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Biome Study Guide

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Where there is a difference between the s and your notes, go with your ... Soils are coarse textured, shallow, rocky, gravelly, and contain no subsurface water ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biome Study Guide


1
Biome Study Guide
  • Compiled from the excellent
  • presentations made in
  • periods 1, 2, 3, 5, 7

2
Note about these slides.
  • This is a general study guide
  • Based on all of the presentations across all five
    periods
  • Where there is a difference between the slides
    and your notes, go with your notes or ask someone
    (check online too)
  • Where are they located? Check out the links in
    our web site.

3
Grasslands
  • Occur all over the world, at high and low
    altitude, in temperate, polar, and tropical
    climates
  • Grass is the dominant plant life.
  • Do not have many trees or large shrubs.
  • Include savannas, prairies, and steppes.
  • There are two types of grasslands Temperate and
    tropical.
  • The soil of the temperate grasslands is a deep,
    dark color.
  • Cover 25 of land area on Earth

4
Grasslands
  • Grasslands are considered transitional biomes.
    This means that grasslands are usually found
    between deserts and forests. A grassland would
    become a forest if it received more rain less
    rain and it would become a desert.
  • Animals include herbivores that graze on the
    grass and burrowing animals
  • Examples Bison, antelope, prairie dog,
    elephant, rabbit, mouse, snake, fox, leopard,
    eagle
  • Adaptations include coloration that blends into
    grass, front legs for digging burrows, nocturnal
    activity, and gathering in herds
  • Plants include buffalo grass, foxtail, clover,
    goldenrod, sunflower

5
Deserts
  • Occur all over the world, at high and low
    altitude, in temperate, polar, tropical climates,
    but mostly in bands at 30 north and 30 south
  • Receive very little precipitation
  • Soils are coarse textured, shallow, rocky,
    gravelly, and contain no subsurface water
  • Can contain sand and sand dunes
  • Even the wettest desert does not get more than 10
    inches of rain per year.
  • Cover 20 of land area on Earth

6
Deserts
  • Animals include coyote, black vulture,
    rattlesnake, kangaroo rat, roadrunner
  • Plants include cactus, century plant, acacia,
    yucca, tumbleweed, Ponderosa pine
  • Adaptations include waxy skin, lack of leaves,
    deep roots, nocturnal activity, burrowing, get
    water from plants
  • Four types of desert
  • Coastal - cool winters, with long, warm summers
  • Hot and dry - warm all year, with very hot
    summers
  • Semi-arid - long, dry summers
  • Cold (polar) - receive snow in winter
    temperatures do not go above 10C

7
Savanna
  • A flat grassland with scattered trees in tropical
    or subtropical regions
  • Found between rain forests and deserts
  • Warm climate with little rainfall long, dry
    winters with monsoon in summer
  • Receive between 10 and 30 inches of rain per
    year temperatures range from 68 to 86

8
Savanna
  • Plants include eucalyptus, willow, acacia,
    elephant grass, baobab, euphorbia
  • Animals include elephant, lion, tiger, cheetah,
    honeypot ant, black mamba, koala, giraffe,
    rhinoceros, emu, baboon, caracal, aardvark
  • Adaptations include migration away during dry
    season, quickly flee grass fires, burrow, store
    moisture in root system, long tap roots, thick
    bark, water storage in tree trunk

9
Rain Forests
  • A tropical forest, usually of tall, densely
    growing, broad leafed evergreen trees in an area
    of high annual rainfall
  • Temperatures range from 68-93F
  • Annual rainfall is over 100 inches
  • Most are located near the equator
  • Contain more than two-thirds of Earths plant
    species
  • Cover 6 of land area
  • Produce 40 of the worlds oxygen

10
Rain Forests
  • Plants include epiphytes (air ferns), orchids,
    bromeliads, strangler figs, buttress root,
    carnivorous plants
  • Animals include piranha, tiger, anaconda, parrot,
    toucan, harpy eagle, sloth, gorilla, orangutan,
    forest elephant, poison-arrow frog
  • Adaptations include ability to be in constant
    shade or reach for the sun, wrap roots around
    other plants, eat food eaten by no other animal,
    camouflage
  • Deforestation is causing loss of forest, oxygen
    production, potential medications, and plant and
    animal species

11
Temperate Forests
  • Found in temperate zones above the tropics and
    below coniferous forests, usually near an ocean
  • Dominated by trees
  • Receive 28-60 inches of rain per year
  • Climate is never extremely hot nor extremely cold
  • Has four distinct seasons
  • Deciduous means to fall off, which leaves in
    these forests do in the fall

12
Temperate Forests
  • Plants include oak, maple, ash, beech, hickory,
    oxlip, bluebell, primrose
  • Animals include mouse, squirrel, raccoon, deer,
    snake, bear, bald eagle, woodpecker
  • Adaptations include losing leaves, thick bark,
    migration to warmer locations, hibernation,
    camouflage, store food

13
Taiga or Boreal Forests
  • Dominated by cold Arctic air. The temperature
    ranges from -65F to 70F
  • Found in Northern Hemisphere, below the tundra of
    Canada, Russia, Alaska, and Scandinavia
  • Winters are very cold, with snow summers are
    warm, rainy, and humid
  • Dominated by coniferous (cone-bearing) trees,
    which contain needles instead of leaves
  • Taiga comes from the Russian for marshy pine
    forest
  • Annual rainfall of 30-85 cm

14
Taiga or Boreal Forests
  • Plants include lots of trees, such as Douglas
    fir, red cedar, Jack pine, white fir, white
    poplar, white spruce
  • Animals include caribou, white tail deer, moose,
    red squirrel, black bear, bald eagle, lynx, wolf,
    grizzly bear, snowshoe rabbit, long ear owl,
    otter
  • Adaptations include fur coats, dark green
    coloration, fur coloration changes

15
Tundra
  • From the Finnish tunturi meaning a treeless plain
  • Located in the Northern Hemisphere between
    latitudes 50º and 75º North (also a small portion
    near Antarctica)
  • Cover about 20 of land area
  • Two seasons Summer and winter windy
  • Precipitation of 6-10 inches per year
  • Vast and nearly completely treeless land
  • Ground is permanently frozen 10 inches to 3 feet
    deep (permafrost)
  • Poor soil nutrition limits the variety of plant
    species that can survive in the tundra

16
Tundra
  • Alpine tundra occurs on mountains, above the tree
    line
  • Only Arctic tree is the Arctic willow, which
    grows to height of four inches
  • Plants include Arctic moss, Arctic willow,
    caribou moss, lichen, low shrubs, bearberry,
    pasque flower
  • Animals include Arctic fox, bear, wolf, lemming,
    caribou, goose, marmot, elk, Harlequin duck,
    snowy owl, musk ox
  • Adaptations include low and slow growth, store
    nutrients, grow in clumps, thick fur, feather, or
    fat, more than one food source, large, spread
    hooves, fur or feather color changes from summer
    to winter

17
Polar
  • The large polar ice cap found in the frigid zone
    environments of the Arctic, Greenland and
    Antarctica
  • A marine biome that is rich in nutrients from the
    land around it
  • Located at the northern and southern ice caps
  • Ice is about 6000 feet thick, contains 70 of the
    worlds water supply, and 90 of the worlds ice
  • Summer in Antarctica temperature highs of 5C,
    lows of -30C

18
Polar
  • Plants include algae, lichen, moss, phytoplankton
  • Animals include beluga and killer whales,
    penguin, Arctic fox, Arctic hare, wolf, polar
    bear, walrus
  • Adaptations include thick fur, fat, or feathers,
    fur and feather coloration changes, small size
    and low profile

19
Alpine
  • Found in mountain regions, below the snow line,
    at altitudes above 10,000 feet
  • Not many trees, usually short plants
  • About 7-12 inches of precipitation per year
  • High temperatures average about 50F in summer
    and rarely go above freezing in the winter
  • A lot of exposure to ultraviolet radiation in
    thin atmosphere
  • Cover 16 of land area

20
Alpine
  • Nutrient-poor soil
  • Plants include bear grass, bristlecone pine, moss
    campion, alpine phacelia, wild potatoes
  • Animals include alpaca, llama, Andean condor,
    yak, mountain goat, snow leopard, chinchilla
  • Adaptations include hibernation, migration, fat
    storage, larger lung capacity, and increased
    number of red blood cells
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