Key Points
Key Points will give you the main information you should
know to teach the activity.
- Populations are a group of living things in a particular
area that all belong to the same species.
- A community
consists of all of the living things that inhabit a particular
area.
- A community
is an assemblage of populations; it consists of all of the
populations that share the same environment.
- An
ecosystem includes all of the abiotic factors as well as
the communities that exist in a certain area. Abiotic factors
are those factors that are not living. Important examples
of abiotic factors include water, temperature, light, soil
and wind. In many ways, the abiotic factors of a particular
area define the communities that live there.
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Detailed
Information
Detailed
Information gives more in-depth background to increase your
own knowledge, in case you want to expand upon the activity
or you are asked detailed questions by students.
Despite being 40th in size
among the states, South Carolina has one of the highest biodiversity levels
of any state in the country. Regions ranging from Mountains to the Ocean,
South Carolina supports a variety of populations, communities and ecosystems.
Populations are a group of living things in a particular area that all belong
to the same species. Humans, porkfish, river otters, mountain laurel trees and
pitcher plants are all examples of different populations.
A community consists of
all of the living things that inhabit a particular area. A community is an assemblage
of populations that share an environment. The environment can be as small as
a rotted log or as large as a continent. In the Mountain region, a community
could consist of river otters, trout, mayflies, mountain laurel, cardinals and
flowering dogwood.
An ecosystem includes all
of the abiotic factors as well as the communities that exist in a certain area.
Abiotic factors are those factors in an environment that are not living. Important
examples of abiotic factors include water, temperature, light, soil and wind.
In many ways, the abiotic factors of a particular area define the communities
that live there.
South Carolina is divided
into five major landform regions: the Mountains, Piedmont, the Sandhills, the
Coastal Plain and the Coast. The vast Atlantic ocean is located off of the coast
of South Carolina. Each of these regions is characterized by a unique set of
physical factors, which in turn affects the animals and plants that are able
to form communities there.
The smallest in area of
the five regions, the Mountain region is located in the northwest corner of
the state and found in only three counties. It is part of the Blue Ridge chain
of the Appalachian Mountains. It is an area characterized by mountains and valleys,
rocky outcrops, waterfalls and fast moving streams. Mountains in this region
can be above 3,000 ft in elevation. The climate in this region tends to be cooler
and less humid than the rest of the state but with a higher rainfall amount,
ranging from 60 to 76 inches a year.
Mountain streams are a unique
habitat in South Carolina. Found only in the mountains of the northwest corner
of South Carolina, this habitat makes up only two percent of the state's freshwater
habitats. The water in these streams is provided by abundant rainfall and groundwater
springs. These streams erode away the soil in their beds leaving a rocky bottom.
The water of mountain streams tends to be cool in temperature, clean and highly
oxygenated. Streams tend to be shallow with areas of rapid moving water and
slower- moving pools. Many plants and animals can be found along the banks of
mountain streams.
The Piedmont
region is in the northwest of the state and extends from the
mountains to the fall line that crosses the state through Columbia.
It is a generally flat area with gently sloping hills and wide
river valleys. As most of the soil in the piedmont is composed
of clay, a substance difficult for water to flow through, very
little rainwater can soak into the soil. Much of the rainwater
runs off to join the many streams and rivers that criss-cross
the landscape. The Piedmont is a warm, humid area. Because of
its distance from the ocean, it does not receive the temperature
regulating effects the ocean provides and thus has wider temperature
extremes than the coast has. It has a rainfall range of 45 to
60 inches a year.
The Coastal
Plain is an area of flat land that comprises more than half
of the state's area. Though hilly in certain places, most of
the plain is flat and slowly lowers in elevation from the Sandhills
to the coast. This flatness results in many wetlands as the
slope is often too gradual to cause water to continuously flow.
The climate of the region is warm and humid with an average
yearly rainfall of 46 inches.
Blackwater
swamps occur in the Coastal Plain. Because of the flatness of
the plain, the blackwater rivers are slow-moving and follow
a winding, meandering path. When rainfall amounts are high,
the water in these rivers floods over the banks into the woods
and creates the swamp habitat. Depending on rainfall amounts
this swamp habitat can last a few days or a few months. The
still, warm water of blackwater swamps is filled with organic
material and provides habitat for a number of plants and animals.
The Coast
is an area of land at the edge of the ocean that extends from
the North Carolina to the Georgia border that is about ten miles
wide. Of all the regions of South Carolina, the Coast is the
most dynamic. The salinity of the rivers and wetlands in this
region change throughout the day as tides rise and fall. Barrier
islands, beaches and salt marshes will change in size and shape
as waves and ocean currents erode and deposit sand. Because
of sea breezes and proximity to the ocean, the Coast tends to
be cooler than areas even just a few miles more inland from
the coast. The Coast tends to be warm and humid with abundant
rainfall.
The ocean
is a body of water that has high salinity and generally stable
conditions. Though hurricanes and other major storms can stir
up the shallow waters above the continental shelf, ocean waters
are generally not affected by the weather. The average temperature
of the ocean remains fairly stable from year to year. Off the
coast of South Carolina, the ocean seafloor is generally covered
by a sandy or muddy bottom. In certain areas, however, rocky
reefs jut upwards from the bottom of the ocean floor.
Rocky reefs
occur in the waters off of South Carolina's coast. These rocky
reefs, in large part, are formed from the remains of organisms,
like corals and tube-building worms, which lived many, many
years ago. These rocky reefs provide a hard substrate to which
other organisms can attach. If sunlight can penetrate to the
depths of a rocky reef location, seaweeds attach to the reef
and thrive. Other small animals like barnacles, sponges, tunicates
and soft corals also attach and grow upon the reef. The seaweeds
and small animals that make their home on the reef attract larger
predators, like sheepshead and porkfish. Rocky reefs are like
an oasis of life surrounded by more desolate areas of sandy
seafloor. Where rocky reefs occur, an abundance of life abounds.
Because
these regions are so different in their abiotic characteristics,
they support very different communities. By knowing the abiotic
characteristics of an area, one can guess what kinds of animals
might live in its community. In turn, knowing the habitat needs
and adaptations of an organism can be used to determine what
environment it might inhabit. This relationship between organisms
and environments defines communities, and also shows how interconnected
the natural world is.