Lecture 1- Introduction to Northern Ecology Flashcards

1
Q

What does northern mean?

A
  • Above 66 degree lattitude
  • Cold, dark, long winters, ice
  • Has permafrost
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2
Q

What is continuous permafrost?

A

Complete continuous sheet of ice frozen soil, extends to under all soil surfaces except large bodies of water (>100m deep)

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3
Q

What is discontinuous permafrost?

A

Broken up patches, frozen in patches

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4
Q

What causes discontinuous permafrost?

A

Broken up by things like water bodies, open meadows, shaded regions stay frozen

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5
Q

What is isolated permafrost?

A

Tiny pockets that occur here and there, mostly shaded areas (forest canopy)

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6
Q

What are the four types of northern regions?

A
  1. High arctic
  2. Low arctic
  3. Subarctic
  4. Boreal forest
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7
Q

What type of area/vegetation is in the high arctic?

A

Area that is covered by rocks and ice, sparse vegetation (moss and lichens)

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8
Q

What type of area/vegetation is in the low arctic?

A

A little more vegetation then high arctic but still low lying plants (shrubs, mosses and lichens), also too cold for trees to grow

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9
Q

What type of area/vegetation is in the subarctic?

A

Some tree development but very short and stunted. This is where the tree-line starts

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10
Q

What type of area/vegetation is in the boreal forest?

A

Wet, peatlands, coniferous forests

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11
Q

What are the three main definitions of the Arctic?

A
  1. Geographic
  2. Thermal properties
  3. Floristic properties
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12
Q

Describe the geographic definition of the arctic

A
  • 24 hour daylight
  • 24 hour darkness
  • Above 66 degree equator
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13
Q

Describe the thermal properties definition of the arctic

A
  • Anything less than 10 degree celcius for July (isotherm)
  • Places that experience the same average throughout the year
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14
Q

What is an isotherm?

A

A line on a climactic map that connects points of an equal average

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15
Q

Describe the floristic properties definition of the arctic

A
  • Tree-line roughly corresponds to the July isotherm but not exactly
  • Climate and conditions can alter the boundary
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16
Q

What does climate change do to the tree-line?

A

Allows for tree-line to move further and further north, impacts the vegetation

17
Q

Why would you not want to use the geographic definition of the arctic?

A

Because its not ecologically relavent

18
Q

Describe what the northern climate is like

A
  • Winters are long and cold with temperatures below 6 degrees for 6-9 months
  • Short summers, temperatures averaging <10 degrees and 24 hours of light