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Geography · The natural environment

Climate & natural vegetation

CIE 04605 min read

Global atmospheric circulation model

The global atmospheric circulation model explains the way heat is distributed around Earth, resulting in different climates.

  • The equator is hottest as the heat from the sun is most concentrated on its small area.
  • The hot air rises, creating low pressure and forming clouds (rain). The air reaches the edge of the troposphere and is pushed north and south.
  • As the air/clouds travel, they cool and begin to sink around the tropics, creating high pressure.
  • High pressure — an anticyclone; air sinks so no clouds are formed (no precipitation).
  • Low air pressure — a cyclone; air rises so clouds are formed (precipitation).
  • Tropical, wet climate — found near the equator where cyclones occur.
  • Desert, dry climate — found near the tropics where anticyclones occur.

Equatorial climate

  • Relative humidity usually over 75%.
  • Average rainfall over 1500mm, which is fairly even year round.

Types of rainfall

  1. Convectional rainfall — The sun heats the land and water evaporates. Warm air rises and clouds condense. Rainfall occurs.
  2. Relief rainfall — Warm air is forced up the high relief (e.g. a mountain). It condenses and rain occurs. The other side of the tall relief is called the rain shadow as no rain reaches that side.
  3. Frontal rainfall — Two bodies of air meet each other. Warm air is forced over the cold air. Condensation forms clouds. It rains heavily along the front.

Factors affecting climate

FactorEffect on climate
Distance from the coast (sea breeze and land breeze)The land heats and cools faster. In summer, a colder sea breeze keeps the coast cold. In winter the warm sea breeze keeps the coast warm.
Prevailing windsPrevailing winds go over long areas and seas and, for example, can bring moisture from the ocean, or bring dry air from travelling over an area of land not ocean.
AltitudeThe higher you go, the colder it is.
Ocean currentsOcean currents can be warm or cold, heating or cooling the coast.

The rainforest

An ecosystem is a large community of living organisms.

Layers of a rainforest

  1. Forest floor
  2. Understory layer
  3. Canopy layer
  4. Emergent layer

Why rainforest soil quality is poor

  • Leaching — the removal of nutrients out of the soil by excess water.
  • Fast nutrient absorption rates — as the rainforest is densely populated and competitive, when a plant decomposes its nutrients are quickly absorbed by other nearby plants.
  • Soil erosion — the removal of the top layer of soil due to wind, water and living plants/animals.

Rainforest case study — Borneo

Deforestation — the cutting down of large areas of trees to clear up space for other purposes.

  • Malaysia has one of the fastest rates of deforestation in the tropical world.
  • Borneo is 130 million years old.

Causes and effects of deforestation

CausesEffects
Logging — the cutting down of trees to make into commercial items. Trees act as a carbon sink, so felling them releases the stored CO2 back.Soil erosion — the degrading of the upper layer of soil. Crops take nutrients out of the soil. The rain comes and washes the loose soil away.
Plantations / farming (palm oil) — 85% of the world's palm oil is from Indonesia and Malaysia together.Climate change — loss of carbon sinks.
Population pressure — 1970-2000 Indonesia had to transmigrate thousands of Indonesians from Java island to Borneo.Loss of biodiversity — e.g. pygmy elephants and orangutans.
Hydroelectric power — e.g. the Bakun HEP scheme in Borneo.Indigenous tribes — deforestation displaces them. 330 tribes in 1900, now far fewer. Since they are unadjusted to urban life many die young, a lot of the time due to drugs and alcohol.

The desert

A desert is a land of extremes that receives less than 250mm of rainfall annually.

  • Caused by high pressure air and usually found at the lines of latitude where dry air starts to sink (23-30 degrees north and south). It is dry as all the moisture has been used up by precipitation.
  • Characterised by dry conditions, short periods of rainfall, poor soil quality and high temperatures.

Adaptations of plants and animals

Cacti

  • They store water in their leaves, stems or roots.
  • They have spines instead of leaves to minimise water loss.
  • Spines also protect cacti from being eaten.
  • They have widespread root systems to reach water from far away.

Camels

  • Slit nostrils and long double eyelashes to bat away sand.
  • Humps of fat to use as energy when nourishment is not available.
  • Large, tough lips to eat thorny desert plants.
  • Broad flat feet to spread weight and protect from sand heat.

Fennec foxes

  • Large ears to expel heat.
  • They are nocturnal, which helps them with heat.
  • Thick hair to insulate during cold nights and protect during the day.
  • Light fur to reflect the sun.

Kangaroo rats

  • They live in burrows.
  • They have large back legs that can help them jump 3m away from predators.
  • They get moisture from a seed diet.

Desertification

Desertification — the process in which land becomes desert, typically as a result of drought, deforestation or inappropriate agriculture.

  • The Sahel in the Sahara is the edge of the desert where desertification is occurring actively.

Desert case study — Thar Desert (India and Pakistan)

  • Home to 16 million people.

Challenges and opportunities of living in a desert

ChallengesOpportunities
Extreme temperatures — can exceed 50 degrees Celsius. Livestock need shade. Working in heat is hard.Farming — irrigation, e.g. the Gandhi Canal (1958).
Accessibility — some areas only accessible by camel. High temps cause tarmac to melt. Overweight public transport. Cars often break down from heat.Energy — wind and solar farms. Jaisalmer is one of the biggest wind parks in India.
Water supply — low annual rainfall. High temp thus quick evaporation. Farming and population are increasing.Mining — gypsum (construction) and phosphorite (fertilisers).
Tourism — camel riding and trekking.

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