Essentials of Ecology

(Darren Dugan) #1

SUPPLEMENT 8 S51


the barrier islands along the coast, allowing
huge quantities of seawater to fl ood the bays
and marshes.
This fl ushing of the bays and marshes reduced
brown tides consisting of explosive growths of
algae that had fed on excess nutrients. It also
increased growth of sea grasses, which serve as
nurseries for shrimp, crabs, and fi sh and provide
food for millions of ducks wintering in Texas
bays. Production of commercially important spe-
cies of shellfi sh and fi sh also increased.

Moist surface winds
spiral in toward the
center of the storm.

Warm
moist air

Gales circle the eye at speeds
of up to 320 kilometers
(200 miles) per hour

The calm central
eye usually is about
24 kilometers
(15 miles) wide.

Rising winds exit
from the storm at
high altitudes.

1

2

3

4

Figure 9 Formation of a tropical cyclone. Those forming in the Atlantic Ocean usually are called hurricanes; those
forming in the Pacific Ocean usually are called typhoons.


Temperature (

°C)

–0.67
1880 1900 1920 1940
Year

1960 1980 2000

–0.50

–0.33

–0.17

0

0.17

0.33

Temperature (

°F)

–1.2

–0.9

–0.6

–0.3

0

0.3

0.6
Figure 10 Change in global ocean tempera-
ture from its average baseline temperature from
1880 to 2000. (Data from National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Administration)
Data and Graph Analysis


  1. In 1900, the global ocean temperature dropped
    from its baseline temperature by how many
    degrees? (Give answer in both Centigrade and
    Fahrenheit.)

  2. Since about what year after 1980 have global
    ocean temperatures consistently increased (with
    all changes being positive)? What has been the
    highest temperature increase since then, and in
    about what year did it happen?


benefi ts of a tropical cyclone exceed its short-
term harmful effects.
For example, in parts of the U.S. state of
Texas along the Gulf of Mexico, coastal bays and
marshes normally are closed off from freshwater
and saltwater infl ows. In August 1999, Hurri-
cane Brett struck this coastal area. According to
marine biologists, it fl ushed out excess nutrients
from land runoff and swept dead sea grasses
and rotting vegetation from the coastal bays and
marshes. It also carved out 12 channels through

the average intensity of tropical cyclones has in-
creased since 1990. With the number of people
living along the world’s coasts increasing, the
danger to lives and property has risen dramati-
cally. The greatest risk from hurricanes in the
continental United States is along the gulf and
eastern coasts, as shown in Figure 11 (p. S52).
Hurricanes and typhoons kill and injure
people and damage property (Figure 8-18,
p. 177) and agricultural production. Sometimes,
however, the long-term ecological and economic

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