Barrons AP Environmental Science

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

  1. (C) The taiga, also known as boreal forest, is the world’s largest land biome,
    and makes up almost a third of the world’s forest cover with the largest areas
    located in Russia and Canada. The taiga has a subarctic climate with very
    large temperature ranges between seasons, but the long and cold winter is
    the dominant feature.


FREE-RESPONSE ANSWER


10 Total Points Possible


(a) (i) 2   point   maximum.    1   point   for correct information about   temperature
and 1 point for correct information about precipitation.

Describe    the climate you might   expect  to  find    on  your    trip    to  the
tropical rainforest.

Possible    answers might   include the following   points: ■   Temperature
is warm to hot and varies little throughout the year.
■ The sun warms the land and sea, and the water evaporates into the
air. The warm air can hold a lot of water vapor. As the air rises, it
cools (i.e., it can hold less water vapor). Then, as warm air meets
cold, condensation takes place, the vapor forms droplets, and
clouds form, producing rain.
■ Precipitation is evenly distributed throughout the year with the
water cycle repeating often. In other climates, the evaporation is
carried away to fall as rain in far-off areas, but in the rainforests,
50% of the precipitation comes from its own evaporation.
■ Air is humid because of the large amount of rainfall and warm air
temperature (warm air can hold more water vapor than cold air).

(a) (ii)    2   points  maximum.    1   point   for description of  trees   found   in  the tropical
rainforest and 1 point for description of plants.

Describe    what    type    of  vegetation  is  found   in  a   tropical    rainforest.

Possible    answers might   include the following   points: ■   The length  of
sunlight is about 12 hours per day (because of the location near the
equator), resulting in a high amount of photosynthetic activity and a
great amount of plant life.
■ Biotic diversity is high. Rainforests cover less than 2% of Earth’s
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