Title: Torrey Pines State Park and Reserve:
1Torrey Pines State Park and Reserve
- Maritime Succulent Scrub and Maritime Chaparral
2Biological Levels of Organization
Individuals lt Population lt Community lt
Ecosystems lt Biome lt Biosphere
3Chaparral Biome
4Mediterranean Climate
- Mid-latitude (30 deg), coastal regions
- Sea level 5500
- Seasonal precipitation
- Precipitation 8-20, mostly in winter (Dec Mar)
- Summers are dryseasonal drought.
- frequent drought years
- Rain/precipitation highly variable from year to
year. - Seasonal Temperatures
- long dry summers 80-100 F
- spring, winter, fall are cool (50s-70s)
- winters moderately cold in coastal regions, but
higher elevation can experience frost and small
amounts of snow - In more coastal regions
- Santa Ana winds in summer (hot and dry)
- fog, mist, marine layer in some seasons
5Common Communities of the Mediterranean Climate
(Chaparral Biome) in CA
- Chaparral (true/hard chaparral)
- Coastal Sage scrub (soft chaparral)
- Oak woodland
- Riparian
- Grassland
6Number of Chaparral Species
- 100 shrubs
- 40 common
- A given site will have 1-10 common shrub species.
- A very diverse community for having such a
limited geographic distribution.
7Adaptations for Dry Environments
- LEAF CHARACTERISTICS
- small leaves
- low surface area results in less water loss
- Thick cuticle
- thicker cuticle makes water loss difficult,
bigger barrier to evaporation - Oily/resinous leaves accomplish the same result
- These leaves are often shiny
- dull leaves
- reduces heat build, and thus reduce
evaporation/water loss - hairy leaves
- create a boundary layer of humidity, and reduce
water loss - stomata concentrated on underside of leaf
- shaded side of leaf reduces transpiration
- Spiny leaves
8xerophytic leaf adaptations
9Ecological (Adaptive) Strategies for Water
Stressed Environments
- Drought Deciduous
- Drops Leaves during extended dry season
- Evergreen
- Keeps leaves year round
- Succulents
- Stores water in thick, fleshy leaves
10Ecological (Adaptive) Strategies for Water
Stressed Environments
- Drought Deciduous
- Plant has leaves that are dropped/lost seasonally
with low water availability. - These leaves lose a lot of water (poor resistance
to water loss), but are highly photosynthetic. - Trades short periods of high productivity that
correspond with water availability with
prolonged periods of water conservation but no
productivity after leaves are lost.
11Ecological (Adaptive) Strategies for Water
Stressed Environments
- Evergreen
- Plant has leaves all year long (although
individual leaves are lost and replaced regularly
throughout the year). - Leaves are thick and high resistant to water
loss, but perform lower levels of photosynthesis
(at least at some temps). - It compensates for low rates of photosynthesis by
performing photosynthesis year round. - Requires access to water for most of the year,
thus these plants often have deep taproots to
acquire water during dry season.
12Ecological (Adaptive) Strategies for Water
Stressed Environments
- Succulents
- Store water in fleshy leaves and stems.
- Often have CAM metabolism
- A form of photosynthesis where stomata are open
at night and CO2 is stored for day when it is
used for photosynthesis - This reduce water loss, because stomata are
closed during day. - Results in slow growth as only a small amount of
CO2 is stored and so can only perform
photosynthesis for a short period of each day.
13Coastal Sagescrub
- Climate and Water Availability
- 8-10 of precipitation during winter
- prolonged dry season (summer through fall)
- However, moderate temperature reduce evaporation
stress - Winter growing season
- General Patterns in Plant Characteristics
- 2-4 tall, few truly woody plants (sub-shrubs)
- moderately spaced
- Shallow root systems capture rain/precipitation
as soon as it falls. - Mostly drought deciduous
- frost intolerant
- generally burned areas must be re-colonized
- this is done through wind dispersal
14Coastal Sage scrub
15Coastal Sage scrub
16Coastal Sage scrub
17The Chaparral Community
- Climate and Water Availability
- 10-25 of precipitation, mostly during winter,
little as snow - Prolonged dry season during summer
- Temperature range more extreme then coast
- Colder in winter, often hotter in summer
- Winter and spring growing season
- General Patterns in Plant Characteristics
- Shrub dominant, mostly woody
- 6-15 tall
- Closely spaced plants (often interlacing)
- Evergreen plants are dominant.
- Dual root systemsshallow and long taproot
- Frost tolerant
- Few understory plants
- Fire adapted
- Seed banks
- Re-sprouters
18Chaparral in foreground with trees in background
(which is wetter)
19More chaparral plants
20Chaparral is Fire Adapted, NOT fire dependent
- Because fires are common in chaparral communities
the plants have adaptations that allow the rapid
regrowth/repopulation of plants. - It is simplistic and incorrect to say it needs to
burn. Individual plants can continue to grow
just fine without fire - Although some do need fire to complete life cycle
- Fires too frequently (lt15 yrs) will cause
replacement of chaparral by non-native plants
21Fire Strategies
- Crown sprouters
- Burls (roots) that store water and nutrients
- Somewhat protected from fire
- Give rise to new shoot systems after fires (from
roots) - Seed Banking
- A large number of dormant seeds in the soil
- Require fire to sprout, repopulate area post
fire. - Often sit dormant for decades resulting in areas
with plants that are cohortslittle intermediate
stages - Fire Followers
- Increased nitrogen triggers germination (or other
chemical triggers/changes to seed) - Annuals will complete lifecycle year after fire
and then sit dormant again for decades - Important in soil stabilization
22Chaparral and Fire
- Pre-human fire cycle is estimated to be 30-100
years - American Indians frequently burned chaparral to
increase tuber herbs (for food), frequency of
game animals, and growth of willows for basket
weaving - For much of the 1900s there was an active policy
of fire suppression or prevention - More recently (30 yrs) there is a recognition
that burns are natural events. - Controlled Burns
23Chaparral one year after a fire
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25Torrey Pines--Maritime Shrub-dominant Communities
(uncommon communities)
- Maritime Succulent Scrub
- Exists in southernmore dryerregions
- Includes
- common coastal sagescrub plant
- increased number of evergreens
- Increased succulents
- central Baja through Laguna Beach
- most species rich of all scrub communities
- reduced fire frequency
- Maritime Chaparral
- Community of evergreen plants that includes a
diminutive form of Chamise - presence of some desert-typical plants
- these plants are not typical of coastal areas
- once common throughout San Diego Co. and northern
Baja - Intermixes with Maritime succulent scrub
26Torrey Pines S.P.
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30Sagescrub v. Chaparral(physical structure and
ecological strategies)
31Human Impacts
- Much of the chaparral has been destroyed by
urbanization and agriculture. - Suppression of natural fire cycles (according to
some sources)
Chaparral Sage Scrub impacts on Humans
- Fires that destroy property
32Did You Know?Did you know that the coastal sage
scrub habitat is one of the most endangered
ecosystems in the world? Only 10-15 of the
original habitat now exists. Once the dominant
ecosystem, the coastal sage scrub community now
only exists in small remnant pockets n.p.s.
cabrillo national monument website
Due to urban development, grazing, and agriculture