the tundra

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THE TUNDRA By Emma Bocciarelli, Haley Bogle, Zane Mikula, and Zach Longeill

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The Tundra. By Emma Bocciarelli, Haley Bogle, Zane Mikula, and Zach Longeill. TUNDRA PLANTS . By Haley Bogle. What is the reproduction of the plants there?. Plants spread their seeds to reproduce Soil is permanently frozen(permafrost) Needs to thaw out in order to be reproduced. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The  Tundra

THE TUNDRA

By Emma Bocciarelli, Haley Bogle, Zane Mikula, and Zach Longeill

Page 2: The  Tundra

TUNDRA PLANTS

By Haley Bogle

Page 3: The  Tundra

What is the reproduction of the plants there?

Plants spread their seeds to reproduce Soil is permanently frozen(permafrost) Needs to thaw out in order to be reproduced

Page 4: The  Tundra

What are the types of plants that live in this area and what are they like?

Lichens, mosses: grow close to ground and out of cold wind

Mosses: thick, green, and tightly packed

Lichens: made of 2 organisms( fungus, green algae)

Page 5: The  Tundra

What is the growing season here?

Flowers, shrubs grow in Summer Mosses and lichens grow in Winter due

to ground closeness to not be hurt

Page 6: The  Tundra

The Effects of the land Mining and

drilling- pollute

Hunters Construction

trucks, bulldozers- expose permafrost and melts it

Page 7: The  Tundra

SO THAT’S THE PLANT LIFE NOW LETS MOVE ON TO ZACH WITH THE WEATHER

Page 8: The  Tundra

TUNDRA WEATHERBy Zach Longeill

Page 9: The  Tundra

What is the climate like in your biome?

Icy and snowy

Cold all year Near north

and south pole

Page 10: The  Tundra

What is the range and average precipitation?

No more than a desert

15-25cm -20

degrees=average

Summer=45 degrees

Page 11: The  Tundra

What is the range and average temperature?

Frozen all year Dry and cold Frozen soil(permafrost) Low strong wind Lowest=60 degrees Fahrenheit

Page 12: The  Tundra

What are the water resources in this biome?

Shallow ponds due to non-soak able permafrost

Ocean melts in summer Ice is turning into water

Page 13: The  Tundra

LITTLE TIP: IF YOU EVER GO TO THE TUNDRA I SUGGEST BRINGING A JACKET, LETS MOVE ONTO ZANE WITH THE TUNDRA’S INTERESTING LAND

Page 14: The  Tundra

TUNDRA GEOGRAPHY

By Zane Mikula

Page 15: The  Tundra

Where in the world is this biome?

Northern EuropeNorthern SiberiaNorthern parts of

North Americacovers 1/5 of Earth’s surface

Page 16: The  Tundra

What is the soil like in your biome?

Permafrost( frozen soil)

1,000 feet below Earth’s surface

Low on nutrients

Page 17: The  Tundra

What landforms are located in your biome?

Glaciers in mountains

Rocky soil Treeless

bottoms High mountain

peaks at toe

Page 18: The  Tundra

What are the different elevations in your biome?

Page 19: The  Tundra

What are the important places that are in this biome?

Yenisei River Wrangel Island Whale bone

River Wral Mountains Yomal Peninsula

Page 20: The  Tundra

COOL RIGHT?! NOW LETS EXPLORE THE CREATURES OF THE TUNDRA WITH EMMA

Page 21: The  Tundra

By Emma Bocciarelli

Page 22: The  Tundra

What are the kinds of animals that live in this area? Polar Bears

mammal, consumer, carnivore Males= 10 feet long, 1000

pounds Females= half male size Birth in Winter in caves Eat whales, walruses,

lemmings, arctic foxes, birds and seals

Live 15-20 years Good sense of smell Strong legs Webbed feet Endangered, 40,000 left

Page 23: The  Tundra

Musk Ox Herbivore, consumer,

mammal 400-900 pounds (largest

tundra herbivore) Thick fur Travel in herds of 10-30 Eat willow shoots, lichens,

grasses, shrubs 6-7.5 feet Male have horns( “boss”) Mate in late summer, early

fall 8 months pregnant Live 24 years

Page 24: The  Tundra

Lichen Producer, plant Made of fungi and green algae Algae gives plant food Lichen give algae safe home 15, 000 types of lichen Grow to elephant size One was found 4,000 years old

Page 25: The  Tundra

Mosses and flowers

MOSSES Producers, plant Thick, green Packed mats Sphagnum moss-colorful Absorb water from air

moisture FLOWERS Producers Growing season- 3 months Bloom quickly Poppies, bluebells,

fireweed, heather poppies Purple, yellow red ect.

Page 26: The  Tundra

Tundra Swan Omnivore, consumer, bird Lives 20 years 8-23 pounds 4-5 feet wingspan Breed in arctic then migrate

to Atlantic, Pacific coastlines, bays, lakes

Fly 3,725 miles Lay 4 eggs, incubates- 32 days Sleep afloat Speedy swimmers Dip heads in water to pluck up

plants, tubers, roots, shellfish Predators= foxes, jaegers

Page 27: The  Tundra

What is an example of a food chain that lives here?

Secondary Consumers:Snowy OwlsArctic Fox

Primary Consumers:Insectslemmings

Primary Producers:GrassesSedgeswillows

Page 28: The  Tundra

Describe the adaptations that the organisms have to make in order to survive Hide under snow Grow thick fur or

extra fat layers(blubber)

Migrate or stay and sleep

Use long wings to catch prey

Wrap fuzzy tail around body

Long claws

Page 29: The  Tundra

Describe any symbiotic relationships that may occur in this biome: mutualism Lichens= made

of fungus and green algae

Algae gives sugars that fungus eats

Fungus provides protection by retaining water and obtaining minerals

Page 30: The  Tundra

Parasitism Liver tapeworm

cysts Grow in

animals( moose, caribou)

Feed on food eaten by animal

Then gives malnutrition to animal( host)

Page 31: The  Tundra

Commensalism

Caribou feed on lichens during coldness

Arctic Fox follows Caribou digs for mammals When done, fox digs

deeper for more Caribou= unaffected,

fox= gets food with caribous hunting help

Page 32: The  Tundra

Zach Longeill Haley Bogle Zane Mikula Emma Bocciarelli

The Tundra is your dream home