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Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

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Global Climate Global Climate Classification Classification and and Vegetation Vegetation Relationships Relationships
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Page 1: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Global Climate Global Climate Classification Classification

andand Vegetation Vegetation

RelationshipsRelationships

Page 2: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Weather vs. ClimateWeather vs. Climate• Weather

– short-term condition of the atmosphere

– days, weeks– meteorologists

• Climate– long-term (30 year) average of

weather conditions and extremes – climatologists

Page 3: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Climate DeterminantsClimate Determinants

• Insolation and Temperature– latitude, altitude, land-water,

ocean currents, mountain barriers

• Precipitation – Air pressure (ITCZ and

Subtropical Highs)– Air mass influences– Prevailing winds

Page 4: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

The Köppen Climate Classification

• A Tropical (equatorial regions)

• B Deserts (arid, semiarid)

• C Mesothermal (mild winter)

• D Microthermal (boreal, cold winter))

• E Polar (always cold)

• H Highland (mountains, plateaus)

Page 5: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

The Köppen Climate Classification

3 letter systemFirst letter = temperature

Second letter = precipitation

Third letter = finer shades of temp

Csb = mediterranean C = middle latitude temps

s = summer dry

b = warm summers (as opposed to hot [a])

Page 6: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Reading a Climograph

Page 7: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Climate Regions

Page 8: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Koppen’s Categories

Page 9: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Vegetation Regions

Page 10: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Tropical Climates (A)

Page 11: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Tropical Humid Climates (Af)• 1/3 of Earth’s total surface (about 20 ºN to 20 ºS)

• Consistently warm (all months > 18ºC/64.4 ºF)

• Annual precipitation exceeds evaporation

• Daily temp range exceeds annual temp range

• Subcategories based on rainfall (ITCZ influence)

– Tropical rainforest– Tropical monsoon– Tropical savanna

Page 12: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Tropical Rainforest (Af)• High rainfall all year (>2” /

month)• Straddles Equator by 5o - 10o

Page 13: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Tropical Rainforest– Vegetation : Highest biomass on earth! Highest

biodiversity on earth! Thousands of species, tall trees, many canopy layers, evergreen, broadleaf trees, epiphytes, lianas (vines), climbers, stranglers, ferns

– Fauna: More species than all other biomes combined!, colorful insects, amphibians, reptiles, and birds, few large animals, high density of biomass and incredible species diversity

• Other: Among most threatened biomes

Page 14: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 15: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Buttresses

Lianas

Epiphytes

Page 16: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Strangler Fig3-Toed Sloth, Panama

Deforestation, Malaysia

Page 17: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Savanna (Aw) – Tropical Grassland Climates

• Region/Distribution: Subequatorial Africa, and South America, Southern India (25° N and S Latitude)

• Vegetation: Continuous cover of grasses, scattered trees or shrubs

• Fauna: Large grazing animals; antelope, zebra, giraffe, elephant, Predators: lions, leopards, cheetahs, hyenas

• Other: Susceptible to desertification

Acacia and Wildebeest Serengeti Plain, Tanzania

Masai Reserve, Kenya

Page 18: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Dry / Semiarid Climates (B)• Occupy about 1/3 of Earth’s land area (Most extensive

climate over land surface)

• Evaporation exceeds precipitation (water deficit)

• Subcategories– Desert (BW)– Steppe (BS)

Page 19: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Dry Arid / Semiarid Climates (B)

Page 20: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Deserts (BW): dry

Page 21: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Deserts (BW):

Desert Causation: • High Pressure Cells and resultant stability• Rainshadows

Precipitation: • Scarce: <10 inches/year• Unreliable: wide variation from average• Intense: convective downpours

Temperature: • Widest range: up to 100oF/day!• Hot at low latitudes, wide variation at higher latitudes

Page 22: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Deserts• Vegetation: Widely scattered thorny bushes,

cacti, small flowers, extensive shallow roots or long tap roots, shrubs, succulents

• Fauna: Many rodents, lizards, toads, snakes and other reptiles, many birds, owls, vultures, many insects (adaptive strategies)

• Other: Deserts cover roughly 1/3 of earth. May be growing due to desertification.

• Steppe: semi-arid high elevation or high latitude

Page 23: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 24: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Desert Plant Survival Strategies schlerophyllous adaptations

- small, waxy leaves or thorns replace leaves

succulents - stems modified to spongy water storage structures

ephemerals (obligate seeders) - fast reproductive cycle

wide spacing with shallow roots - collect sparse rainfall

Animal survival strategies?

Page 25: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Death Valley, CA

Page 26: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Anza-Borrego State Park, CA Winter 2004/2005

Page 27: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 28: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 29: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Organ Pipe CactusOrgan Pipe National Monument, Arizona

Page 30: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Steppe (BS): temperate grasslands

• more precipitation than BW

• narrower temperature ranges

• grasslands

Page 31: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 32: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Grassland (temperate)

• Region/Distribution: Central North America, parts of Africa, Australia, SE South America (Pampas)

• Soil: very fertile soils, best on earth• Vegetation: Grass tall to short prairie, pampas,

steppe. Sod forming grasses, Sparse bushes, occasional trees in some areas

• Fauna: large grazing animals, bison, antelope, wild horses, kangaroos, giraffes, burrowing animals: rabbits, prairies dogs…; predators: coyotes, lions, leopards…...

• Other: Most N. American grasslands have been converted to agricultural fields. Wild grazers replaced by cattle, sheep, goats. Less than 1% of original grasses left.

Page 33: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 34: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 35: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Mesothermal Climates (C)• “Middle temperature”• True seasonality

(air mass conflict)• Subdivisions based on

precipitation variation– humid subtropical– marine west coast– Mediterranean

Subtropical Forest Sarasota, Florida

Marine West CoastTemperate Rainforest

Olympic Peninsula, Washington

Page 36: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Mesothermal Climates (C)

Humid SubtropicalMarine West Coast

Mediterranean

Page 37: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Humid SubtropicalMidlatitude Forests

• Hot summer, substantial year-round precipitation

• Low latitude east coasts (warm currents).

• Summer max precipitation. • Cold spells

Cfa - New Orleans, LA

Page 38: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Temperate Forest (Deciduous)• Region/Distribution: Western Europe, East

Asia, Eastern U.S.. Between 30-50° north or south

• Soil: brown soils, good for agriculture

• Vegetation: Broad-leafed deciduous trees, (120-150’ tall), oaks, hickories, maples,…

• Fauna: mammals such as white tail deer, porcupines, raccoons, rabbits, squirrels, most carnivores eliminated by hunting i.e. wolf, mountain lion, bobcat; many birds; frogs and salamanders, snakes

• Other: Biota well adapted to seasonality including hibernation, migration

Page 39: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 40: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Mediterranean• Dry summers (shifting subtropical

highs)• Surrounds Mediterranean• Also on west coasts near 30o N

and S (Australia, S. Africa, Chile)

Page 41: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 42: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Chapparal

Page 43: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Mediterranean • Region/Distribution: West coast and Central

California, SW. Australia, tip of S. Africa, West Peru. Chile, Mediterranean (good wine places!)

• Vegetation: Grassland, scattered trees (oaks, eucalyptus), scrub. Fire tolerant, sclerophyllous (hard leaf) evergreens, chaparral (scrubby evergreen)

• Fauna: Burrowers like ground squirrels, gophers; deer, mountain lions, coyotes, many birds

• Other: Susceptible to fire during dry season, some species need fire to regenerate, Susceptible to erosion and desertification, development, threatened biome

Page 44: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Manzanita

Page 45: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 46: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 47: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Microthermal Climates (D)

Virtually restricted to Northern Hemisphere.

Page 48: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Subarctic Climates (Boreal or Taiga)• 50o-70o N latitude

• long, bitterly cold winters

• highest annual temp range: up to 100O F

•Great annual temperature ranges (continentality, air mass conflicts)

Dw – Calgary, Canada

Page 49: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Coniferous (Boreal) Forest – Koppen D

• Region/Distribution: Northern parts of North America, Europe and Asia, South So. America, much of Russia

• Vegetation: Coniferous (mostly evergreen) forest, ex. Spruce, Fir, Pine, Larch, needle-leaved

• Fauna: Large herbivores: moose, elk; small herbivores: squirrels snowshoe hare, beaver; Predators: wolves, foxes, bears, lynx, weasel family; Mosquitoes in summer

• Other: Acid rain, logging , oil drilling, hunting of predators

Page 50: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Fir Trees, Alaska

British Columbia

Spruce Needles

Page 51: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Polar Climates (E)- all months < 50OF

Page 52: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Polar Climates (E)- all months < 50OF

• Tundra (ET)– warmest month 32-50F

• Ice caps (EF)– warmest month below 32F

• Both have very low precipitation

Page 53: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Tundra

Region/Distribution: North of the Boreal Forest, high latitudes of northern hemisphere in a belt around the Arctic Ocean, near the coast Soil: Permafrost, no true soil development Vegetation: Low growing lichens, mosses, grasses, sedges, dwarf shrubs, small plants typically ground hugging or warmth preserving in some wayFauna: Small burrowing mammals, lemmings, also foxes, lynx, owls, grizzly bear, caribou and musk ox: migrants Other: many insects in summer, standing water

Page 54: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.
Page 55: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Highland Climates (H)

How are these like the poles? How different?

Page 56: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Highland Climates (H)

How are these like the poles? How different?

• Lower temperatures

• More moisture available

• More insolation

• High winds in both

Page 57: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Where in the world is?…..

Page 58: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Verkhoyansk, Russia (67.4 N, 133.3 E)

Page 59: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Where in the world is?…..

Page 60: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Iquitos, Peru (3.4 S, 73.2 W)

Page 61: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Where in the world is?…..

Page 62: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Hilo, Hawaii

Page 63: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Where in the world is?…..

Page 64: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

West Point, NY

Page 65: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Where in the world is?…..

Page 66: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

San Francisco, California

Page 67: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

The Köppen Climate Classification

• A Tropical (equatorial regions)

• B Deserts (arid, semiarid)

• C Mesothermal (mild winter)

• D Microthermal (boreal, cold winter)

• E Polar (always cold)

• H Highland (mountains, plateaus)

Page 68: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

The Köppen Climate Classification

• A Tropical (equatorial regions)

• B Deserts (arid, semiarid)

• C Mesothermal (mild winter)

• D Microthermal (boreal, cold winter)

• E Polar (always cold)

• H Highland (mountains, plateaus)

Page 69: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Riparian Vegetation

Vegetation that grows along water courses.

Often supports richer diversity of plant and animal life, including more hardwood trees in a dry environment.

Page 70: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Vertical Zonation of Vegetation

Page 71: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Vegetation Succession

Pioneer Stage Climax Stage

Occurs after disturbances: fires, storms, landslides, etc.

Page 72: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

Ecological InvasionsCalifornia Invasive Species: Old World Grape, livestock, Eucalyptus (Gum Trees), wild hog, mustards, horse, Mediterranean grasses/mustards

Methods of Transfer• Domesticated animals (fur, droppings)• Ornamentals• International tourism/migrations (New Zealand)

Problems with Invasives• Often out-compete endemics.• Don’t provide habitat for local fauna.• Upset balance of ecosystem.

Page 73: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

The American Chestnut100 feet tall, thick symmetrical branches, over an acre of greenery, about a million lush leaves in all. Massive quantities of protein-rich nuts.

In 1904 a handful of Asian chestnut trees were planted in New York City at the Bronx Zoo. An Asian chestnut blight quickly destroyed over 99.99 percent of the American Chestnut population - almost all of four billion trees - annihilating at least six specialized insect species, decimating wild turkey populations, and depriving humans of a priceless resource in a single generation.

This loss represented one fourth of the tree cover in the Appalachians!

Page 74: Global Climate Classification and Vegetation Relationships.

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