Trees and Forests.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How Are Plants Grouped Scientists group plants by the ways in which they are similar or different. All plants are alike in one way. They need three things.
Advertisements

TISSUES WORKING TOGETHER
Tree Cookies! They're round. They're full of fiber. But unless you're a termite, you can't eat tree cookies! Based on:
ECOLOGY UNIT Chapters 20 & 21.
Parts of a plant.
Science Chapter 5 Test Review
Science Unit A Chapter 3 Quiz Where Are You in the Food Chain?
13B-3 Roots Not always underground Anchor the plant
Trees and Forests. Ecosystem  An area of living and non living components which form an environment.
Plants People and animals need oxygen to live. Green plants make the oxygen in the air we breathe. How do plants make oxygen? Plants take in carbon dioxide.
Trees & Forests. Northern Boreal (Taiga) Supalpine.
Characteristics of Seed Plants
PLANTS: structure and function
Ch.8 Plants.
Forest Biomes Chapter 9.
Ecology Learning Targets I can identify ways that organisms interact with other organisms and non-living things I can describe feeding relationships.
Focus: Abiotic and Biotic Factors, Photosynthesis
ECOLOGY UNIT Chapters 20 & 21.
Plant and Animal Life Cycles
Chapter 5 Energy and Ecosystems
Chapter 4 Plants. Lesson 1 How do leaves help a plant?  Leaves are organs made of cells and tissues  Plants make their own food called glucose  Leaves.
Plants with Seeds Structure – Leaves stem stem roots roots.
Trees & Forests Grade 6 Science Mrs. DeForge. Levels of the Forest Level: Plant: Animal: Level: Plant: Animal: Different birds (owls etc) and insects.
THE SCIENCE OF TREES. Sunlight gives energy to everything on earth. We need sunlight for photosynthesis Water combines with carbon dioxide to produce.
Parts of a Vascular Plant
Decomposers. Producers are organisms that make their own food using air, sunlight, and water Such as, green plants and algae.
Jeopardy A?B?C?D?E? $100 $200 $300 $400 $500 ANSWER This is made up of both living and nonliving things.
ECOLOGY UNIT Chapters 20 & 21. Chapter 20 – Section 1 Science Standard – S7L4: Students will examine the dependence of organisms on one another and their.
Life Science.
TREES.
Forestry Science I Unit 3 Lesson 1 Created by Ms. Holli Bowman FORS 7730 Fall 2001 Modified by Georgia Agricultural Education Curriculum Office July 2002.
Trees and Forests Review
Life Depends on the Sun Sunlight is the primary source of energy in an ecosystem. Everything you do requires energy; eating, sleeping, thinking, breathing.
r Questions: 1.What is a forest? 2.What is forest ecology? 3.What are trees? 4.What are four main parts of a tree? 5.How does a tree grow? 6.What is competition.
Anatomy SWBAT discuss the methods of support found in plants; describe the function and structure of xylem and phloem; describe or give a function of cork,
Ecology Obj. 3a & e. Ecosystems  An ecosystem is all the organisms that live in an area together with the nonliving factors of the environment  Ex.
Ecology. Ecosystems o An ecosystem is all the organisms that live in an area together with the nonliving factors of the environment o Ex. Pond or pine.
Dendrology: Tree Parts and Functions
Tree Cookies! They're round. They're full of fiber. But unless you're a termite, you can't eat tree cookies! Based on:
The Food Chain ENERGY CONVERSION. Photosynthesis is the process that uses light energy from the sun, together with carbon dioxide and water, to make glucose.
Jeopardy $100 Layers of the forest Photosynthesis Interconnections D vs. CDefinitions $200 $300 $400 $500 $400 $300 $200 $100 $500 $400 $300 $200 $100.
Parts of Tree.
Chapter 1. Try to describe the process of photosynthesis in your own words.
Producers, Consumers & Decomposers
Tree Basics Basic Description: Woody plants with single stems. Consist of toots, trunk and crown.
Jeopardy Final Jeopardy D vs. C Definitions $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
Energy and Ecosystems studyguide
Jeopardy Final Jeopardy D vs. C Definitions $100 $100 $100 $100 $100
Forestry Science I Unit 3 Lesson 1
Roots, Stems, Leaves Chapter 4 Section 4 #47A.
Bellringer The flower on the left is a ___________ and the flower on the right is a ______________.
A Walk in the Wetland.
PLANTS: structure and function
Unit 2 Interactions Among Living Things
Functions of Plants Stems and Leaves
Forestry Lesson 1 Tree Parts.
Trees and Forests We Need Trees!.
Tree Structure.
PLANTS: structure and function
Forestry Lesson 1 Tree Parts.
The Characteristics of Seed Plants
Ecosystems.
Transfer of Matter and Energy
Topic: Ecology Aim: Describe what ecosystems consist of. Do Now: 1
Trees & Forests – What is a tree?
Forestry Science I Unit 3 Lesson 1
Aim: Describe what ecosystems consist of.
Plant Characteristics and Special Functions
The Organisms of an Ecosystem
Presentation transcript:

Trees and Forests

Why are trees and forests valued? *Forests serve as habitat for a variety of living things Human needs: recreation, raw materials, life supporting environment Habitat: an environment where something lives Ecosystem: a living community that depends on each member and it’s surrounding environment (cooperating together to survive) Living things in the forest: Producers – living things that use energy from the sun to produce their food. Consumers - living things that eat the producers Three types of consumers – herbivores, carnivors and omnivores Decomposers – living things which feed off dead plants and animals They reduce the remains to nutrients and minerals for the soil Examples – mushrooms (fungi) and bacteria Non-living things in the forest – water, rocks, sunlight, air, soil and chemicals. Activity Sheet: Master #1

Activity Sheet: Master #3 What kinds of plants and animals are found living on, under and among trees? How are trees affected by those living things? There are four Forest Layers Upper canopy: top layer of the forest Captures more than 90% of the sunlight Where most of the photosynthesis occurs A Lot of flying animals can be found here. Humming bird, owl, and insects(butterfly, caterpillars). Understory: Many small trees, larger bushes and shrubs. Provides shelter for many forest animals Shrubbery layer: Home to many forest wildflowers, ferns, deer skunks and rabbits These animals find their food on this level. Forest Floor: Dark and damp. Only plants that can live with very little light grow here. Fungi decompose dead plant material here Fungi are not green because they don’t have chlorophyll and can not produce food through photosynthesis. Fungi eat dead plant material. Mushrooms, conks and lichens are examples of fungi. Decomposers such as worms, bacteria, millipedes, and centipedes are examples of decomposers. Inhabitants of the forest floor are tods, mushrooms, and insects. Activity Sheet: Master #3

What is the role of trees in nutrient cycles? Decomposers break down the dead matter from trees or animals break down plant leaves Nutrients are released back into the soil Roots of trees absorb the nutrients Nutrients travel up the trunk of the tree and are used as energy for growth. Consumers eat the leaves of trees or the dead leaves fall back to the ground Activity Sheet: Master #5

Photosynthesis Photosynthesis; The process by which leaves make food for the plant. Leaves make food from water and carbon dioxide Sunlight captured by chlorophyll traps light energy. Chlorophyll is what makes the leaves green. Chlorophyll molecules use light energy to change carbon dioxide and water into oxygen, sugars, and starches. Leaves release the oxygen they don’t need into the air and keep the sugar for food. Plants give off almost all the free oxygen in the atmosphere.

Activity Sheet: Master #9

Activity Sheet: Master #10 What is in a tree cookie? Outer Bark: Dry dead cells which protect the rest of the stem. Inner Bark (phloem): A live spongy layer just inside the outer bark that moves sugars and other substances from the leaves to the stem, roots, and other places where they are needed. Eventually grows out to form part of the outer bark. Cambium: Just inside the bark (but outside the wood), is a single layer of cells. It repeatedly divides to form all of the new wood and bark. Sapwood (xylem): Makes up everything living beyond the cambium in the tree trunk, branches, twigs, and woody roots. This wood is made up of fibers which add strength & hollow tubes of different sizes. These tubes are like straws that conduct water & minerals from the roots to the leaves. Growth Ring: The cambium produces a new layer of wood in diameter around the tree each year. In the late spring/early summer it grows rapidly (the light portion-called early wood) and during the late summer/early fall it grows more slowly (the dark portion called late wood). Heartwood: As a stem ages and grows, eventually some of the wood in the center dies and becomes heartwood. It is a darker in color than the Sapwood and supports the tree. Activity Sheet: Master #10

Tree Types Check out the following link and find out the differences and similarities between deciduous and coniferous trees. Complete the Venn Diagram in your booklet. http://www.ecokids.ca/pub/eco_info/topics/forests/types_of_trees.cfm

Life of a Tree Interpret the growth of a young tree, examine each year’s growth, locate scars that separate old and new growth. Tree rings (annual rings) Close tree rings – poor growing conditions Far tree rings – good growing conditions. Trees form new wood in the spring and summer Springwood is lighter than summerwood Growth of rings is affected by Weather, amount of growing space, soil condition, insect attacks, fire. Know how to read the tree rings to tell the history of the tree. http://files.dnr.state.mn.us/forestry/education/primer/appendixthree.pdf