Topic 10 The Distribution of Organisms
Ecosystem Recall that an ecosystem is defined as a community of living organisms interacting with each other and the physical environment. The major categories of components are: –Biota –Atmosphere –Soil –Water
Important abiotic factors Terrestrial ecosystems: –Atmospheric—Light intensity, humidity, precipitation, air temperature –Soil—nutrient availability, moisture, pH, texture and porosity, temperature –Water—precipitation levels, pH Aquatic ecosystems: –Atmospheric—wind speed and direction, air temperature, light intensity –Water—dissolved nutrients, run-off, precipitation, turbidity, oxygen saturation (DO), water temperature Marine ecosystems: –Nutrient availability, salinity, air and water temperature, wind speed and direction (influences currents), turbidity, dissolved gases
Earth’s Climate Zones Figure 5-2
Terrestrial biome distribution
Climate constraints
Range of tolerance Tolerance ranges exist for multiple factors: temperature, pH, light intensity, oxygen or carbon dioxide availability, salinity, etc. This is closely related to the concept of limiting factors. The distribution of species is determined by the ranges of abiotic factors present in an area.
Gradients Abiotic factors are not evenly distributed within ecosystems. –Stratification This leads to micro-habitats within ecosystems
Gradients
What keeps a species in a place? Evolutionary constraints On what level does evolution take place? –Individuals –Populations –Species –Individuals –Populations –Species What is the mechanism of evolution?
Evolution and adaptations