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Learn about energy pyramids, trophic levels, and the flow of energy in food chains. Understand how to calculate biomass and energy at different trophic levels. Explore different terrestrial biomes and aquatic ecosystems.
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Energy Pyramids – Instructions • Pick a food chain and go to page 72-73 in your textbook (4 extras) • Trophic Level – using the appropriate term • Example – drawing (include word if not clear) • Side three • Numbers – how many organisms? (given for you) • Energy (Joules – unit of energy) and Biomass (total mass for one trophic level) – you are given base level, how will you find the rest? • Color, Cut, Fold, Affix, and you’re done!
cut here fold here Flow of energy: Example Pyramid 10,000n kg (biomass) 1,000n kg 100n kg 10n kg 10,000 J (energy) 10 J 100 J 1,000 J 3 40 250 6000 (numbers) Example food chain MAY NOT USE this one fold here fold here
Latitude and Climate • Weather – condition of the atmosphere at a given time v. Climate – the average weather conditions in an area • Temperature and precipitation • Climate is affected by latitude (distance between the equator and any point N-S), ocean currents, and land masses (Shape and elevation) • Why? Angle of the sun. • One factor that influences distribution of biomes on earth
How are humans affecting climate? • Example: global warming via the Greenhouse Effect
Tundra • Below polar ice caps • No trees • Frozen soil (permafrost) • Minimal precipitation
Boreal Forest or Taiga • South (or North) of Tundra • Evergreen forest – no permafrost • Short summers
Temperate Forest • Broad-leaved, deciduous trees • Four seasons • Woodland animals (bears – top predator)
Temperate Shrubland or Chaparral • Less rainfall than temperate forests • Dominated by shrubs—adapted to dry environment • E.g. California
Temperate Grassland • Fertile soils – to support grasses • Drought, grazers, and fires prevent it from becoming a forest • Example: prairie
Desert • Evaporation exceeds precipitation • Organisms adapted to this: succulents (cacti), insects, lizards, etc.
Tropical Savanna • Grasses and scattered trees • Minimal precipitation • Zebras, lions, etc.
Tropical Rain Forest • Warm temperatures, lots of rain • Highest species diversity • Vegetation: canopy v. understory
Other Terrestrial Areas • Mountains – climate changes as altitude changes • Communities resemble that of the tundra at the top • Polar regions – cold all year, covered in ice
Aquatic Ecosystems - Overview • Freshwater • Transitional (“brackish”) • Marine (salty)
Freshwater Ecosystems • Rivers and streams – water flows in one direction, carries sediment, cause erosion • Plants and animals must be able to withstand water currents • Lakes and ponds – standing water, vary greatly in size • Eutrophic (nutrient-rich) v. Oligotrophic (nutrient-poor) • What effect would this have on the organisms present? • Seasonal patterns (next slide)
Transitional Ecosystems • Brackish water – between salty and fresh • Wetlands – marshes, swamps, and bogs • Very productive environments (nutrients) • Often anoxic, usually pretty salty (adaptations) • Estuaries – where salt water meets fresh!
Marine Ecosystems – Salt Water • Intertidal – where ocean meets land • Wave and tide action • Persistent organisms • Coastal ocean and coral reefs • Very diverse (next slide) • Subject to human disturbances • Open ocean • Photic zone – where light reaches (up to 100 meters!) • Phytoplankton/algae