Transcript
Page 1: Chapter 19  “Ecosystem Essentials”

Chapter 19

“Ecosystem Essentials”

Geosystems 6eAn Introduction to Physical Geography

Robert W. ChristophersonCharles E. Thomsen

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What is this an example of?

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Ecosystem

Figure 19.2

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Plants (Vegetation)Critical biotic link between solar energy and the biosphereBase of vast majority of food webs

About 20 species of plants provide 90% of the human food supply

Wheat, corn (maize), and rice are half

Convert carbon dioxide to oxygenTranspiration elevates atmospheric humidity

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Photosynthesis and Respiration

Figure 19.5

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Distribution of VegetationFive major factors:

Climate (temperature and precipitation)

Topography (elevation, slope)

Soils (nutrients, minerals)

Biotic Influences (dispersal mechanisms)

Disturbance (natural or anthropogenic)

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Climate

Figure 19.8

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Life Zones

Figure 19.9

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Carbon and Oxygen Cycle

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Climate Change

Figure 19.23

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What’s limiting these distributions?

Figure 19.12

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Soils – nutrients, minerals

http://www.cfr.washington.edu/Classes.esc.520B/ImagesNorthFork/Serpentine6SM.jpg http://www.krisweb.com/krisnavarro/krisdb/ac/dscn2166_sm.jpg

http://nrs.ucdavis.edu/mclaughlin/images/plants/Seep.jpg

Serpentine

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Dispersal Mechanisms – Fruit and Seed

http://www.cas.vanderbilt.edu/bioimages/pages/fruit-seed-dispersal.htm

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Osage orange (Hedge apple)These huge fruits ooze sticky, white latex when bruised. 

They are large and hard - what would want, or be able to eat them?  

Probably were once dispersed by extinct megafauna (large mammals) that died out soon after humans arrived in North America.   

http://www.cas.vanderbilt.edu/bioimages/pages/fruit-seed-dispersal.htm

What about this fruit?

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Extinct Megafauna

http://sscl.berkeley.edu/~anth122/mammoth.gif http://www.intersurf.com/~chalcedony/gomp.jpg http://mishilo.image.pbase.com/u36/zidar/upload/23675731.pbtooth1.jpg

Mammoth

Gomphothere

Tooth

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Disturbance

NaturalWater, wind, volcano, fire…

Anthropogenic (human-caused)Deforestation, fire, development…

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SuccessionEcological succession – when newer communities replace older communities of plants and animals

Primary succession – an area of bare rock or disturbed site with no previous community

Secondary succession – some aspects pf a previously functioning community are present

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Succession

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End Chapter 19

Geosystems 6eAn Introduction to Physical Geography

Robert W. ChristophersonCharles E. Thomsen


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