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COMMUNITIES AND BIOMES
Chapter 3
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Communities Ch. 3, Sec. 1
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Communities Communities = all the interacting living organisms in an area; all the different species Limiting Factor = any biotic or abiotic factor that restricts population growth
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Tolerance = ability of an organism to withstand fluctuations of biotic and abiotic factors
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Succession Succession = orderly changes & species replacement of communities in ecosystems
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Primary Succession = colonization of barren land by communities of organisms
Pioneer Species are the 1st to arrive Lava flow, lichen (algae & fungus), a Galapagos island
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Pioneer species die and decompose adding nutrients back to the soil
More organisms (insects, fungus, small plants, etc.) live & die adding nutrients back to the soil Until eventually…. Climax Community = stable & mature community that changes little
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The Indiana Dunes are an example of primary succession
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Secondary Succession = sequence of changes after an existing community is destroyed/damaged; a new community regrows Mount St. Helens
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Practice Compare and contrast Primary Succession and Secondary Succession. Are the starting points the same? Are the organisms the same?
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Biomes Ch. 3, Sec. 2
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What’s a Biome? Large group of ecosystems that share the same type of climax community
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Aquatic Biomes Approx. 75% of Earth’s surface is covered by water
Mostly salt water
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1. Marine Biomes = oceans, can be very shallow (surface of ocean) or very deep (bottom of ocean)
Photic Zone = portion of marine biome that is shallow enough for sunlight to penetrate Aphotic Zone = deep water that never receives sunlight
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2. Estuaries = mixture of freshwater & ocean water; where rivers meet the ocean
Sea grass, mangroves
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3. Intertidal Zone = portion of shoreline between high and low tide
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4. Freshwater Biomes = lakes, ponds, rivers
Lake Victoria, Amazon river
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Terrestrial Biomes
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Rainfall varies from biome to biome, resulting in different adaptations in species
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1. Tundra = cold temperatures, short growing season
Permafrost = a layer of permanently frozen soil, prevents plants from growing deep roots
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2. Taiga = cold, conifers (trees that produce cones)
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3. Desert = less than 25cm of annual rainfall
Adaptations for living in the desert Plants = spine, waxy coating, toxins Animals = nocturnal activity, venom, require less water Kangaroo rat, cactus, rattlesnake
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4. Grassland = rich soil, trees usually by bodies of water, lots of grazing animals
Prairie, Savannah, Steppe
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5. Temperate Forests = trees lose their leaves each year
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6. Rain Forests = high biodiversity, found in tropical & temperate (moderate climate) areas
Jaguar, poison dart frog, sloth
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Practice How are organisms in the photic zone and aphotic zone interdependent? (Hint: Think about what grows in the photic zone, what supports the base of ecological pyramids? What happens if a population of one species grows out of control?)
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