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World Biomes

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Tropical Rain forest ... Indo- Malaysian (west coast of India, Assam, southeast Asia, New Guinea and Queensland, ... rainforest soil is useless to humans. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: World Biomes


1
World Biomes
  • Tropical Rain forest

2
Distribution of biome
  • The tropical rainforest is found between 10 N
    and 10 S latitude at elevations below 1,000 m.
    There are three major, disjunct formations
  • Neotropical (Amazonia into Central America)
  • African (Zaire Basin with an outlier in West
    Africa also eastern Madagascar)
  • Indo- Malaysian (west coast of India, Assam,
    southeast Asia, New Guinea and Queensland,
    Australia.

3
Distribution
4
Climate
  • The tropical rainforest is a forest of tall trees
    in a region of year-round warmth. An average of
    1250 to 6600 mm of rain falls yearly.
  • The temperature in a rainforest rarely gets
    higher than 34 C or drops below 20 C average
    humidity is between 77 and 88. There is usually
    a brief season of less rain. In monsoonal areas,
    there is a real dry season. Almost all
    rainforests lie near the equator.

5
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6
Soil
  • The soil is infertile, deeply weathered and
    severely leached. Rapid bacterial decay prevents
    the accumulation of humus. The concentration of
    iron and aluminium oxides gives the soil a bright
    red colour and sometimes produces minable
    deposits (e.g., bauxite). On younger substrates,
    especially of volcanic origin, tropical soils may
    be quite fertile.

7
Plants I
  • A tropical rainforest has more kinds of trees
    than any other area in the world. Scientists have
    counted about 100 to 300 species in one 1-hectare
    area in South America. Seventy percent of the
    plants in the rainforest are trees.

8
Plants II
  • All tropical rainforests resemble one another in
    some ways. Many of the trees have straight trunks
    that don't branch out for 100 feet or more. There
    is no sense in growing branches below the canopy
    where there is little light. The majority of the
    trees have smooth, thin bark because there is no
    need to protect them from water loss and freezing
    temperatures. It also makes it difficult for
    epiphytes and plant parasites to get a hold on
    the trunks. The bark of different species is so
    similar that it is difficult to identify a tree
    by its bark. Many trees can only be identified by
    their flowers.

9
Kapok tree
10
Brazil nut
11
Rubber tree
Ruffled Fan palm
12
Orchids
13
Bromeliad
Fern tree
14
Carnivorous plants
Venus Fly Trap
Pitcher plant or Monkey Cup
15
Plants III (growth forms)
  • Epiphytes the so-called air plants grow on
    branches high in the trees, using the limbs
    merely for support and extracting moisture from
    the air and trapping the constant leaf-fall and
    wind-blown dust.

16
Plants IV (growth forms)
  • Lianas woody vines grow rapidly up the tree
    trunks when there is a temporary gap in the
    canopy and flower and fruit in the tree tops.

17
Plants V (growth forms)
  • Climbers green-stemmed plants that remain in the
    understory. Many climbers, including the
    ancestors of the domesticated yams (Africa) and
    sweet potatoes (South America), store nutrients
    in roots and tubers.

18
Plants VI (growth forms)
  • Stranglers these plants begin life as epiphytes
    in the canopy and send their roots downward to
    the forest floor.

19
Fungi
  • Fungi can live on the forest floor because they
    do not need sunlight for growth.

20
Plants VIII
  • Rainforests now cover less than 6 of Earth's
    land surface. Scientists estimate that more than
    half of all the world's plant and animal species
    live in tropical rainforests. Tropical
    rainforests produce 40 of Earth's oxygen.
  • About 1/4 of all the medicines we use come from
    rainforest plants. More than 1,400 varieties of
    tropical plants are thought to be potential cures
    for cancer.

21
Animals
  • Animal life is highly diverse. Common
    characteristics found among mammals and birds
    (and reptiles and amphibians, too) include
    adaptations to an arboreal life (for example, the
    long tails of New World monkeys), bright colours
    and sharp patterns, loud vocalizations, and diets
    heavy on fruits.

22
Insects
23
Amphibians and reptiles
Constrictor Python
Tree frogs
Chameleon
24
Birds
Paradise bird
Harpy Eagle
Macaw
25
Mammals
Sloth
Tapir
Howler Monkey
26
People I
27
People II
  • Farming huge tracts of rainforest are cleared
    for large-scale commercial plantations or
    livestock ranching. Ironically, rainforest soil
    is useless to humans. Rainforest soils are
    notoriously poor and cannot support human
    agriculture for more than a few years. Crops may
    grow well at first, mostly subsisting on the
    minerals released when the forest is burnt. But
    these minerals wash away quickly without the
    protection of the thick forest canopy and the
    soil soon becomes useless.
  • Humans destroy by collecting and killing wild
    animals and plants.

28
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29
People III
  • Rainforest is also cleared to make way for homes
    for people, and infrastructure like dams, roads,
    electrical and communications installations.
  • Rainforests are dug up as we mine for oil, gold
    and other minerals. Small scale gold prospectors
    use mercury which is toxic to extract gold.

30
People IV
  • Logging of trees for building materials,
    firewood, paper products. Rainforests contain 50
    of global standing timber. Unlike the
    faster-growing temperate timber trees, rainforest
    trees take decades to reach economic size so it
    is not easy to harvest them in a sustainable
    manner. Logging roads usually allow other
    commercial exploitation to follow.

31
People V
  • Humans kill by breaking up a rainforest into
    smaller clumps. It destabilises the forest
    interior temperature and humidity are no longer
    constant. Such fluctuations kill plants and
    animals adapted only for stable conditions. If
    the fragment is too small, it can't withstand
    natural seasonal changes. It also prevents
    natural movement of plants and animals from one
    part of the forest to another.
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