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Mission2006 Team3 - Flora

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Title: Mission2006 Team3 - Flora


1
Mission2006Team3 - Flora
  • Jean Marie Downing Juliana
    Perez
  • George Eng Shan
    Riku
  • Tanzeer Khan
    Catherine Yao
  • Sarah Newman

2
Our Teams Goal Time Line
  • What is the Amazon Rain Forest?
  • September 23- October 7
  • What are the Threats?
  • September 23 October 7
  • Monitoring
  • October 7 November 14
  • What Can We do?
  • October 7 November 14
  • After November 14 Preparation Period for Final
    Presentation

3
Before Research
  • The difference between flora and fauna
  • - Flora will cover all plants, fungi, and algae
  • - Fauna will be cover animals, monerans, and all
    other protists
  • About Tropical Rain Forest
  • The definition of tropical rain forest is those
    forests which
  • receives more than 2000mm rain per year
  • the coldest mean monthly temperature will
    not fall below 18 C.
  • About Amazonia
  • The world's largest tropical rainforest, spanning
    more than half  of Brazil
  • Containing half of present-day rainforest.

4
Before Research Division of Layers
  • The Emergent Layer
  • Contains the tallest trees in the
    rainforest(150200 feet)
  • The Canopy
  • The primary Layer of the
    rainforest(15150 feet).
  • The Understury
  • Seldom grow to more than 12
    feet.Difficulty with
  • pollinization because of the lack of
    air movement.
  • The Forest Floor
  • Almost no plants (because of 0-2 light
    100 humidity)Few flowering plants, mosses,
    herbs, and fungi.

5
What is the Amazon Rain Forest?
History
  • Factors to determine the state of rain forest
  • Number of Plant Species
  • Vegitation
  • by examining the pollen or
    macrofossil of
  • representative plants.
  • by examining the extinctions and new
    appearances of
  • species

6
What is the Amazon Rain Forest?
History
  • There were three major climate change in history
    of flora.
  • Cretaceous extinction event
  • Marked reduction in floristic diversity
  • Ecocene cooling event
  • Less effect on South Africa, which is the main
    reason of the high generic diversity of Palmae in
    South America in present-day.
  • The sudden cooling in 2.7 Ma
  • Cold period in 2.21.0 Ma
  • No desiccation, which enabled the survival of
    very diverse rain forest

7
What is the Amazon Rain Forest?
Biological Aspects
  • There are several different kinds of rainforests.
  • Tropical lowland evergreen rainforest
  • Tropical semi-evergreen rainforest
  • Montane rainforest
  • Heath forest
  • Peat Swamp forest
  • Freshwater swamp forest

8
What is the Amazon Rain Forest?
Biological Aspects
  • Besides trees, there are many other kinds of
    vegetation
  • Especially geared towards finding light
  • Lower there live
  • On the forest floor there live
  • In forest succession

9
What are the Threats? Logging
  • A monocyclic silvicultural system is used in the
    Amazon rainforest. The results are
  • Shifting species composition
  • Compacted soil
  • Dammed streams
  • Vulnerability to fires
  • Encourages other activities, e.g. poaching,
    land-clearing for agriculture

10
What are the Threats?
Agriculture
  • This destroys the delicate soil profile.
    Rainforest cycles the soil used so it is
    self-sustaining. But crops using only some
    portions of the soil intensively, therefore
    damage it. No more new crops can be grown after
    a certain period (5 years), and the forest
    cannot regrow in the ruptured soil. Result
    Rainforest destroyed for more space, and used
    space is left as an infertile, barren wasteland.

11
What are the Threats? El Nino/Climate
Change
  • Evidence of El-Nino events
  • Effects of El-Nino events and relevance to
    current climatic change
  • Vulnerability of epiphytes to climate change
  • Affect on CAM cycles (CAM-idling)
  • Epiphyte role in rainforest and possible
    monitoring tool

12
What are the Threats?
Deforestation
  • There are two great causes
  • One is the demand of wood the governments sell
    logging concessions to raise money for projects,
    to pay international debt, or to develop
    industry.
  • The other is the transformation of the forests in
    surfaces dedicated to agriculture and cattle
    ranch.

13
What are the Threats?
Deforestation
  • Deforestation increases the amount of CO2 and
    other trace gases in the atmosphere.
  • The deforestation of tropical rain forests is a
    threat to life worldwide.
  • Deforestation may have profound effects on global
    climate and cause the extinction of thousands of
    species annually.
  • The future requires solutions based in solving
    the economic crises of countries holding rain
    forests, as well as improvement of the living
    conditions of the poor people often responsible
    for deforestation.

14
Future Plan
  • We Divide our group into
  • Monitoring
  • Protection
  • We also continue characterizing the Amazon Rain
    Forest (focused on Brazil)

15
Contact Info
  • Website http//web.mit.edu/12.000/www/m2006/teams
    /r3/flora/index.html
  • Mail rain3_at_mit.edu
  • Thank you!!!
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