Rainforests “if the traveller notices a particular species and wishes to find more lite it, he may often turn his eyes in vain in every direction. Trees.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Tropical Rainforest Biome Tropical rainforest – A forest of tall trees found in a region of year-round warmth. (Equator). Average precipitation.
Advertisements

 Tom Abbott, Biddulph High School and made available through and only for non commercial use in schools Tropical rainforest models.
TROPICAL RAINFOREST PAGE OBJECTIVES Describe and explain distribution of tropical rainforest. Describe the features of tropical rainforests. Describe.
Topic:Woodland Ecosystem --- The Tai Po Nature Field Study Tang Wing Yan Wong Ha Kwan Fung Ka Hei.
Tropical rainforest models
Rainforest.
Rainforest biome By:Anna R Eliza R Abbie J. Rainforest Biome Have you ever gone to the rainforest biome? It is a unique and interesting place. It would.
The plants on the Biome – Broad Leaved Evergreen Trees, Ferns, Large Woody Vines and climbing plants, orchids and bromeliads. The Animals – Herbivores!
Tropical Rainforest.
TROPICAL RAINFORESTS  BIOMES  SCIENCE 8  10/26/07  BIOMES  SCIENCE 8  10/26/07.
The Rainforest
By: Cody Brentlinger and Brandon Turner TROPICAL RAINFOREST.
Plant Adaptations.
Section #2: Forest Biomes
Putting It All Together
PLANT ADAPTATIONS Steve Blake Aldo Leopold High School Tropical Ecology.
Tropical Rain Forest Tropical Rain Forest.
By Niamh Doverman The worlds largest rainforest in the world is the Amazon rainforest. Rainforests only take up 2-3% of the earths land. 50%
The Rainforest By Chloe Tobin.
Plant Adaptations What does Adaptation mean
Forest are ecosystems in which many trees grow..
By: Bayaan Shalaby and Razan Kahlout. The largest rainforest in the world is the Amazon Rainforest. Tropical Rainforests are located in Africa, Asia,
The Rainforest Ecosystem. Learning objectives: Explain how the rainforest ecosystem works including the layers of the rainforest Explain how plants and.
Tropical rainforest structure LO: To understand the structure of the Rainforest To understand how plants and animals are adapted to the conditions within.
The Layers of the Rainforest
The Amazon rain forest is full of diverse plant life. This rain forest has many plants and trees. Around a third of the world’s species of plants make.
HOW THE FOREST WORKS.  The rainforests contain 50% of all the plant and animal species in the world.  The Amazon rainforest is 30 times the size of.
Tree day Why are trees important?. The importance of trees. Canaries palm treeTrees provide….. Oxygen that we need to live. Protection for the soil. Homes.
1 Unit about Fragile environments Lesson 1. 2 What do you think the dark green shaded parts are? What do you notice about their distribution?
Meredith Wolfe Troy Marowske
W HERE ARE THEY ? Almost all rain forests lie near the equator. The three largest rainforests are American, African, and Asian. Each has a different.
Get in Line to Catch the Vine. Tropical Rain Forest 101  Forest of tall trees in a region of year-round warmth  Many of the trees have straight trunks.
Tropical Rain Forest - Man-land relationship.
The Rainforest Canopy and You. Hi! I am Mango the Monkey and I am here to tell you all about the rainforest canopy. First, lets learn about the other.
General Information Located near or along the equator Rainforests are hot year around with little temperature change. Rains more than 90 days per year.
Only rain forest located in the tropics or ten degrees within the equator have year round warm weather. Subtropical rain forest that lay outside the.
Lesson 40 Terrestrial Ecosystem: Rain Forest
VAULT: Bio161Bruyninckx  bIO160Administration  Tropical rainforest  Sloth  Strangler figs  Antbirds.
Tropical Rainforests By: Ghanim Al Naimi 6D. What is the Tropical Rainforest? Tropical rainforests are located around the equator from the Tropic of Cancer.
Plants of the Tropical Rain Forest By: Orion Kendra.
LO: 1. To use atlases and globes to find the location of the main tropical rainforests. Extension: To use co-ordinates to locate rainforests. LO: 2. To.
Plant Adaptations Plants need water, sunlight, Nutrients and air for survival Many plants have adaptations to help them meet their needs in different environments.
WHAT ARE RAINFORESTS? By: Miss. Rodriguez.
The Rainforest Ecosystem. Learning objectives: To describe the characteristics of the tropical rainforest Explain how the rainforest ecosystem works including.
What is a rainforest? A very special place with the greatest variety of plants and animals found anywhere on Earth. A noisy place because of all the insects,
What is the rainforest environment like?. Rainforests.
Plant Adaptations. Adaptations Adaptations- Adaptations are special features that allow a plant or animal to live in a particular place or habitat.
By Kaitlyn Kitchen, Katelyn McCormack, and Lauren Kim.
To know what a ecosystem is. To be able to describe in detail the tropical rainforest ecosystem.
 Forests have evolved over the last 420 million years  Forests account for: ◦ 1/3 of Earth’s land, ◦ Contain 70% of carbon present in living things.
Plant Adaptations.
Terrestrial Biomes Features and Creatures
Plant Adaptations.
“Don’t make me read, make me understand “
Tropical Rain Forest Tropical Rain Forest.
Terrestrial Biomes Features and Creatures
Tropical rainforest models
Tropical Rainforest.
Adaptations of plants to the conditions in the tropical rainforest
Tropical rainforest models
Tropical Rain Forest Tropical Rain Forest.
Fauna Ecosystem Flora Biome Equatorial region
Plant Adaptations.
Plant Adaptations.
Tropical Rain Forest Tropical Rain Forest.
Plant Adaptations.
Tropical rainforest models
Plant Adaptations.
Presentation transcript:

Rainforests “if the traveller notices a particular species and wishes to find more lite it, he may often turn his eyes in vain in every direction. Trees of varied forests dimensions and color ae around him, but he rarely sees any one of them repeated. Time after time he goes towards a tree which looks like the one he seeks, but a closer examination proves it to be distinct”. A.R. Wallace

Rainforests What is it? –Vines

Rainforests What is it? –Tall canopy

Rainforests What is it? –Buttressed trees

Rainforests What is it? –Rivers

Rainforest…critters What is it?

Rainforest…critters What is it? –frogs

Rainforest…critters What is it? –Macaws other seed/fruit eaters

Rainforest…critters Monkeys

Rainforests…look alike

Rainforest rivers…look alike

Rainforests…smell alike

Inside a Rainforest Structurally very complex (physiognomy) with up to 5 layers present –Forest floor –Shrub –Mid-canopy –Canopy –Emergents

Rainforest Diversity Comparisons Malay Peninsula vs. Britain (2x) –S 8000 (1400G, 28 end vs 1430, 620G, 0e) Malay vs Denmark (mammals..FGS) –32/104/20313/32/45

Rainforest Diversity Ecuador –365 vascular plants on 0.1 ha –33% epiphytes, 13% herbs, 10% shrubs and 9% non-epiphytic lianes Costa Rica (100m 2 ) –233 vascular plants, 32 bryophytes (1/6 GB) Most of these small ( 10cm

Rainforest Diversity What about a typical tropical tree? Although can be tall and wide, most are medium and skinny (25-30m) Their structure tends to reinforce this misconception

Rainforest Structure Many species have buttresses and prop roots

Rainforest Structure Function not completely understood (perhaps support) Not all species have prop roots or buttresses (e.g. Brazilnut)

Rainforest Structure trunks and crowns Many trees have long, slender boles Bark comes in a variety of color and textures (although some more common) Many trees have a flattened crown (think umbrella)

Rainforest Structure Cauliflory – flowers and fruits abruptly growing from the trunk (e.g. cocoa) Why? May be due to weight, could facilitate pollination by ___, facilitate dispersal by ____.

Rainforest Structure leaves Vastly different? No…most are oval, unlobed, smooth edged, sharp points at end, thick and waxy, and generally palmate

Rainforest Structure flowers Flowers do come in many shapes, sizes, and colors

Rainforest Diversity flowers Color not random –Red, orange and yellow – birds –Lavender – insect –White – bats or moths Smell –Fragrant = moths, bees, beetles –Musty = bats Pollination – many nectar rich…why? –Some wind pollinated…who?

Rainforest Diversity fruits & seeds Many species produce small to medium- sized fruits, but a number a very large Palms, the monkey-pot tree, brazil nut

Rainforest Diversity fruits & seeds

Large seeds are a major source of food for the large mammals (e.g. monkeys, bats, peccaries, agoutis) and birds (e.g. tinamous, guans, curassows, trogans, and toucans) and in flooded forests, some fish are important fruit consumers and seed dispersers. Insects are frequent predators of small seeds

Rainforest Diversity Palms Palms are distinctively tropical There are about 1,500 species (550) All palms are members of the family Palmae, are all monocots, sharing characteristics with lilies, orchids and grasses. Widely used by indigenous peoples for diverse purposes such as thatch, ropes, strings, weavings, hunting bows, various food and drink.

Rainforest Diversity vines Vines are conspicuous, abundant, and important in the rainforest In some forests they are a dominant form of biomass in Panama, 1ha contained 1,597 climbing lianas (in 43% of the canopy)

Rainforest Diversity In the Neotropics, there are > 133 families that have climbing members Some, lianas, entwine themselves and dangle from the canopy. Others climb.

Rainforest Diversity lianas Lianas get their start in gaps where they have been living as a harmless shrub Once in the canopy, they can spread from tree to tree

Rainforest Diversity lianas Lianas are a growth form, not a family of plants and as such, come from a variety of families (making the identification hard) In Panama, a single ha had 1,597 climbing lianas, 22% of the upright plants were lianas

Rainforest Diversity lianas Other vines start on the ground (e.g. many philodendrons). Once their seed germinates, it sends out its tendrils to the shade of a nearby tree. Many times as the vine extends into the canopy, it is no longer rooted (thus becoming an epiphyte)

Rainforest Diversity The most aggressive vines are stranglers (Ficus spp.) About 150 sp neotropics Many dispersed by monkeys or birds Consequently, send down tendrils to form root system

Strangler Fig Sequence

Rainforest Diversity epiphytes Epiphytes live on other plants Although not directly parasitic, they do compete for space, light, and water Rainforests worldwide (both temperate and tropic) abound with epiphytes of many different kinds (cloud forests) In many lowland forests, ¼ of all plants may be epiphytes. Less AB where drier

Rainforest Diversity epiphytes

Many different plants grow epiphytically (e.g. lichens, ferns, orchids, liverworts, cacti, mosses) In C and S Am, there are estimated to be 15,500 species

Rainforest Diversity epiphytes A single tree may house a great diversity of species or simply a great abundance of individuals Survive by trapping soil and nutrients from air

Rainforest Diversity epiphytes Many species have mycorrhizae, which aids in the uptake of many nutrients and minerals

Rainforest Diversity epiphytes Bromeliads are abundant epiphytes in almost all Neotropical moist forests Leaves of many species are arranged in an overlapping rosette to form a cistern that holds water and detrital material About 2,000 Neotropical bromeliads (pineapples)

Rainforest Diversity epiphytes Epiphytic bromeliads provide a source of moisture for many canopy creatures (e.g. tree frogs, mosquitos, flat-worms, snails, salamanders, and even crabs can complete their life cycle in the small flower arboreal cisterns. One study found 250 animal species occurring in bromeliads

Rainforest Diversity orchids Orchids are a global family (Orchidaceae) with 25-35k species In Costa Rica, 88% are epiphytes, others grow as vines Many have bulbous stems (called pseudobulbs) that store water Strong mutualistic relationship with mycorrhizae

Rainforest Diversity orchids Cross pollination is done by insects (primarily bees) Some orchid flowers mimic insects, facilitating visitation by insects thinking they are meeting a ‘special’ friend Obvious importance to collectors 90 species in the genus Vanilla

Rainforest Diversity orchids

Rainforest Diversity species richness and biodiversity Appalachians 30 sp/ha Tropics sp/ha –Peru 300 sp/ha Brazil 85,000 sp (2x Af, 1.7x Asia, 5x NAm, How? Lots of rare species (BCI old 500 trees/151 sp; young 500/115) Kapok tree, some legumes, Carribbean pine

Rainforest Diversity species richness Costa Rica (La Selva) 1,668 sp BCI 1,320 sp Amazon Peru-good soils - 1,856 sp Near Manaus – poor soil – 825 sp Tree sp much greater in Amazon, but epiphyte, herbs, and shrubs are greater in CAm.

Rainforest Diversity species richness Other groups are equally rich Columbia birds: 1,695 sp Peruvian Amazon (50 mi 2 ) 550 sp La Selva (1,500 ha 2 ) 410 sp North America…700 sp

Rainforest Diversity species richness

One night 56 sp collected Ecuadorian Amazon, one site 81 sp

Rainforest Diversity species richness Insects in Costa Rica 550 butterflies Peruvian Amazon (Explorers Inn) 1,234 sp

Rainforest Diversity species richness Ants – Peruvian Amazon 135 sp 43 sp in one tree (Great Britain) 163 beetles in one tree (8M) –Beetles are 40% of arthropod diversity…20M..30M with ground & shrub Difficult to comprehend, most are in the canopy This applies to many groups…

Rainforest Diversity species richness