Transcript Chapter 18
The Biosphere and Human Effects
Chapter 18
18.3 Types of Land Ecosystems
Different climates support different types of plant
life, which support different types of animals
Biome
• Type of ecosystem that can be characterized by
its climate and dominant vegetation
Deserts
Low rainfall produces deserts at latitudes around
30° north and south, where dry air descends
Desert
• Biome where little rain falls, humidity is low, and
the main plants store water in their tissues or tap
into water sources deep underground
Desert
Grasslands
Grasslands form at midlatitudes in the interior of
continents between deserts and temperate
forests
Grasslands
• Biome where grasses and other low-growing
plants are adapted to warm summers, cold
winters, periodic fires, and grazing animals
• Example: shortgrass and tallgrass prairies
Chaparral
Dry shrublands (chaparral) are found in South
Africa, California, and Mediterranean regions
Chaparral
• Biome where cool, wet winters and hot, dry
summers support shrubs adapted to periodic fires
Grasslands and Chaparral
Grassland, shrublands,
and woodlands
Fig. 18-5c, p. 365
Tropical Rain Forests
At the equator, high rainfall and temperature
support tropical rain forests with broadleaf trees
that remain green year-round
Tropical rain forest
• Species-rich tropical biome in which continual
warmth and rainfall allows dominant broadleaf
trees to grow all year
Tropical Rain Forest
Deciduous Broadleaf Forests
Deciduous broadleaf trees are adapted to
regions that cannot sustain year-round growth
Deciduous tree
• A tree that drops all its leaves annually just before
a season that does not favor growth
Temperate deciduous forest
• Biome dominated by trees that drop all their
leaves and go dormant during a cold winter
Deciduous Broadleaf Forest
Coniferous Forests
Conifer forests dominate high latitudes in the
Northern Hemisphere and other regions where
drought, poor soil, or periodic fires prevent
broadleaf trees from taking hold
Taiga (boreal forest)
• Extensive northern biome dominated by conifers
• A cold, dry season alternates with a cool, rainy
season
Coniferous Forest: Siberian Taiga
Tundra
Tundra forms at high latitudes and high altitudes
Arctic tundra
• Youngest, most northerly biome, dominated by
low plants adapted to a short growing season and
a layer of permanently frozen soil (permafrost)
Alpine tundra
• High-altitude biome dominated by low plants
Arctic Tundra
Animation: Major biomes
Animation: Environmental gradient
18.4 Types of Aquatic Ecosystems
Composition of aquatic communities is
influenced by gradients of sunlight penetration,
water temperature, salinity, dissolved gases,
rate of water movement, and depth
Freshwater Ecosystems
A lake is a standing body of water
• Light decreases with depth; different communities
live at different depths and distances from shore
Streams and rivers are flowing water ecosystems
• Physical characteristics that vary along its length
influence the types of organisms that live in it
• Fast-flowing cooler water holds more oxygen than
warmer, slower-moving water
Marine Ecosystems
Estuary
• A semi-enclosed area where nutrient-rich water
from a river mixes with seawater
• Highly productive ecosystem
Seashores
• Rocky shores have grazing food chains based on
algae; sandy shores have detrital food chains
Marine Ecosystems
Benthic province
• The ocean’s rocks and sediments
Pelagic province
• The ocean’s open waters
• In upper waters, photosynthetic organisms form
the basis of grazing food chains
• Deeper communities subsist on materials that
drift down from above
Marine Ecosystems
Coral reefs
• Formation composed of secretions of coral
polyps, found in tropical, sunlit seas
• Main producers are photosynthetic protists that
live inside the coral’s tissues
Coral bleaching
• Stress response in which a coral expels the
photosynthetic protists in its issues
Coral Reef and Bleaching
water of the open ocean
air at ocean
surface
water over
continental shelf
continental
shelf
Pelagic
Province
0
200
1,000
2,000
4,000
11,000
depth (meters)
deep-sea
trenches
Fig. 18-10a, p. 369
Animation: Oceanic zones
Marine Ecosystems
Seamount
• An undersea mountain
Hydrothermal vent
• Place where hot, mineral-rich water streams out
from an underwater opening in the Earth’s crust
• Producers are prokaryotes that strip energy from
minerals
Seamounts and Hydrothermal Vents
Comparing Aquatic Ecosystems
In well-lit upper waters, photosynthetic
producers are the base for grazing food chains
Detritus drifting down from above sustains most
deep-water communities in lakes and oceans
Hydrothermal vent communities on the ocean
floor are sustained by energy that prokaryotes
harvest from minerals
Animation: Lake zonation
Animation: Lake turnover
Animation: Rocky intertidal zones
Animation: Three types of reefs
Animation: Hydrothermal vent
community
Animation: Coastal upwelling
18.5 Human Effects on the Biosphere
The increasing size of the human population and
its increasing industrialization have far-reaching
effects on the biosphere
Effects range from extinction of individual
species to global climate change
Increasing Species Extinctions
Humans are increasing the rate of species
extinctions by degrading, destroying, and
fragmenting natural habitats, by overharvesting
species, and by introducing exotic species
Increasing Species Extinctions
Endangered species
• Faces extinction in all or part of its range
Threatened species
• Likely to become endangered in the near future
Endemic species
• Evolved in one place and is found nowhere else
Living or Extinct?
Ivory-billed woodpecker
Threatened Species
Habitat destruction threatens the eastern prairie
fringed orchid – aquifer depletion and pollution
endanger Texas blind salamanders
Some Threatened Species
The Global Impact of Human Activities
Human activities threaten entire ecosystems
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Desertification
Deforestation
Air pollution and acid rain
Water pollution
Trash in aquatic ecosystems
Air pollution and the ozone hole
Greenhouse gases and global warming
Desertification
Poor agricultural practices turn grasslands or
woodlands into deserts
• US Great Plains (the Great Dustbowl)
• Sahara Desert
Desertification
• Conversion of grassland or woodlands to
desertlike conditions
Desertification
Dust from the Sahara over the Atlantic Ocean
Deforestation
Human activities strip woodlands of trees
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Flooding
Landslides
Increases atmospheric CO2
Decreases atmospheric oxygen
Deforestation
• Removal of all trees from a large tract of land
Deforestation
Clearing tropical forests in Brazil
Pollution
Human activities generate pollutants that kill
animals and damage ecosystems
Pollutant
• Natural or man-made substance released into the
environment in greater than natural amounts, and
that damages the health of organisms
Acid Rain
Acid rain
• Rainfall contaminated by acidic pollutants
• Burns trees, kills fish, leaches nutrients from soil
Caused by pollutants that combine with water
vapor in the atmosphere to form acids
• Sulfuric acid from sulfur dioxides from coalburning power plants and factories
• Nitric acid from nitrogen oxides from vehicles and
power plants that burn gas and oil
Acid Rain
Other Sources of Water Pollution
Pollution from point sources may be identified;
dealing with pollution from nonpoint sources is
more difficult
• Industrial chemicals and heavy metals
• Oil from vehicles
• Runoff of fertilizers, pesticides, herbicides, and
animal wastes
• Sewage and excreted prescription drugs
• Sediments
Some Results of Water Pollution
Bioaccumulation
• Concentration of toxins such as mercury as they
move up through the food chain
Eutrophication
• Nutrient enrichment by sewage and fertilizers,
resulting in toxic algal blooms or oxygen depletion
Turbidity
• Clouding of water by sediment runoff, blocking
sunlight and choking animals
The Trouble With Trash
Human activities generate plastics and other
trash that kill animals and damage ecosystems
• Chemicals from buried trash contaminate
groundwater
• Wastes dumped or washed into the ocean
damage marine ecosystems
• Plastics can persist more than 100 years
The Trouble With Trash
More than 300 pieces of plastic fed to an
albatross chick by its parents
Air Quality
Pollution from airborne particles damages
respiratory systems of humans and animals
• Burning of fossil fuels and industrial processes
Some pollutants have global effects
• CFCs cause thinning of the ozone layer
• Rising levels of greenhouse gases contribute to
climate change
Air Quality
The Ozone Hole
Ozone is a pollutant near the ground, but
depletion of the ozone layer is a global threat
caused by the use of CFCs
• Global agreement to phase out CFC use
Ozone layer
• Atmospheric layer with a high concentration of
ozone that prevents much ultraviolet radiation
from reaching Earth’s surface
Ozone and CFCs
Animation: How CFCs destroy ozone
Global Climate Change
Climate change caused by rising concentrations
of greenhouse gases is another global threat
• Results in extremes in rainfall patterns and
drought, increased hurricane intensity
Global climate change
• Global warming and other changes in the current
climate and weather patterns
Evidence of a Warming World
Causes of Climate Change
Earth’s climate normally cycles from icy to hot
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Earth’s orbit changes in a 100,000 year cycle
Earth’s tilt varies in a 40,000 year cycle
Periodic changes in solar output
Occasional effects of volcanic eruptions
Recent warming is due to increase in
greenhouse gases due to human activities
• 2007 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
Climate Change and Greenhouse Gases
Fueling Global Climate Change
Effects of Climate Change
Increasing temperature causes sea level rise
• Increased coastal erosion and flooding
• Salt water contamination of freshwater aquifers
Temperature effects on biological systems
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Earlier spring flowering in plants
Shifts in animal migration and breeding seasons
Ecosystems shift to higher latitudes or altitudes
Stressed aquatic systems, such as corals
Animation: Global crises by region and
habitat
Animation: Habitat loss and
fragmentation
Animation: Humans affect biodiversity
Animation: Formation of photochemical
smog
Animation: Chernobyl fallout
Animation: Stream pollution
Video: ABC News: Air pollution in China
Video: ABC News: Beach pollution
Video: ABC News: China computer waste
Video: ABC News: Clean Air Act
Video: ABC News: International report:
Cooling the planet
Video: ABC News: Desertification in
China
Video: ABC News: Global warming
Video: ABC News: Environmental victory
green decision
Video: ABC News: Green laws
Video: ABC News: Impacts of global
warming
Video: ABC News: International report:
Global warming
Video: ABC News: Melting ice
Video: ABC News: Miles per gallon,
requirements for automakers
Video: ABC News: MTBE pollution
Video: ABC News: Ozone layer depletion
Video: ABC News: Painful painkillers
Video: ABC News: Pharmaceuticals in
water supplies
Video: ABC News: Pollution and
women‘s health
Video: ABC News: Sports franchise
going green
Video: ABC News: Stuff that we leave
behind
Video: ABC News: Water pollution
threatens millions
Video: ABC News: U.S. forests
Video: ABC News: Wal-Mart goes green
18.6 Maintaining Biodiversity
Biodiversity includes diversity of genes, species,
and ecosystems
Worldwide, biodiversity is declining at all levels
Biodiversity
• Genetic diversity of individuals of a species,
variety of species, and variety of ecosystems
Is Biodiversity Important?
Healthy ecosystems are essential to humans
• Ecosystems produce oxygen, remove CO2,
decompose waste, provide food, prevent erosion
and flooding
We benefit from biodiversity
• Wild species provide medicines, reservoirs of
genetic diversity to enhance crops
• Ethical reasons to preserve biodiversity
Indicator Species
A decline in biodiversity warns us that our
natural support system is in trouble
Indicator species
• A species that is particularly sensitive to
environmental changes and can be monitored to
assess whether an ecosystem is threatened
• Examples: lichens, mayflies
Conservation Biology
Conservation biologists identify threatened
regions with high biodiversity and prioritize which
will receive protection
Conservation biology
• Field of applied biology that surveys biodiversity
and seeks ways to maintain and use it
Hot Spots
By focusing on hot spots rather than on
individual species, scientists hope to maintain
ecosystems that sustain biological diversity
Hot spots
• Threatened regions with great biodiversity
• Considered a high priority for conservation efforts
• Currently 867 land regions identified by WWF
Protecting a Hot Spot
Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve, Costa Rica
Ecological Restoration
Ecological restoration can help actively re-create
or renew a diverse natural ecosystem that has
been destroyed or degraded
Ecological restoration
• Actively altering an area in an effort to restore or
create a functional ecosystem
• Example: Louisiana’s coastal marshes
Ecological Restoration
Marsh restoration project, Louisiana
Living Sustainably
Individuals can help maintain biodiversity by
using resources in a sustainable fashion
• Cut consumption
• Reuse and recycle materials
• Reduce energy use
Sustainable development
• Using resources in a way that takes into account
the needs of future generations
Video: ABC News: Bald Eagle off
endangered list
Video: ABC News: Endangered turtles
return to sea
Video: ABC News: Natural wonders
Hawaiian Islands
Video: ABC News: Hsing Hsing dies
Video: ABC News: Marine sanctuary
Video: ABC News: Planet Earth 2007
Video: ABC News: U.S. earth summit
Video: ABC News: Penguin rescue
Video: ABC News: Whaling
18.7 Impacts/Issues Revisited
Arctic ice sheets are breaking up due to global
climate change, making fossil fuel and mineral
resources more accessible
However, extracting these resources will harm
species such as the polar bear, already
threatened by global climate change
Digging into Data:
Arctic PCB Pollution