Transcript
Page 1: Plant Ecology - Chapter 20

Plant Ecology - Chapter 20Paleoecology

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PaleoecologyThe study of historical ecologyChanges in global patterns of vegetation, diversityDriven by ecological, evolutionary processes

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PaleoecologyPlants invaded land during the Paleozoic era, during the later Ordovician and SilurianMajor time of evolution, diversification

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PaleoecologyDiversity of biotic interactions developed earlyMycorrhizae, herbivory, animal pollination, animal seed dispersal

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PaleoecologyFossil carbon deposits formed from plants during Carboniferous periodCoal from remains of wetland plants (ferns, mosses, gymnosperms)

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PaleoecologyOil, gas developed from mostly marine plankton (phyto-, zoo-), and maybe wetland plantsDramatic climate change at end of Carboniferous - drier - seed plants began to dominate

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PaleoecologyMesozoic era was time of major tectonic plate movementEncompassed Triassic, Jurassic, and Cretaceous periods

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PaleoecologyMoved from supercontinent Pangaea to breakup into current continentsImproved conditions for plant growth, diversification

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PaleoecologyFerns, seed ferns, gymnosperms became the dominant floraCO2 levels 3-4 X higher than today provided warm climate and plentiful CO2 for photosynthesis

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PaleoecologyDecline in CO2 (248-65 mya) changed conditions for plantsCooler, more seasonalityChanging climate and continental breakup led to development, diversification of angiosperms

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PaleoecologyAsteroid impact at end of Mesozoic (65 mya, K-T boundary)Impact debris and/or massive fires led to massive animal and plant extinctionsDinosaurs, and 25-80% of N. Amer, plants (more in south, fewer in north)

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PaleoecologyContinued decline in CO2 concentrations (chemical reactions during new mountain weathering) resulted in slow, re-evolution of new species of angiospermsEvolution of C4 grasses from C3 ancestorsDo better at low CO2

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PaleoecologyRecent trends?Global changes in CO2?Change in C3 and C4 plant abundance, distribution?

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PaleoecologyMicrofossils - pollen grainsMacrofossils - leaves, stems, flowersUsed to understand changing plant communities, changing climates

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PaleoecologyGlacial and interglacial cycling100,000 yearsChange in angle, degree of tilt of Earth’s axis

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PaleoecologyChange in species present in MN from 22,000 ya to presentSpruce, ash, birchPine, elm, oakGrassesNow pines,oaks,sedges

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PaleoecologyCan track shifts in species distribution through time


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