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Ecosystems and biomes | Ecology | Khan Academy

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    - [Voiceover] So, just as a bit of review.
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    If we take the members
    of a certain species
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    that share the same area,
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    we call that a population.
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    Population.
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    All of the organisms in
    this particular population
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    will be members of the same species.
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    There could be other
    members of that species
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    that aren't in that same area,
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    and they wouldn't be a member
    of this particular population.
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    And a certain area won't have just one,
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    or it doesn't tend to have
    just one species in it.
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    So, we could call this population one.
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    You might have other populations there
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    of a different species.
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    So, this is another
    species right over here.
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    All of them combined in the same area,
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    we could call this population,
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    population two.
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    And if you take...
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    And we could, obviously have
    many more populations there.
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    And if you take all of the populations
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    in a given area,
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    there's flexibility on
    how you define that area
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    or define that region,
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    you take those together,
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    so you're really taking
    all of the living things
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    in a certain area, we
    call that a community.
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    A community of populations.
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    Now, the community only
    consists of living things,
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    the biotic factors.
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    So, let me write that down.
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    Biotic referring to the living
    things in a certain area.
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    But if we want to think about
    not just the living things,
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    but also the non-living
    things in that region.
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    So, I'll write abiotic.
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    Let me do that in another color.
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    So, let's take the abiotic factors,
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    or the abiotic environment.
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    And, once again, we're
    sharing the same region,
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    and that is flexible on
    how you define that region.
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    You put all of these things together,
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    and then you get your ecosystem.
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    Your ecosystem, once again,
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    it could be a very small region,
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    it could be a very large region,
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    but it's made up of all living things,
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    the biotic factors, and
    the non-living things,
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    the abiotic factors.
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    Now, what we're gonna
    think about in this video
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    is just the types of
    ecosystems that you might have.
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    Think a little bit about it,
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    and also begin to think about
    how the different factors
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    interact with each other.
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    How there's conservation of matter
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    where, within an ecosystem,
    matter tends to go
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    from one form to another.
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    You also have a flow of energy.
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    Energy tends to enter an ecosystem
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    in form of light, and that
    energy gets transferred
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    from one organism to another,
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    and, sometimes, even involving
    the non-living things,
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    eventually, getting turned
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    into actual heat.
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    Now, in terms of the types of ecosystems.
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    I already mentioned there's
    a lot of variety there.
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    This, right here, is a
    picture of a tide pool
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    at Half Moon Bay, not too
    far from where I live.
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    I've actually been to the
    tide pools at Half Moon Bay.
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    And you could consider
    one particular tide pool,
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    both the abiotic factors, the water,
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    and the rock there,
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    as well as the biotic factors,
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    the starfish, the sea anemones,
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    and whatever else might be living there.
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    Those combined, that
    could be an ecosystem.
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    You might say that the
    entire beach is an ecosystem.
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    You might say that the entire
    region is an ecosystem.
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    Once again, it depends
    on how much you want
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    to zoom in or how much
    you want to zoom out,
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    and you can zoom out a good bit.
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    This rain forest, right over here,
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    this is the Amazon rain forest.
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    You can consider the whole
    rain forest an ecosystem,
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    or maybe you just want to study,
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    maybe you just want to study
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    what's happening in this exact
    region, right over there.
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    You can also consider that an ecosystem.
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    You can consider what's
    happening in the river, itself,
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    an ecosystem, or, maybe,
    one part of that river.
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    And, as you notice, I'm
    talking about some ecosystems
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    that are on land, and
    some that are in water,
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    and that is a general way,
    one way of classifying them.
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    So an ecosystem, you
    could have it on land.
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    You could have it on, near, in the water.
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    So, you could say it's aquatic.
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    And then, if within aquatic,
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    you could have ones that...
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    You have salt water, or
    partially salty water,
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    and these are called marine,
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    and the main marine ecosystem,
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    we're thinking about the
    oceans and things like that.
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    And then, you have freshwater ecosystems.
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    Like if you are in the upper-Amazon,
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    that is freshwater that is flowing.
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    So we could say fresh, freshwater,
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    non-salty water.
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    And even though it looks
    like rivers are big
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    and there's a lot of freshwater around us.
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    Obviously we need freshwater to live,
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    most of the aquatic ecosystems are marine,
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    are not involved freshwater.
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    Freshwater is a very small subset.
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    Now, this is just a few examples.
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    Even your body, you could view your body
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    as a whole ecosystem.
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    You could view parts of
    your body as an ecosystem.
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    You could look at just...
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    You could look at just a fraction of...
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    If this is my hand right over here,
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    you could take just a
    little square, there,
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    and you could consider that an ecosystem.
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    You can think about the different bacteria
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    that are there, other
    types of microorganisms
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    that are there, and
    how they're interacting
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    with the non-living things, the air.
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    How they're interacting
    with the oil on your skin,
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    with the dead skin cells, and also,
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    how they're interacting
    with the living skin cells,
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    and you, yourself.
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    Now, since we're in
    the, since we're focused
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    on how we can classify ecosystems,
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    one thing that's often done
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    is classifying land ecosystems
    into various categories.
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    And, right over here, we have depicted
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    the major types of land ecosystems
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    on our planet
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    and where you might find them.
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    And these different
    types of land ecosystems,
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    these are called biomes.
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    Biomes.
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    And as you can see from this diagram,
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    tropical forests, you can
    find it right over here.
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    This is the Amazon rain forest.
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    You can find it in Africa.
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    You can find it in Southeast Asia.
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    You can find it in
    Central and even Southern
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    or North America.
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    You have boreal forests which you'll find
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    in more northern latitudes.
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    Savanna, desert, tundra,
    chaparral, polar ice,
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    temperate forest, temperate grasslands,
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    and these are just helpful
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    for thinking about roughly
    the types of ecosystem,
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    or ecosystems we would
    find in those regions.
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    And it's typically most determined by
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    temperature, moisture, the climate.
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    Actually, the climate and the terrain
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    and the types of minerals
    that you would find there,
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    that tends to be a pretty good indicator
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    for what it will be like,
    what the life would be like.
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    But even with that said, there could
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    still be a lot of variety.
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    For example, the Sonoran
    Desert, that is right over here
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    in the southwest United States,
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    in the northwest Mexico.
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    This is a desert, and there's deserts
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    all over the rest of the planet,
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    but they won't have...
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    They might be similar in a lot of ways,
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    but they won't have
    the exact same climate,
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    or the exact same abiotic factors,
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    or the exact same biotic factors.
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    So, for example, right now
    I'm gonna show you a picture,
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    pictures of the Sonoran
    Desert and the Rock Desert
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    that's on the island of Boa Vista.
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    Boa Vista is right over there.
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    You really can't see it.
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    It's a very small island
    off the coast of Africa.
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    And, as we see in these
    diagrams, or in this picture,
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    you don't have to be an
    expert to recognize that,
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    okay, these are both deserts.
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    They both look dry.
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    There's not a lot of water here,
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    but they are also very different.
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    The Sonoran Desert looks to have
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    at least a lot more life,
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    than the Rock Desert have here.
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    It's appropriately named the Rock Desert
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    because it seems, at
    least to the naked eye,
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    it looks like all you can see is rock.
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    So biomes, once again, it's a very rough,
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    high-level way to
    classifying land ecosystems.
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    But even the same biome
    can be very, very...
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    Two things that are
    categorizing in the same biome
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    could be very different.
Title:
Ecosystems and biomes | Ecology | Khan Academy
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Khan Academy
Duration:
07:33

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