RemNote Community
Community

Forest ecology Study Guide

Study Guide

📖 Core Concepts Forest Ecology – Study of patterns, processes, and interactions among plants, animals, fungi, and abiotic factors in forests. Biome Components – Biotic: trees, understory plants, wildlife, microbes; Abiotic: soil, water, climate, light. Carbon Sink – Forests absorb atmospheric CO₂ and store it as biomass. Hydrological “Biotic Pump” – Forests draw moisture from oceans, release it via transpiration, and influence regional precipitation. Biodiversity Hotspot – 80 % of terrestrial species live in forests. Mycorrhizal Symbiosis – Fungal hyphae extend root reach, boosting uptake of phosphorus, water, and other slowly moving nutrients. Regeneration Stages – Establishment → Thinning → Transition → Steady‑state. --- 📌 Must Remember Forests cover ⅓ of land surface and produce 28 % of Earth’s oxygen (most oxygen actually from oceanic plankton). Global forest biomass: 606 Gt living, 59 Gt dead wood. Boreal fires = primary driver of conifer composition; deciduous species act as successional pioneers. Temperate stomatal responsiveness limits water loss during drought. Tropical buttress & stilt roots = mechanical support in shallow, wet soils. Conifer adaptations: waxy, resin‑filled leaves; mycorrhizal dependence; evergreen habit; tapered shape for wind/snow. Mycorrhizal networks transport phosphorus and water between plants, enhancing drought resistance. --- 🔄 Key Processes Forest Water Cycle (Biotic Pump) Tree transpiration → humidifies local air → condensation → precipitation → returns to forest. Mycorrhizal Nutrient Uptake Plant roots ↔ fungal hyphae → hyphae explore farther soil → absorb P, water → transport to host plant. Regeneration Sequence Establishment: seed germination, rapid seedling rise. Thinning: competition causes many seedlings to die after canopy closure. Transition: canopy gaps from tree death → new seedlings colonize. Steady‑state: mixed‑age stand, dynamic equilibrium. Fire‑Driven Succession (Boreal) Fire kills mature conifers → opens canopy → light‑ demanding deciduous species (birch, aspen) establish → over time, conifers re‑colonize. --- 🔍 Key Comparisons Boreal vs. Temperate Forests Climate: high‑latitude cold (boreal) vs. mid‑latitude moderate (temperate). Disturbance: fire dominant (boreal) vs. mixed (temperature, drought, human). Dominant trees: conifer‑only (boreal) vs. conifer, deciduous, or mixed (temperate). Mycorrhizal Symbiosis vs. Direct Root Uptake Range: hyphae reach far beyond root zone (mycorrhiza) vs. limited root reach. Nutrient type: effective for slow‑moving nutrients (P, micronutrients) vs. mainly water and readily mobile ions. Coniferous vs. Tropical Trees Leaf adaptation: waxy, resinous (conifers) vs. thick, leathery with drip‑tips (tropics). Root architecture: shallow tap/needle roots vs. massive buttresses/stilt roots. --- ⚠️ Common Misunderstandings “Forests produce most of Earth’s oxygen.” – True for terrestrial O₂, but oceans (phytoplankton) contribute the majority. “All forests are carbon sinks.” – Young, growing forests sequester carbon; old or heavily disturbed forests may become net sources. “Mycorrhizae only help with phosphorus.” – They also transport water and other nutrients, and can link multiple plant individuals. “Fire only destroys forests.” – In boreal systems, fire is a regeneration catalyst, promoting species turnover. --- 🧠 Mental Models / Intuition “Tree as a skyscraper” – Imagine each tree as a vertical city: roots (basement utilities), trunk (elevator shaft), canopy (office floors). The deeper the roots and broader the canopy, the larger the “city” of interactions (nutrients, water, shade). “Mycorrhizal internet” – Fungal hyphae act like fiber‑optic cables, sharing resources between “nodes” (plants) much like data sharing across a network. “Fire‑reset clock” – Think of fire as a reset button that clears the old “software version” (mature conifers) allowing a new “update” (deciduous pioneers) to install. --- 🚩 Exceptions & Edge Cases Evergreen conifers in mild temperate zones may shed some foliage seasonally – not strictly evergreen. Mycorrhizal dependence varies: some pioneer species can establish without fungi, while many mature conifers cannot survive without them. Water‑use efficiency: some tropical trees possess CAM‑like adaptations in drought‑prone patches, contrary to the typical C₃ tropical pattern. --- 📍 When to Use Which Identify forest type → Look at latitude, dominant tree forms, disturbance regime. High latitude, fire‑prone, conifer‑dominant → Boreal. Mid‑latitude, mixed species, stomatal drought response → Temperate. Low latitude, multi‑layer canopy, buttressed trees → Tropical. Assess nutrient limitation → If phosphorus appears limiting, focus on mycorrhizal involvement; if water is limiting, examine stomatal control and leaf morphology. Predict regeneration after disturbance → Use the four‑stage model; adjust timeline based on disturbance intensity (fire → fast early stage, wind‑throw → slower). --- 👀 Patterns to Recognize Layered canopy → epiphytes & vines (typical of tropical forests). Fire scar + abundant cones → boreal conifer regeneration. Waxy, resinous foliage + mycorrhizal fungi → coniferous adaptation to drought/cold. Nurse plant presence + seedling clusters → facilitation in harsh micro‑environments. --- 🗂️ Exam Traps “Forests are the primary source of atmospheric oxygen.” – Answer: False; oceans dominate O₂ production. “All mycorrhizal relationships are mutualistic.” – Some can become parasitic under certain nutrient conditions. “Temperate rainforests are the same as tropical rainforests.” – Temperate rainforests have cooler temperatures, conifer dominance, and abundant lichens; tropical rainforests are warm, broadleaf‑dominant. “Dead wood does not store carbon.” – It stores substantial carbon (≈ 59 Gt globally) and releases it slowly via decay. ---
or

Or, immediately create your own study flashcards:

Upload a PDF.
Master Study Materials.
Start learning in seconds
Drop your PDFs here or
or