topic 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the taxonomic hierarchy?

A
  • Class
  • Order
  • Family
  • Genus
  • Species
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2
Q

What is physiognomic classification?

A

Grouping plants upon similarities in structure or life-form

Two individuals may have similar structure, but be genetically distant

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3
Q

What are the layers of a forest?

A
  • Moss layer
  • Herb layer
  • Shrub layer
  • Tree layer
  • Crown of a tree - comprise a canopy (closed canopy when they overlap)
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4
Q

Define a tree, shrub, liana, herbaceous, forb, graminoid, epiphyte, fern

A
  • Tree: perennial, erect woody plant with a single upright main trunk
  • Shrub: a woody plant having several stems branching near the ground
  • Liana: vines - woody stems
  • Herbaceous plant: lack woody stems, usually shortewr then trees
  • Forbs: dendritic or webbed venation flat wildflower
  • Graminoids: parallel venation, narrow leaves (can be arboreal - tree height)
  • Ferns: reproduce with spores rather than seeds
  • Epiphytes: use other plants as supporting structure, not rooted in ground. But they do not take nutrients or energy from the plant they grow on: not parasitic
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5
Q

Forest vs woodland

A
  • Forest: vegetation where tree grow together
  • Woodland: vegetation where trees are spaced so taht crowns are separated.
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6
Q

What are two main influences on plant growth?

A

Temperature and water

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7
Q

Strategies for plants to minimize water loss. What are plants in dry condition called?

A

These plants are called xerophytes
- minimize water loss with a thick epidermis
- Special coating
- Less surface area, maybe no leaves at all (spherical shape, no leaves)
- Spines slow air flow across the epidermis, slowing evaporation and reduce herbivory
- Reduce number of stomata/ amount of time they are open
- Deep roots allowing them to “tap” groundwater
- Succulent tissues ( store water in stems, leaves or roots)
- Deciduous habit - become dormant, reducing water needs

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8
Q

What strategies do plants have in high water environments? (water is never limiting)

A
  • Drip tips
  • High productivity means they compete for light, however there is a very dense canopy so they have larger leaves to capture light better
  • Abundance of moisture allows plants to have large leaf surface area due to no stress in terms of moisture loss through transpiration
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9
Q

What is afforestation vs reforestation?

A

Afforestation is planting on land that has not historically contained forest
Reforestation is planting on land that has historically contained forests

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10
Q

How much area must be covered for it to be considered a forest?

A

minimum 0.05 - 1.0 ha with tree crown cover

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11
Q

Explain temperature limits of plants - COLD

A
  • Decreasing temperatures cause a decrease in metabolic rates
  • Freezing can cause cell damage if ice crystals form in cells - physically damage to the cell and tissues
  • Cold tolerant species can expel excess water from cells to spaces between cells, where freezing will do no damage
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12
Q

Explain temperature limits of plants (HOT)

A
  • High temperatures can cause stress- increase respiration and water loss
  • High metabolic rates with physiological, biochemical and molecular changes in plant metabolism
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13
Q

How is altitude related to biomes?

A

With increasing elevation, there is a temperature decrease and evaporation decrease, contributing to sequences of vegetation zones related to altitude

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14
Q

Name characteristics of a desert biome

A
  • Low P, High aridity
  • High water evapotranspiration
  • Deserts precipitation is less than 1/2 its evapotranspiration
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15
Q

What is allelopathy?

A

Some plants can release toxins from their roots, this prevents other plants from growing too close

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16
Q

Name 5 characteristics of grasslands

A
  • Fire is common
  • Tall grass prairies with high number of forbs
  • Chernozem soil
  • Best for agriculture
  • Endangered ecosystem
17
Q

What are 5 characteristics of the mediterranean shrub land? (name of vegetation type)

A
  • Adapted to dry conditions
  • Highest precipitation in winter (too cold for it to be properly utilized)
  • Sclerophyllous vegetation (Scler = hard, phyll = leaf)
  • Many plants that grow here have hard, leathery leaves with a thick cuticle
  • High exploitation
18
Q

East to West of USA, what is biome gradient?

A
  • Broadleaf deciduous forest
  • Woodland/Savanna
  • Prairie and grassland
  • Desert
    Tree diversity declines as we go west, it gets drier and drier
19
Q

What is the biome gradient from the equator to the tropic of Cancer in Africa?

A
  • Tropical Rain Forest
  • Grasslands (Savanna)
  • Deserts
20
Q

Describe the soil of tropical rain forests

A

Leeched - high iron content, high OM cycling so it never soaks into the soil

21
Q

Describe biome gradient from Arctic Circle to North Africa Coast

A
  • Tundra
  • Boreal Forest
  • Broadleaf
  • Mediterranean Shrub Land (Chaperall)
22
Q

What are main characteristics of the Tundra biome?

A
  • Greatest adaptation to low temperatures
  • Short growing season
  • Permafrost
23
Q

What is the biome gradient with increasing elevation?

A
  • Tropical rainforest
  • Broadleaf deciduous
  • Boreal
  • Tundra