1 / 14

Environmental Relationships in Tropical Rainforests

Environmental Relationships in Tropical Rainforests. Climate: Tropical Wet (Af). High rainfall all year (>2” / month) Straddles Equator by 5 o - 10 o Windward mountain regions in tropics Consistently warm (all months > 18ºC/64.4ºF) Annual precipitation exceeds evaporation

dusan
Download Presentation

Environmental Relationships in Tropical Rainforests

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Environmental Relationships in Tropical Rainforests

  2. Climate: Tropical Wet (Af) • High rainfall all year (>2” / month) • Straddles Equator by 5o - 10o • Windward mountain regions in tropics • Consistently warm (all months > 18ºC/64.4ºF) • Annual precipitation exceeds evaporation • Daily temp range exceeds annual temp range

  3. Cook Islands, 2001

  4. Costa Rica, June 2004

  5. Costa Rica, June 2004

  6. Fiji, 2004

  7. OVERVIEW: TROPICAL RAINFOREST ENVIRONMENTS Where:Straddles Equator by 5o - 10o. Northern South America, Central America, West and Central Equatorial Africa, SE Asia, NW Coastal Australia, Pacific Islands. Covers 6% of land surface (down from 14% prior to humanity). Vegetation:Tens of thousands of species. Highest density of species, tall trees, many canopy layers, evergreen, broadleaf trees, epiphytes, lianas (vines), climbers, stranglers, ferns. Fauna:More species than all other biomes combined, colorful insects, amphibians, reptiles, and birds, few large animals, high density of biomass and incredible species diversity. Soils:Laterite, thin and poor, most nutrients in vegetative litter because of leaching, biological processes, and rapid weathering. Red or orange soils. Threats:Among most threatened biomes. Logging and various types of deforestation, mining, cattle ranching, and development all contribute to an estimated loss of 214 acres a day (larger than New York City).

  8. Tropical Rainforest Vegetation: Broadleaf Evergreen Deciduous vs. Evergreen • Cold • Low Sunlight • Drought Broadleaf vs. Needle-Leaf • Abundance of Water • Cold

  9. Epiphyte Epiphyte Buttresses Lianas (Vines)

  10. 3-Toed Sloth, Panama Clear-cut Tropical Deforestation Strangler Fig Slash-and-Burn Agriculture Leaf-cutter Ants, Costa Rica

  11. Tropical Soils: Laterization Laterite Soil, Fiji Sugar Cane Field, Maui Ironically, tropical areas have poor soils. High temperatures and very high rainfall lead to the characteristically red soils of tropical areas. Most minerals are dissolved and leached away out of reach of plants. The remaining minerals (iron, aluminum, and manganese) are highly oxidized (rusted) and appear red. Only a very thin top layer of soil is rich.

  12. Summary: Tropical Rainforest Where:Straddles Equator by 5o - 10o. Northern South America, Central America, West and Central Equatorial Africa, SE Asia, NW Coastal Australia, Pacific Islands. Covers 6% of land surface (down from 14% prior to humanity). • Vegetation:Tens of thousands of species; highest density of species, tall trees, many canopy layers, evergreen, broadleaf trees, epiphytes, lianas (vines), climbers, stranglers, ferns. • Fauna:More species than all other biomes combined; colorful insects, amphibians, reptiles, and birds, few large animals, high density of biomass and incredible species diversity. • Soil: Laterite; fairly thin and poor, most nutrients in vegetative litter because of leaching, biological processes, and rapid weathering. • Threats: Among most threatened biomes; logging and various types of deforestation, mining, cattle ranching, and development all contribute to the loss of 214 acres a day (larger than New York City).

  13. Remember: Geographers Do Fieldwork! = ?

  14. Global Rates of Rainforest Destruction (including deforestation) 2.4 acres (1 hectare) per second: equivalent to two U.S. football fields 149 acres (60 hectares) per minute 214,000 acres (86,000 hectares) per day: an area larger than New York City 78 million acres (31 million hectares) per year: an area larger than Poland Source: Myers, Norman. 1989. Deforestation Rates in Tropical Forests and Their Climatic Implications. Updated 1994.

More Related