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Slide Notes

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Biome Project

Published on Dec 17, 2015

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

HOT AND DRY DESERT

BY: BENJAMIN FOUST
Photo by Moyan_Brenn

LOCATIONS

  • There is a lot of desert in Africa and Asia
  • Much of Australia is desert as well
  • Some of north and south America is desert region

PHYSICAL LANDSCAPE

  • About 20% of the Earth's deserts land is covered with sand
  • Nearly 50% are plains where eolian deflation has exposed loose gravels
  • Remaining 30% are exposed bedrock crops, desert soils, and fluvial deposits
  • Oases are where about the only vegetation grows

CLIMATE

  • The climate is highest near summer
  • The high climate contributes to less rainfall
  • There is only about 10 inches of rain a year
  • Most deserts only have water precipitation
  • Some have snow however
Photo by Pandiyan

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PLANTS

  • Cactus (obviously)
  • Agave
  • Yucca

CACTUS ADAPTATIONS

  • Spikes- spikes defend against consumers
  • Roots- roots are close to surface to take advantage of less rain
  • Stem- stem is thick and expandable to hold as much water as possible
  • Spines- spines shade stem, keeping it cool and keep it dormant all the time

ANIMALS

  • Lizards
  • Snakes
  • Camels
Photo by Lon&Queta

CAMEL ADAPTATIONS

  • Hump- hump stores water for later use
  • Feet- big feet allow camel to stay on top of sand near oases
  • Fur- thick fur provides shade for rest of body
  • Nostrils+eyelashes- keep sand out of nose and eyes

RELATIONSHIPS

  • Bees pollinate desert flowers (mutualism)
  • The bees get some food and the flowers get pollinated
  • Birds sit on top of rhinos and camels (commensalism)
  • The birds get a ride but the camels and rhinos are not affected

ENERGY FLOW

  • Bugs eat desert plants and get some energy
  • Lizards eat bugs and get a portion of energy
  • Snakes eat lizards and get some energy
  • Birds eat snakes and get energy
  • Decomposers eat the dead bodies of animals
Photo by andedam

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IMPACT OF HUMANS

  • Humans are overpopulating the world and build into desert biomes
  • The desert animals' homes are being over run by humans
  • Many plants are killed making room for buildings and roads
  • Animals' homes are lost forever and some are even killed
  • This is occuring in the desert near human population

HUMAN IMPACT CONT.

  • Over population is the cause
  • The populations of birds, lizards, snakes, and many plants are being affected
  • Humans kill several plants which affects the whole food chain
Photo by Mollivan Jon

POSSIBLE SOLUTIONS

  • We could hold back from building into deserts
  • Stop killing organisms when space is needed
  • Use the space we have instead of creating more
Photo by katiebread