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Large group of ecosystems that share the same type of climax community
Biomes Large group of ecosystems that share the same type of climax community
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Aquatic Biomes Marine Biomes Freshwater Biomes Estuaries
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Marine Biomes Photic Zones Aphotic zone
Shallow enough for sunlight to penetrate Bays, rocky shores, sandy beaches, and mudflats Aphotic zone Never receives sunlight Least explored
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Estuaries Partially surrounded by land Freshwater and salt water mix
Amount of Salt (salinity) depends on tide Amount of freshwater depends on river Grasses can grow thick forming a tangled mad that traps food material and provides habitat for developing animals
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Freshwater Biomes Lakes Ponds Streams Rivers
Different areas in the lake provided different habitats depending on sun exposure Ponds Streams Rivers
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Aquatic Biomes Marine Estuaries Freshwater Photic zone, intertidal
Aphotic Zone Estuaries Freshwater Lakes, ponds Rivers, streams Wetland
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Terrestrial Biomes
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Tundra Long summer days Short winter light Permafrost
Mosquitoes & black flies Small animals
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Taiga Trees (fir, hemlock, spruce and larch) More larger animals
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Desert Less than 25 cm Precipitation Many animals forage at night
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Grassland Rich Soil Few trees Breadbaskets of the world
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Temperate Forest Temperate or deciduous Broad leaf trees
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Rainforest Warm Wet Grow year round
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Tropical Rainforest Temperate Forest Taiga
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Desert Grassland Tundra
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Temperate Grassland Moisture: 25-75 cm annually Temperature:
Hot summers Cold winters Vegetation: rich Soil, grasses, few trees Animals: herds of grazing animals, bison, deer, elk Also jack rabbits and prairie dogs
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Biome Distribution around the world
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Interpret the following graph…
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Next…… Primary and Secondary Succession
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Succession The gradual supplanting of one community of plants/animals by another.
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Primary Succession Takes place on land where there are no living organisms. Examples: lava flowing from a volcano, a tsunami, glaciers
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Example of Primary and Secondary
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Primary Succession In Action
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Ecological Succession at Glacier Bay
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Secondary Succession Sequence of changes that take place after an existing community is severely disrupted in some way. Occurs in areas that already contain life and on land that contains soil. Ex. Fire Fire Several years after fire
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Secondary Succession In Action
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Lake Succession
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Climax Community Stable, mature community that has little or no change.
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Climax forest begins with a disturbance such as a fire…
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Q1 A certain tropical tree has a fruit that is eaten by only one species of bats. As the bat digests the fruit, the seeds are made ready to sprout. When the bat excretes the wastes of the fruit, it drops seeds in new locations. Which of the following is the correct term for the relationship between the bat and the tree? A. predation B. mutualism C. competition D. commensalism
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Q2 Which of the following is a parasite? a. a lion hunting a zebra
b. a deer grazing on grass c. a tick sucking blood from a dog d. a snake swallowing a bird’s egg
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Q3 What can you infer about the number of species on each of these islands? a. Island A has more species. b. Island B has more species. c. Island A and Island B will have the same number of species. d. Both islands will have fewer species than islands that are located farther north.
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Q4 Q5 predator : prey :: herbivore : A. carnivore B. plant C. parasite
D. predation What are the biomes of NE OK? Temperate Grasslands Deciduous Forest
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Q6 The graph shows the relative temperature, precipitation, and soil nutrient content in a specific biome. Which of the following biomes is best represented by this graph? A. tundra B. desert C. tropical rainforest D. temperate grassland
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Q7 Which of the following biomes are correctly paired? a. I only
Savanna: dry, warm, succulents Temperate Grasslands: tall grasses, seasonal, arid Temperate Deciduous trees: broad-leaf trees, seasonal a. I only b. I and II c. III only d. II and III e. I, II, and III
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Q8 Q9 small or microscopic organisms that make up the base of aquatic webs plankton intimate relationship between species symbiosis
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Q10 Q11 pioneer species in primary succession
Lichen (remember that fungus/algae symbiant?) pioneer species in secondary succession Grasses
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Q12 Q13 Name 2 ways that bare rock can be converted into soil. Lichen
Erosion Name 3 events that could initiate secondary succession. Fire Construction Flood—major EF 4 or 5 tornado
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A Q14 B What is the proper order of succession? AEBDC D C E
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Q15 What are the names of the four oceans? Artic Pacific Atlantic
Indian
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