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Environmental Controls on Life

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Environmental Controls on Life Light Temperature Moisture Picea glauca & 10 C July isotherm – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Environmental Controls on Life


1
Environmental Controls on Life
  • Light
  • Temperature
  • Moisture

Picea glauca 10C July isotherm
2
Light
  • Heliophytes
  • sun loving (shade intolerant)
  • C4, CAM
  • Sciophytes
  • shade loving (shade tolerant)
  • C3

3
Photosynthesis and Light
  • PS increases until maximum, then declines
  • Hyperbolic shape
  • Compensation point
  • Saturation point
  • Photoinhibition

4
Physical Adaptations to High Light Environment
  • Small and thick leaves,
  • Thick cuticle (covering)
  • Curled, less surface area
  • Reflective surface layer
  • High number of stomata
  • Leaf orientation
  • (heliotropic)

5
Physical Adaptations to Low Light Environment
  • Large, soft leaves
  • High amounts of chlorophyll
  • Long-lived leaves
  • Heliotropic leaves!

6
Life History Adaptations to Light
  • Annuals versus perennials
  • Canopy trees flower more
  • Seeds require light to germinate
  • Loblolly pine (Pinus taeda)

7
Physiological Adaptations to Light
  • Phenology timing of changes in growth
  • Flowering
  • Leaf shedding
  • Leaf burst

8
Temperature - Plants
  • Poikilothermic
  • Optimum temperature for photosynthesis - varies
  • EX. Circumarctic treeline
  • Cold stress, freezing damage

9
Black spruce (Picea glauca) limits and July temps
10
Plant Adaptations to Temperature
  • Dormancy deciduous
  • How do needleleaved plants survive?
  • Frost hardening
  • Chemical alteration of liquids (antifreeze)
  • Less water in cells
  • Cell walls deformed

11
Plant Adaptations to Temperature
  • Saguaro
  • CAM photosynthesis
  • Palo Verde nurse shrubs

12
Plant Adaptations to Temperature
  • Palm distribution
  • Why cant palms be cultivated at higher
    latitudes?

13
Temperature - Animals
  • Poikilotherms
  • cold-blooded
  • -1.9C body temp OK for Antarctic icefish, 6C
    lethal
  • Homeotherms
  • generate heat through metabolism
  • 37-47C (10C higher than core temps.) lethal

14
Northern Limits of the Eastern Pheobe
15
Adaptations to Temperature in Animals
  • Metabolic rates
  • Sweating, panting, licking
  • Ratio of body mass to surface area
  • Behavioral adaptations
  • Shivering
  • Super-cooling (gylcerol)
  • Hybernation
  • Insulation

16
Allens Rule
Latitude and Body Shapes
  • Low latitude high surface areavolume
  • High latitude low surface area volume
  • Low latitude long extremities
  • High latitude short extremities

17
Adaptations to Moisture - Plants
  • Photosynthesis
  • Turgor (rigidity)
  • Movement of nutrients (vascular plants)
  • Xerophytes dry loving
  • Mesophytes moist loving
  • Hydrophytes water loving

18
Transpiration
  • Release of water to atmosphere by plants
  • Generally through stomata
  • Evapotranspiration transpiration evaporation

19
Water Stress and Range
  • Moisture deficit
  • evaporative demand gt root absorbtion
  • Creosote (Larrea tridentata)
  • -2.0- -2.9 Mpa
  • Alder (Alnus spp)
  • -1 Mpa

20
Lower Treeline
  • High elevations
  • Lower evaporative demand
  • Higher rainfall (orographic)
  • Seedlings have highest sensitivity
  • Fig 3.9

21
Plant Adaptations Moisture Stress
  • Water stress escapees
  • Annual plants
  • Water stress avoiders
  • Cacti
  • Drought deciduous (Fouquieria splendens
    ocotillo)
  • Water stress tolerators
  • Selaginella lepidophylla resurrection plants

22
Cactus Family - avoiders
  • Fine surface root systems
  • Enlarged stems to store water
  • Light colored thorns reflect light
  • CAM ps pathway (stomota open at night)
  • Slow growth rates

23
Moisture - Excess
  • Diffusion of O2 through water is slow!!
  • Plantanus occidentalis (sycamore) growth declines
    at gt50 soil moisture saturation

24
Moisture - Animals
  • 2/3 water by weight
  • Mammal losses 15-20 water fatal
  • Water loss lower in arid dwellers
  • Ex. Kangaroo rat (Dipodomys spectabilis)
  • Dry urine, feces
  • No sweat
  • Nocturnal
  • Water from dry food!

25
Other Physical Factors
  • Chemical nutrients/environment
  • Nitrate, phosphorous, potassium in plants
  • Salinity, oxygen for aquatic orgs.
  • Combinations of factors

26
Geographical Range vs. Density
  • Range Area where species is found
  • Density Abundance per unit area (rare versus
    common)
  • Highest densities in range center

27
Gaussian Curve and Environmental Gradients
  • Physiological functioning
  • Density

28
What is a niche?
  • Ecological concept
  • Species exist in a multi-dimensional space
    defined by various limiting factors that affect
    physiological functioning and abundance

29
Generalist vs. Specialist
  • Generalist wide ranges of environmental
    tolerances
  • Specialist restricted gradient distributions

30
Correlation Caveat
  • If the geographic range of a species and some
    climatic variable overlap, does that mean that
    this variable controls the range of this species?
  • What other factors might affect a species range?
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