sun rays,
absorb more heat, higher temperatures
2. __________________________ – high latitudes, low angle sun rays,
reflect more heat, lower temperatures
B. ___________: regions between 23.5° N latitude and 23.5° S latitude;
warmest temperature zones on Earth
C. __________________: the regions north of the Arctic Circle (66.5° N) and
south of the Antarctic Circle (66.5° S), that receive the smallest amount of
direct sunlight year-round
D. ________________________: latitudes between the tropics and polar
regions in each hemisphere (most of the US), moderate
II. Wind, Precipitation, and Ocean Currents
A. Uneven heating causes wind and precipitation. Near the equator more heat
means more moisture and rising air, lots of rainfall
B. After losing moisture over the equator, dry air spreads from the equator and
descends at about 300N and 300S __________________________________.
C. Rising, falling air masses and Earth’s Rotation cause predictable wind
patterns which combine with the uneven heating of the Earth and the shapes
of the continents create currents – river-like flow pattern within a body of
water, circulates water back and forth from poles to equator
III. Local Climate
A. Large bodies of water can hold heat and cause stable temperatures. Rock and
soil absorb/lose heat quickly. Ex: Great Britain has mild temperatures
B. Mountains causes ______________________________ as elevation
increases (60C every 1000m), also block moisture from the air as it moves
across (causes some deserts)
IV. Microclimate
A. microclimate: climate in a _________________________ that varies from
the surrounding climate region, Ex: organisms thriving under a fallen log
34.3 Biomes are the major types of terrestrial ecosystems.
I. What is a Biome
A. biome : major type of terrestrial ecosystem that covers a
_______________________________ (abiotic and biotic), related to latitude
II. Tropical Forest
A. ________________________: type of forest near the equator that receives as
much as 250 cm of rainfall yearly, tall broad-leaved trees create a canopy
where little light reaches the ground
B. Plants adapt to shade, many mosses and vines grow on trees
C. animals are tree-dwellers as well, including monkeys, birds, snakes, and bats.
D. Contains 50% of all species, most diverse, Ex: Madagascar, Amazon
E. Clearing forests is a conservation problem (mining, lumber, farms)
III. Savanna
A. ___________________: grassland with scattered trees; found in tropical
regions of Africa, Australia, and South America
B. animals, such as zebras, wildebeest, antelope, and, in Australia, kangaroos, as
well as numerous insects, also burrowing animals, and predators (lions,
cheetahs, etc.)
C. Warm climate with alternating wet and dry seasons, droughts are common,
animals often migrate
IV. Desert
A. ________________: land area that receives less than 30 centimeters of rain
per year, temperatures vary greatly, often have less plant life, Ex: Sahara,
Gobi
B. Cactus adapt by storing water, kangaroo rat has a burrow for shade
V. Chaparral
A. ___________________: temperate coastal biome dominated by dense
evergreen shrubs, mild, rainy winters, hot, dry summers, brush fire common
to climate Ex: Mediterranean, California coast
B. Animals of the chaparral include deer, birds, and rodents that feed on the
shrubs and their seeds, as well as lizards and snakes.
VI. Temperate Grassland
A. ______________________________: biome characterized by deep, nutrientrich soil that supports many grass species, colder winter than savannah,
seasonal droughts, height of vegetation depends on yearly rainfall
B. North American grasslands (also known as prairies, Midwest) include
grazing mammals such as bison and pronghorns, as well as coyotes, snakes,
lizards, worms, arthropods, rodents, and insects.
VII. Temperate Deciduous Forest
A. _______________________________: forest in a temperate region,
characterized by trees that drop their leaves annually, large trees, winters
cold, summers hot (parts of Ohio, eastern forests of US)
B. deciduous trees such as maples, oaks, beeches, and hickory shed their leaves
in autumn, which helps reduce evaporation during the winter
C. microorganisms, fungi, and arthropods live in the soil, Mammals found in the
temperate deciduous forests of eastern North America include deer, squirrels,
chipmunks, foxes, and bears. During the cold winter, many of these animals
conserve energy by greatly reducing their activity levels
VIII. Coniferous Forest
A. ___________________________: forest populated by cone-bearing
evergreen trees; mostly found in northern latitudes, northern regions are
called ______________, long cold winters, heavy snowfall, Ex: Canada
lower latitudes
B. conical shape of tree needle (leaf) limits snow from piling on trees, and limits
evaporation during dry periods
C. Typical taiga animals include hares, moose, elk, wolves, and bears.
IX. Tundra
A. _________________: biome in the Arctic Circle or on high mountaintops,
characterized by bitterly cold temperatures and high winds, Ex: Northern
Canada, Alaska, Siberia, Arctic
B. __________________: permanently frozen subsoil, shallow topsoil, mosses,
lichens, grasses thrive, no large plants
C. Lemmings, caribou, and reindeer eat the tundra ground cover, some animals
like the snow owl change color
34.4 Aquatic ecosystems make up most of the biosphere.
I. Ponds and Lakes
A. Freshwater bodies of water with little dissolved salts, Ex: Great lakes
B. photic zone: regions of a body of water _______________________,
enabling photosynthesis, lakes are divided into zones by depth
C. phytoplankton: microscopic algae and cyanobacteria that carry out
photosynthesis in photic zone
D. aphotic zone: deep areas, no photosynthesis
E. benthic zone: bottom of an aquatic ecosystem; consists of sand and sediment
and supports its own community of organisms
II. Streams and Rivers
A. Flowing freshwater, usually empties to lake or ocean
B. near source low in nutrients, cold, major producer is algae, downstream is
warmer and larger, supports more life including phytoplankton
C. trout, frogs, worms, insects, etc.
III. Estuaries
A. estuary: area where fresh water from _________________________ with
salty ocean water; productive ecosystem, Ex: Chesapeake Bay, parts of
Florida
B. have changes in salt concentration and temperature, very productive, lots of
nutrients, many fish and birds, crabs, oysters, clams. Etc.
IV. Ocean Zones
A. Oceans are divided 4 zones based on depth and distance from shore
B. pelagic zone: open water above the ocean floor
C. intertidal zone: area of shore between the
____________________________________________________ lines
D. neritic zone: area of ocean that extends from the low-tide line out to the edge
of the continental shelf
E. ____________________: vast open ocean from the edge of the continental
shelf outward, includes zooplankton: microscopic animals that swim or drift
near the surface of aquatic environments
V. Coral Reefs
A. very diverse, like the rainforest of ocean, coral is an animal that builds upon
hard, dead external skeletons, can be poisonous, Ex: Great Barrier Reef
B. including sponges, sea anemones, worms, sea stars, and mollusks, sea turtles,
and fishes
VI. Deep-sea Vents
A. hydrothermal vent: opening in the ocean floor where
_________________________________________________________ from
Earth's interior, producers (prokaryotes) use chemical energy (eat sulfur)
because of no light, Ex: Mid-Atlantic Ridge
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