biome

(noun)

any major regional biological community such as that of forest or desert

Related Terms

  • deciduous
  • population
  • weather
  • climate
  • ecotone
  • ecosystem
  • habitat
  • understory

Examples of biome in the following topics:

  • What constitutes a biome?

    • Terrestrial biomes are based on land, while aquatic biomes include both ocean and freshwater biomes.
    • Each biome consists of communities that have adapted to the different climate and environment inside the biome.
    • The distribution of these biomes shows that the same biome can occur in geographically distinct areas with similar climates.
    • Biomes have no distinct boundaries.
    • Each type of biome can be found in multiple places.
  • What is a Terrestrial Biome?

  • What is an Aquatic Biome?

  • Abiotic Factors Influencing Aquatic Biomes

    • Abiotic factors that influence aquatic biomes include light availability, depth, stratification, temperature, currents, and tides.
    • As with terrestrial biomes, aquatic biomes are influenced by a series of abiotic factors.
    • The importance of light in aquatic biomes is central to the communities of organisms found in both freshwater and marine ecosystems.
  • Tropical Wet Forest and Savannas

    • Compared to other forest biomes, tropical wet forests have little variation in seasonal temperatures.
    • Tropical wet forests have more species of trees than any other biome.
    • One way to visualize this is to compare the distinctive horizontal layers within the tropical wet forest biome.
    • Epiphytes are found throughout tropical wet forest biomes.
    • Each of the world's major biomes is distinguished by characteristic temperatures and amounts of precipitation.
  • Marine Biomes

    • The ocean and coral reefs make up two types of marine biomes where organisms are influenced by depth and light availability.
    • The ocean is the largest marine biome.
    • Within the ocean, coral reefs are a second kind of marine biome.
    • Nutrients are scarce in this less-productive part of the marine biome.
  • Freshwater Biomes

    • Lakes, ponds, rivers, streams, and wetlands are all freshwater biomes, which differ in depth, water movement, and other abiotic factors.
    • Freshwater biomes occur throughout the world's terrestrial biomes.
    • Differentiate among the freshwater biomes of lakes and ponds, rivers and streams, and wetlands
  • Temperate Forests

    • Temperate forests are the most common biome in eastern North America, Western Europe, Eastern Asia, Chile, and New Zealand.
    • This biome is found throughout mid-latitude regions.
    • Because of the moderate, annual rainfall and temperatures, deciduous trees are the dominant plant in this biome .
    • In addition, temperate forests show less diversity of tree species than do tropical wet forest biomes.
    • The trees of the temperate forests leaf out and shade much of the ground; however, this biome is more open than tropical wet forests because trees in the temperate forests do not grow as tall as the trees in tropical wet forests.
  • Abiotic Factors Influencing Plant Growth

    • Net primary productivity is an important variable when considering differences in biomes.
    • Very productive biomes have a high level of aboveground biomass.
    • The magnitude and distribution of global primary production varies between biomes.
  • Climate and Weather

    • The climate of a biome is characterized by having consistent temperature and annual rainfall ranges.
    • Climate does not address the amount of rain that fell on one particular day in a biome or the colder-than-average temperatures that occurred on one day.
Subjects
  • Accounting
  • Algebra
  • Art History
  • Biology
  • Business
  • Calculus
  • Chemistry
  • Communications
  • Economics
  • Finance
  • Management
  • Marketing
  • Microbiology
  • Physics
  • Physiology
  • Political Science
  • Psychology
  • Sociology
  • Statistics
  • U.S. History
  • World History
  • Writing

Except where noted, content and user contributions on this site are licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0 with attribution required.