Transcript Biomes
Biomes
Chapter 6
Biomes
Biome – a large region that is determined by 2 things
1. similar climate – average weather in an area.
2. similar plants and animals – (soil type)
Climate – average weather of an area
Precipitation
Type (snow, rain, etc.)
Amount
See Figure 3, Page 154
Temperature and Precipitation
Biomes also vary with altitude and latitude
Altitude – height of an object above sea level
as altitude increases, temperature decreases.
Latitude – distance north or south of the equator –
the closer to the equator the hotter it is.
See Figure 4, Page 155
Latitude and Altitude
Plants and Animals
The soil type determines the types of plants that
will grow.
The types of plants determines the types of animals
Plants have adaptations that allow them to live in
certain biomes.
3 Major types of plant adaptations
Size
Color
Shape
See Figure 1, Page 153 – Biome map
The World’s Major Terrestrial
Biomes
3 Major Types of Biomes
Forests
Grasslands
Deserts
Tropical Rain Forests
Forests
All forests contain an abundance of small and
large trees
4 types of Forests
1. Tropical Rain Forest
2. Temperate Rain Forest
3. Temperate Deciduous Forest
4. Taiga
Tropical Rain Forest
The Most biodiverse (has large variety of living things)
Very high temperatures
Very humid
A lot of rain 200-450 cm/year
Located near the equator (latitude)
Most near sea level (altitude)
Tropical Rainforest continued…
Soil contains very few nutrients
because things are decomposed
quickly and the nutrients are
immediately absorbed by plants
Main type of plants is trees
See Figure 7, Page 158
Layers of the Rain Forest
Layers of Tropical Rainforest
Understory (Bottom layer)– receives very little light
Canopy (Middle layer) – divided between upper &
lower canopy
This is the main level of rainforest, absorbs 95% of
sunlight.
Emergent Layer (Top layer) – tallest trees
Tropical Rainforest is one of the most
threatened biomes
Main threat is habitat destruction – caused by the
cutting down of trees
We cut down trees for paper/wood – but mostly for
grazing livestock and growing cash crops.
Temperate Rain Forest
Has seasonal variations
Moderate (medium) temperatures
High humidity
Large amounts of rain
Found in North America (Pacific
Northwest, Australia, and New Zealand
Temperate Deciduous Forests
Temperate Deciduous Forest
Deciduous trees are trees that lose
their leaves seasonally
Moderate temperatures
4 seasons
Temperatures vary greatly from season to
season; sometimes day to day
We live in this Biome
Made up mostly of trees that lose their leaves
seasonally
The soil contains a lot of nutrients because
decomposition is slow
Plants in this biome grow in layers
This biome contains a large variety of plants and
animals.
Taiga
Taiga (Northern Coniferous Forest)
Very cold temperatures
Moderate amount of snow & rain
Long winters, short summers
Majority of trees are conifers which reproduce
using cones and keep their needle-like leaves
year around.
Contains many lakes and swamps
Most of the northern portion of the United States
Grasslands
Contain mostly grasses and weeds, very few
trees and the land is usually relatively flat.
4 Different types
Savanna
Temperate Grasslands
Chaparral
Tundra
Savannas
Savanna
Type of grassland that contains grasses, shrubs and
small trees
Very warm temperatures
Most of the rain falls during the rainy or wet season
Some animals found here include elephants, antelope,
lions, giraffes and cheetah
Found in parts of Africa, Western India, Northern
Australia and parts of South America
Temperate Grasslands
Temperate Grasslands
North America – prairie
Asia – steppe
South America – pampas
4 distinct seasons
Moderate temperatures
Moderate rainfall
Usually found in the interior of continents
Periodic droughts
Plant life consists of grasses, wildflowers and
a few small bushes
Very fertile soil
Many have been converted to farmland
America’s most endangered biome
Used for Grazing livestock animals (cattle,
sheep, horses)
Grassland Plants
Chaparral
Chaparral
Temperate – 4 seasons
Moderate temperatures
Dominated by shrubs (small bushes)
Usually found by coasts
Dry climate
Plants must be adapted to survive droughts by
conserving water
Transitional biome – often found in between
grassland and desert biomes
Tundra
Tundra
Coldest climate of any biome
Dry – little precipitation
Precipitation in the form of snow and ice
Contains permafrost (a layer of soil that is frozen year
round – it never thaws)
2 types of Tundra
Artic – high latitudes far from equator – North & South Poles
Alpine – high altitudes (mountaintops)
Plants only grow during summer, they are
small and low to the ground
Animals – penguins, moose, polar bear,
caribou
Tundra very fragile and endangered (global
warming)
Deserts
Deserts
Have very little precipitation
Less than 5 inches or 10 cm per year
Widely scattered vegetation
In most deserts, there is a large temperature range
throughout the day, hot days & cold nights
Many desert plants will drop their leaves if it gets
too dry – and regrow new ones when it rains
3 Types of Deserts
Tropical
Temperate
Polar
1. Tropical Desert
Hot year round
Rain one or two months per year
Example: Sahara (Africa)
2. Temperate
desert
Medium temperatures
More precipitation and plants (cacti,
snakes – reptiles, insects & arachnids)
Example: Mojave (US)
3. Polar Desert
Winters cold, summers warm
Little precipitation
Example: Gobi (China)