What is a compensation point of a plant?
Rate of photosynthesis is equal to rate of respiration
Store as much energy as it uses
What is biological amplification/magnification?
What is bioaccumulation?
The longer an animal lives, the more it consumes (DDT)
Xylem vs Phloem
Water flows through xylem
Nutrients flow through Phloem
Rank biomes in terms of NPP
Rain forest> Temperate deciduous forest > Boreal forest > Temperate grassland > Tundra > desert
What is a biogeochemical cycle?
Circuit of flowing elements and materials that combine Earth’s biotic and abiotic systems
Where is long term storage of Carbon vs short term?
What is blue carbon?
The Carbon held in mangrove swamps and salt marshes
World’s most effective carbon sinks
What are 5 main human contributors of CO2 in the atmosphere?
How is CO2 emissions not a smooth line?
Due to hemispheres having different land masses
- Goes up in northern hemisphere’s winter (less trees photosynthesizing)
How has climate warming impacted Adelie penguins?
Less ice, but more rocks available for female efficiency
More adelie penguins!
Lianas and atmospheric CO2
Increase in lianas, decrease in forest biomass
- Increased fragmentation in forest
- Lianas reduce total carbon fixation, and compete with trees for light, causing decreased tree growth and tree mortality
- Shift carbon to aboveground plants that will eventually release it
Increase temperature impact on fire frequency in boreal region when comparing spruce and birch
How is arctic tundra affected by carbon storage and greenhouse gas emissions?
What is fate of tundra ponds with increased temperatures?
What are main Primary producers in estuaries and ocean
What is a diatom?
Microalgae that photosynthesize
- single celled, float in upper water layers
- In clear waters some live at the bottom, on the mud surface
- Major component of phytoplankton
What are dinoflagellates?
Describe succession of phytoplankton in marine waters
A yearly, seasonal succession
- there is a diatom “bloom” in spring when nutrients are abundant
- As diatoms remove nutreints, N becomes limitng
- Diatoms are replaced by dinoflagellates, as they are more mobile and better at getting scarce nutrients
Describe cultural eutrophication
Fertilization of lakes, rivers or coastal waters with previously scarce nutrients, boosts primary production of algae
What is nutrient pollution?
Nutrient over-enrichment - both nitrogen and phosphorus are vital to planat growth
What is an estuary?
What are two types of nutrient sources?
Describe nitrogen deposition from the air
Input of nitrogen into land from the air
Through industrially produced fertilizers and overuse
Can see predictions of increasing deposition of nitrogen in the future