Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1

330 ■ CHAPTER 18 General Principles of Ecology


ECOLOGY


Fire and Water


During her first burn in 2004, Balch was
surprised to see that the plants in the two exper-
imental plots were fairly resistant to fire. The
Amazon’s tall, dense tree canopy creates humid
air below it, protecting the forest from most fires,
which tend to burn slowly under such condi-
tions. For this reason, Balch’s experimental plots
initially suffered little damage.
That wasn’t true in the following years.
Remember that the Amazon saw a major
drought in 2005, and droughts cause tree death,
allowing more sunlight to reach the forest floor
and dry the leaves and shrubs there, priming
the forest for fire (Figure 18.10). During the
planned burns after the drought in 2005, the two
experimental plots experienced major damage.
The majority of the trees on the plots died, and
grasses took their place—particularly at the
forest edge, where it was hottest and driest.
In both the 1-year and the 3-year burned plots,
grasses invaded from adjacent pasturelands.
This experimental result suggests that wild-
fires do indeed push the Amazon toward a drier,

The red circles are direct
measurements at the Mauna
Loa Observatory in Hawaii, at
11,135 feet above sea level.

The green circles indicate CO 2
levels measured from bubbles
of air trapped in ice that formed
many hundreds of years ago.

200


250


300


350


400


450


0


Year

Atmospheric CO

concentration (ppm) 2

100011001200130014001500160017001800190020002100


2016: 404.21 ppm

Figure 18.8


Atmospheric CO 2 levels are rising rapidly


Atmospheric CO 2 levels (measured in parts per million, or ppm) have


increased greatly in the past 200 years.


Q1: What measurements do the green circles represent?

Q2: What measurements do the red circles represent?

Q3: For approximately how many years has the Mauna Loa
Observatory been recording CO 2 levels?

Average global temperature 1880–2016

Temperature (

°F)


1880 1900 1920 1940 1960 1980 2000 2020


56.5


0


57.0


57.5


58.0


58.5


59.0


Figure 18.9


Global temperatures are on the rise


Average global temperature has increased greatly over the 140 years since it


has been recorded.


Q1: In what years were global temperatures the lowest?

Q2: In what years were global temperatures the highest?

Q3: What trend is apparent in this graph of actual global
temperatures?

Figure 18.10


Before and after the Amazon drought
of 2005
The drought devastated the forest to this extent
over much of the forest’s range.
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