Living World - [Optional] - Hot Deserts (Paper 1) Flashcards
This is one of the optional topics for the exam. You have a choice between cold environments or hot deserts. If you are unsure, ask your class teacher.
Define ‘biodiversity’
The variety of plants and animals living in a particular ecosystem.
What is a hot desert?
A hot desert is an area that is very dry (usually receiving less than 250mm of rainfall per year). They also experience very high temperatures of 45°c.
Where are hot deserts located?
Generally found 30°N and 30°S of the equator in areas of land away from large expanses of coast.
What is the climate (temperature and precipitation) like in a hot desert?
- Temperature: highs of 45°c in the day, lows of 5°c at night.
- Precipitation: less than 250mm per year
Why is it hot and dry in hot deserts?
Hot: Close to the equator where suns rays are more concentrated
Dry: in areas of high pressure where air is sinking.
What is the soil like in a hot desert?
- Shallow and dry
- Coarse texture
- Infertile due to lack of leaf litter
What wildlife (plants and animals) would you find in a hot desert
- Animals that are well adapted to the hot, dry climate, limited vegetation. e.g snakes, lizards
- The animals are generally very small in size and tend to sleep through the day time when temeperatures are high.
- Limited plants. Those that do grow are short in height and don’t live a long time.
How have animals adapted to hot deserts?
- Nocturnal - hunt in the cool evenings
- Big ears to allow temperature regulation
- Can store fat that breaks down into water e.g. camels
- Long eyelashes, flat wide feet to cope with sand
How have plants adapted to hot deserts?
- Long plant roots to reach water deep in soil
- Small leaves to reduce moisture lost
- Succulent plants (fleshy skin to retain moisture)
- Sharp needles on surface to deter predators
What is the biodiversity like of hot deserts?
- Limited due to extreme climate
- This means any changes can have drastic consequences
- Global warming is the biggest threat to hot deserts biodiversity.
Why are hot deserts are interdependent ecosystem?
- Plants gain nutrients from soil, animals require energy and nutrients from plants
- The climate causes the soils to be infertile and unable to support large amounts of vegetation.
- Changes to one part of the ecosystem can have huge knock-on impacts on another part e.g. removing vegetation can cause soil erosion.
What are the opportunities in the Thar Desert?
- Tourism: tens of thousands of tourists visit each year. Lots of desert safaris at Jaisalmer and desert festival.
- Mining: gypsum (for cement), feldspar (for ceramics), phosperite (fertiliser)
- Energy exploitation: rich in coal and oil. Opportunities for wind (Jaisalmer Wind Park) and solar power (Bhaleri solar plant)
- Farming: mostly subsistence farming. Irrigation has made commerical farming possible e.g. cotton, wheat.
What are the challenges facing the Thar desert?
- Extreme temperatures: highs of 50°c makes it difficult to work outside and plants and animals need large amounts of shade to survive.
- Inaccessibility: limited roads to the area due to low population density. Tarmac roads don’t cope well in high temperatures.
- Water supply: farming and population increase has put pressure on water use. Low temperatures and high evaporation rates makes water scarce.
What is desertification?
When land becomes degraded to the point it turns to desert. This tends to happen on the edges of existing deserts.
Define ‘salinisation’
The accumulation of salts in the soil that occur as a result of rapid evaporation of water.