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Millie Browne
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Cards (156)
Abiotic
Relating to non living things
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Biotic
Relating to living things
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Consumer
Creature that wats herbivores and / or plant matter
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Decomposer
An organism that breaks down dead tissue which is then recycled to the environment
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Ecosystem
A community of plants and animals that interact with each other and the physical environment
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Food chain
The connections between different organisms that rely on one another as their food source
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Food web
A complex hierarchy of plants and animals relying on each other for food
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Nutrient cycling
A set of processes whereby organisms extract
minerals
necessary for growth from soil and water before passing them on though the
food
chain
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Global ecosystem
Large biomes
with flora and
fauna adapting
to their environment
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Producer
An organism or plant that is able to absorb
energy
from the sun through
photosynthesis
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Biodiversity
The way of life in the world or a particular
habitat
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Convectional
rainfall
Warm air at the surface
heats
up, rises, cools and condenses forming
clouds.
This leads to heavy daily rainfall
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Commercial
farming
Farming to sell produce for a
profit
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Deforestation
The chopping down and
removal
of trees to clear an area of
forest
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Logging
The business of cutting down trees and transporting the logs to sawmills.
Selective logging
and clear felling. Teak and Mahogany
worth the most
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Mineral extraction
The removal of mineral resources from the earth.
Gold
,
Bauxite
, Oil and gas. Pollutes rivers and air
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Soil erosion
Removal of
topsoil
faster than it can be replaced due to natural,
animal
and human activity
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Subsistence farming
A type of agriculture producing food and materials for the
benefit
only of the farmer and his
family
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Debt reduction
Countries are relieved of some of their
debt
in return for protecting their
rainforests
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Ecotourism
Responsible travel to
natural
areas that conserve the
environment
, sustains the well being of local people and may involve education
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Selective
logging
The cutting down of trees which are mature or
inferior
to encourage the
growth
of the remaining trees
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Sustainability
Actions and forms of progress that meets the needs of the present without reducing the ability of
future
generations to meet their own
needs
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Ecosystem characteristics
Tropical Rainforests
Temperate Grassland
Coniferous Forest
Deciduous
forests
Tundra
Mediterranean
Tropical Grasslands
Deserts
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Tropical Rainforests
Along equator (Asia,
Africa
/
South America
)
6
% earth's surface
25ºC –
30ºC
and over
250mm
rain per year
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Temperate
Grassland
40º
-
60º
N of the equator (N America and E Europe)
Centre of
continents
away from the
sea
Short
grasses
Wet
and
dry
seasons
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Coniferous Forest
60ºN
(Scandinavia / Canada)
Cone bearing
evergreen
No
sunlight
for part of the year
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Deciduous forests
Higher
latitudes (W Europe, N America, New Zealand)
5 –
20ºC
and between
500
– 1500 mm rain per year
4
distinct seasons
Lose leaves in the
winter
to cope with the
cold
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Tundra
Above
60ºN
(
Arctic Circle
)
Less than
10ºC
and less than
500mm
per year rain
Cold, icy and dry means
2
month growing season
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Mediterranean
30-
40ºN
and S on
west coast
of continents
Drought resistant small trees
and
evergreen shrubs
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Tropical
Grasslands
Between
equator
and
tropics
20 –
30ºC
and between
500- 1500
mm of rain per year
Wet
and
dry
seasons
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Deserts
Tropics
(Sahara and Australia)
Over
30ºC
and less than
300
mmm per year rain
20
% of land's surface
Average temperature
27ºC
More than
2000
mm rain per year
Wet season (
December
to May)
Infertile
soils
Shallow
roots
4
layers of vegetation
Trees lose
leaves
all year
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Plant adaptations in tropical rainforests
Tall
and
straight
to reach the sun
Buttress
roots to support the tall trees
Lianas
use trees to reach the sun
Drip
tips so leaves don't
rot
Thick
waxy eaves
Smooth
thin bark
Epiphytes
grow on trees and get nutrients from
air
and water
Shade
tolerant ferns
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Animal adaptations in tropical rainforests
Sloths
– hook to grip branches
Parrots
– sharp beak for nuts and fruit; 4 toes per foot to clamber
Long limbed spider monkey
– sharp nails to peel bark to get to sap
Flying frog
– web like feet to glide through the air
Titan beetle
– flies and lives on decaying material
Anteaters
– long tongues; good smell and hearing; sharp claws to open ant hills
Harpy eagle
– short pointy wings to manoeuvre
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Small changes to
biotic
and
abiotic
factors can have serious knock on effects
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Biomass
is the largest nutrient store and the biggest transfer is from soil to
biomass
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Fertility
s quickly lost from the
soil
if trees are cut down
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Poor
soils
due to leaching (the washing away of
nutrients
)
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Thick litter layer.
Rapidly breaks down due to
climate
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Warm
humid
climate means rapid plant
growth
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More than
half
the world's species are found in
rainforests
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