BSC 2005 Lecture Notes - Lecture 15: Global Warming, Evaporation, Estuary

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Ecosystems, the living and nonliving components of an environment, including the organisms present (biotic factors) and the physical and chemical environment with which they interact (abiotic factors, constantly adjusting to the small changes in the communities. Any change has the potential to cause disruption. Habitat: physical environment where an organism lives and to which it is adapted. Poor soil (all nutrients are above the soil): marine biomes, saltwater (ocean, reefs) or mixed (estuaries, covers about 75% of planet, evaporation of seawater produces rain, marine algae supply much atmospheric oxygen, take in vast amounts of. Co2: freshwater biomes, include ponds and lakes, rivers and streams, and wetlands, characterized by low salt concentration (less than 1%, tremendous diversity of plants and animals. Climate changes lead to range shifts: changing temperatures means seasons may begin earlier or end sooner, plant types in a particular area may change as ranges shift, animals will also shift ranges to better habitat and/or go extinct.

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