Summary 155
with mild, moist winters and hot, dry summers; vegetation
is typically small-leafed evergreen shrubs and small trees.
Desert is a biome in which the lack of precipitation limits
plant growth; deserts are found in both temperate and
tropical regions. Savanna is tropical grassland with widely
scattered trees or clumps of trees. Tropical rain forest is a
lush, s pecies-rich forest biome that occurs where the climate
is warm and moist throughout the year.
2
Aquatic Ecosystems 142
- In aquatic ecosystems, important environmental factors
include salinity, amount of dissolved oxygen, and availability
of light for photosynthesis. - Freshwater ecosystems include standing-water, flowing-
water, and freshwater wetlands. A standing-water
ecosystem is a body of fresh water surrounded by land
and whose water does not flow, such as a lake or pond. A
flowing-water ecosystem is a freshwater ecosystem such
as a river or stream in which the water flows in a current.
Freshwater wetlands are marshes and swamps—lands
that are covered by shallow fresh water at least part of the
year; wetlands have a characteristic soil and water-tolerant
vegetation. An estuary is a coastal body of water, partly
surrounded by land, with access to the open ocean and a
large supply of fresh water from a river. Water in an estuary is
brackish rather than truly fresh. Temperate estuaries usually
contain salt marshes, whereas tropical estuaries are lined
with mangrove forests.
3
Population Responses to Changing
Conditions over Time: Evolution 147
- Evolution is the cumulative genetic changes in populations
that occur during successive generations. - Natural selection is the tendency of better-adapted
individuals—those with a combination of genetic traits
best suited to environmental conditions—to survive and
reproduce, increasing their proportion in the population.
Natural selection is based on four observations established
by Charles Darwin: (1) Each species produces more offspring
than will survive to maturity. (2) Organisms compete with
one another for the resources needed to survive. (3) The
individuals in a population exhibit inheritable variation in their
traits. (4) Individuals with the most favorable combination of
traits are most likely to survive and reproduce, passing their
genetic traits to the next generation.
Summary
1
Earth’s Major Biomes 128
- A biome is a large, relatively distinct terrestrial region with
characteristic climate, soil, plants, and animals, regardless
of where it occurs; a biome encompasses many interacting
ecosystems. Near the poles, temperature is generally the
overriding climate factor in determining biome distribution,
whereas in temperate and tropical regions, precipitation is
more significant. - Tundra is the treeless biome in the far north that consists
of boggy plains covered by lichens and small plants such
as mosses; it has harsh, very cold winters and extremely
short summers. Boreal forest is a region of coniferous
forest in the Northern Hemisphere, located just south of the
tundra. Temperate rain forest is a coniferous biome with
cool weather, dense fog, and high precipitation. Temperate
deciduous forest is a forest biome that occurs in temperate
areas where annual precipitation ranges from about 75 cm
to 126 cm (30–50 in). Temperate grassland is grassland with
hot summers, cold winters, and less rainfall than is found in
the temperate deciduous forest biome. Chaparral is a biome
Average monthly temperature in
°C
Average monthly precipitation in cm
14
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
28
24
20
16
12
8
4
0
–4
Months
JMMJJASONDFA
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