What are the names of organisms that live on land. Comparison of the main environmental factors that play a limiting role in the ground-air and water environments

There are several main life environments on planet Earth:

water

ground-air

soil

living organism.

Aquatic life environment.

Organisms living in water have adaptations determined by the physical properties of water (density, thermal conductivity, the ability to dissolve salts).

Due to the buoyancy of water, many small inhabitants of the aquatic environment are in suspension and are not able to resist currents. The totality of such small aquatic inhabitants received the name plankton. Plankton includes microscopic algae, small crustaceans, fish eggs and larvae, jellyfish and many other species.

Plankton

Planktonic organisms are carried by the currents, unable to resist them. The presence of plankton in the water makes possible the filtration type of nutrition, i.e., straining, with the help of various devices, small organisms and food particles suspended in water. It is developed in both swimming and sedentary bottom animals, such as sea lilies, mussels, oysters and others. Sedentary Lifetime would be impossible for aquatic inhabitants if there were no plankton, and it, in turn, is possible only in an environment with sufficient density.

The density of water makes it difficult to actively move in it, so fast swimming animals, such as fish, dolphins, squids, must have strong muscles and a streamlined body shape.

mako shark

Due to the high density of water, pressure increases strongly with depth. Deep-sea inhabitants are able to endure pressure, which is thousands of times higher than on the land surface.

Light penetrates into the water only to a shallow depth, so plant organisms can exist only in the upper horizons of the water column. Even in the cleanest seas, photosynthesis is possible only to depths of 100-200 m. There are no plants at great depths, and deep-water animals live in total darkness.

The temperature regime in water bodies is milder than on land. Due to the high heat capacity of water, temperature fluctuations in it are smoothed out, and aquatic inhabitants do not face the need to adapt to severe frosts or forty-degree heat. Only in hot springs can the water temperature approach the boiling point.

One of the difficulties of the life of aquatic inhabitants is the limited amount of oxygen. Its solubility is not very high and, moreover, it greatly decreases when the water is contaminated or heated. Therefore, in reservoirs there are sometimes freezes - the mass death of inhabitants due to a lack of oxygen, which occurs for various reasons.

Fish kill

The salt composition of the environment is also very important for aquatic organisms. Marine species cannot live in fresh waters, and freshwater species cannot live in the seas due to disruption of the cells.

Ground-air environment of life.

This environment has a different set of features. It is generally more complex and diverse than water. It has a lot of oxygen, a lot of light, sharper temperature changes in time and space, much weaker pressure drops, and often there is a moisture deficit. Although many species can fly, and small insects, spiders, microorganisms, seeds, and plant spores are carried by air currents, organisms feed and reproduce on the surface of the ground or plants. In such a low-density medium as air, organisms need support. Therefore, mechanical tissues are developed in terrestrial plants, and in terrestrial animals, the internal or external skeleton is more pronounced than in aquatic ones. The low air density makes it easier to move around in it. About two-thirds of the inhabitants of the land have mastered active and passive flight. Most of them are insects and birds.

black kite

Butterfly Kaligo

Air is a poor conductor of heat. This facilitates the possibility of conserving the heat generated inside the organisms and maintaining a constant temperature in warm-blooded animals. The very development of warm-bloodedness became possible in the terrestrial environment. The ancestors of modern aquatic mammals - whales, dolphins, walruses, seals - once lived on land.

Land dwellers have very diverse adaptations associated with providing themselves with water, especially in arid conditions. In plants, this is a powerful root system, a waterproof layer on the surface of leaves and stems, the ability to regulate the evaporation of water through stomata. In animals, these are also different features of the structure of the body and integument, but, in addition, the corresponding behavior also contributes to maintaining the water balance. They may, for example, migrate to waterholes or actively avoid particularly dry conditions. Some animals can live their entire lives on dry food, such as, for example, jerboas or the well-known clothes moth. In this case, the water needed by the body arises due to the oxidation of the constituent parts of food.

camel thorn root

In the life of terrestrial organisms, many other environmental factors also play an important role, for example, the composition of the air, winds, and the topography of the earth's surface. Weather and climate are of particular importance. The inhabitants of the ground-air environment must be adapted to the climate of the part of the Earth where they live, and endure the variability of weather conditions.

Soil as a living environment.

The soil is a thin layer of the land surface, processed by the activities of living beings. Solid particles are permeated in the soil with pores and cavities filled partly with water and partly with air, so small aquatic organisms can also inhabit the soil. The volume of small cavities in the soil is a very important characteristic of it. In loose soils, it can be up to 70%, and in dense soils - about 20%. In these pores and cavities or on the surface of solid particles, a huge variety of microscopic creatures live: bacteria, fungi, protozoa, roundworms, arthropods. Larger animals make their own passages in the soil.

Soil dwellers

The entire soil is permeated with plant roots. Soil depth is determined by the depth of root penetration and the activity of burrowing animals. It is no more than 1.5-2 m.

The air in soil cavities is always saturated with water vapor, its composition is enriched with carbon dioxide and depleted with oxygen. In this way, the conditions of life in the soil resemble an aquatic environment. On the other hand, the ratio of water and air in soils is constantly changing depending on weather conditions. Temperature fluctuations are very sharp near the surface, but quickly smooth out with depth.

The main feature of the soil environment is the constant supply of organic matter, mainly due to dying plant roots and falling leaves. It is a valuable source of energy for bacteria, fungi and many animals, so the soil is the most saturated environment with life. Her hidden world is very rich and diverse.

Living organisms as a living environment.

wide ribbon

Saint Petersburg State Academy

Veterinary medicine.

Department of General Biology, Ecology and Histology.

Abstract on ecology on the topic:

Ground-air environment, its factors

and adaptation of organisms to them

Completed by: 1st year student

Oh group Pyatochenko N. L.

Checked by: Associate Professor of the Department

Vakhmistrova S. F.

St. Petersburg

Introduction

The conditions of life (conditions of existence) are a set of elements necessary for the body, with which it is inextricably linked and without which it cannot exist.

The adaptations of an organism to its environment are called adaptations. The ability to adapt is one of the main properties of life in general, providing the possibility of its existence, survival and reproduction. Adaptation manifests itself at different levels - from the biochemistry of cells and the behavior of individual organisms to the structure and functioning of communities and ecosystems. Adaptations arise and change during the evolution of a species.

Separate properties or elements of the environment that affect organisms are called environmental factors. Environmental factors are varied. They have a different nature and specificity of action. Environmental factors are divided into two large groups: abiotic and biotic.

Abiotic factors- this is a complex of conditions of the inorganic environment that directly or indirectly affect living organisms: temperature, light, radioactive radiation, pressure, air humidity, salt composition of water, etc.

Biotic factors are all forms of influence of living organisms on each other. Each organism constantly experiences the direct or indirect influence of others, entering into communication with representatives of its own and other species.

In some cases, anthropogenic factors are separated into an independent group along with biotic and abiotic factors, emphasizing the extraordinary effect of the anthropogenic factor.

Anthropogenic factors are all forms of activity of human society that lead to a change in nature as a habitat for other species or directly affect their lives. The importance of anthropogenic impact on the entire living world of the Earth continues to grow rapidly.

Changes in environmental factors over time can be:

1) regular-constant, changing the strength of the impact in connection with the time of day, the season of the year or the rhythm of the tides in the ocean;

2) irregular, without a clear periodicity, for example, changes in weather conditions in different years, storms, downpours, mudflows, etc.;

3) directed over certain or long periods of time, for example, cooling or warming of the climate, overgrowing of a reservoir, etc.

Environmental factors can have various effects on living organisms:

1) as irritants, causing adaptive changes in physiological and biochemical functions;

2) as constraints, causing the impossibility of existence in the data

conditions;

3) as modifiers causing anatomical and morphological changes in organisms;

4) as signals indicating a change in other factors.

Despite the wide variety of environmental factors, a number of general patterns can be distinguished in the nature of their interaction with organisms and in the responses of living beings.

The intensity of the environmental factor, the most favorable for the life of the organism, is the optimum, and giving the worst effect is the pessimum, i.e. conditions under which the vital activity of the organism is maximally inhibited, but it can still exist. So, when growing plants in different temperature conditions, the point at which maximum growth is observed will be the optimum. In most cases, this is a certain temperature range of several degrees, so here it is better to talk about the optimum zone. The entire temperature range (from minimum to maximum), at which growth is still possible, is called the range of stability (endurance), or tolerance. The point limiting its (i.e. minimum and maximum) habitable temperatures is the limit of stability. Between the optimum zone and the stability limit, as the latter is approached, the plant experiences increasing stress, i.e. we are talking about stress zones, or zones of oppression, within the range of stability

Dependence of the action of the environmental factor on its intensity (according to V.A. Radkevich, 1977)

As the scale moves up and down, not only does stress increase, but ultimately, upon reaching the limits of the organism's resistance, its death occurs. Similar experiments can be carried out to test the influence of other factors. The results will graphically follow a similar type of curve.

Ground-air environment of life, its characteristics and forms of adaptation to it.

Life on land required such adaptations that were possible only in highly organized living organisms. The ground-air environment is more difficult for life, it is characterized by a high oxygen content, a small amount of water vapor, low density, etc. This greatly changed the conditions of respiration, water exchange and movement of living beings.

The low air density determines its low lifting force and insignificant bearing capacity. Air organisms must have their own support system that supports the body: plants - a variety of mechanical tissues, animals - a solid or hydrostatic skeleton. In addition, all the inhabitants of the air environment are closely connected with the surface of the earth, which serves them for attachment and support.

Low air density provides low movement resistance. Therefore, many land animals have acquired the ability to fly. 75% of all terrestrial creatures, mainly insects and birds, have adapted to active flight.

Due to the mobility of air, the vertical and horizontal flows of air masses existing in the lower layers of the atmosphere, passive flight of organisms is possible. In this regard, many species have developed anemochory - resettlement with the help of air currents. Anemochory is characteristic of spores, seeds and fruits of plants, protozoan cysts, small insects, spiders, etc. Organisms passively transported by air currents are collectively called aeroplankton.

Terrestrial organisms exist in conditions of relatively low pressure due to the low density of air. Normally, it is equal to 760 mm Hg. As altitude increases, pressure decreases. Low pressure may limit the distribution of species in the mountains. For vertebrates, the upper limit of life is about 60 mm. A decrease in pressure entails a decrease in oxygen supply and dehydration of animals due to an increase in the respiratory rate. Approximately the same limits of advance in the mountains have higher plants. Somewhat more hardy are the arthropods that can be found on glaciers above the vegetation line.

Gas composition of air. In addition to the physical properties of the air environment, its chemical properties are very important for the existence of terrestrial organisms. The gas composition of air in the surface layer of the atmosphere is quite homogeneous in terms of the content of the main components (nitrogen - 78.1%, oxygen - 21.0%, argon 0.9%, carbon dioxide - 0.003% by volume).

The high oxygen content contributed to an increase in the metabolism of terrestrial organisms compared to primary aquatic ones. It was in the terrestrial environment, on the basis of the high efficiency of oxidative processes in the body, that animal homeothermia arose. Oxygen, due to its constant high content in the air, is not a limiting factor for life in the terrestrial environment.

The content of carbon dioxide can vary in certain areas of the surface layer of air within fairly significant limits. Increased air saturation with CO? occurs in zones of volcanic activity, near thermal springs and other underground outlets of this gas. In high concentrations, carbon dioxide is toxic. In nature, such concentrations are rare. Low CO2 content slows down the process of photosynthesis. Under indoor conditions, you can increase the rate of photosynthesis by increasing the concentration of carbon dioxide. This is used in the practice of greenhouses and greenhouses.

Air nitrogen for most inhabitants of the terrestrial environment is an inert gas, but individual microorganisms (nodule bacteria, nitrogen bacteria, blue-green algae, etc.) have the ability to bind it and involve it in the biological cycle of substances.

Moisture deficiency is one of the essential features of the ground-air environment of life. The whole evolution of terrestrial organisms was under the sign of adaptation to the extraction and conservation of moisture. The modes of environmental humidity on land are very diverse - from the complete and constant saturation of air with water vapor in some areas of the tropics to their almost complete absence in the dry air of deserts. The daily and seasonal variability of water vapor content in the atmosphere is also significant. The water supply of terrestrial organisms also depends on the mode of precipitation, the presence of reservoirs, soil moisture reserves, the proximity of groundwater, and so on.

This led to the development of adaptations in terrestrial organisms to various water supply regimes.

Temperature regime. The next distinguishing feature of the air-ground environment is significant temperature fluctuations. In most land areas, daily and annual temperature amplitudes are tens of degrees. The resistance to temperature changes in the environment of terrestrial inhabitants is very different, depending on the particular habitat in which they live. However, in general, terrestrial organisms are much more eurythermic than aquatic organisms.

The conditions of life in the ground-air environment are complicated, in addition, by the existence of weather changes. Weather - continuously changing states of the atmosphere near the borrowed surface, up to a height of about 20 km (troposphere boundary). Weather variability is manifested in the constant variation of the combination of such environmental factors as temperature, air humidity, cloudiness, precipitation, wind strength and direction, etc. The long-term weather regime characterizes the climate of the area. The concept of "Climate" includes not only the average values ​​of meteorological phenomena, but also their annual and daily course, deviation from it and their frequency. The climate is determined by the geographical conditions of the area. The main climatic factors - temperature and humidity - are measured by the amount of precipitation and the saturation of the air with water vapor.

For most terrestrial organisms, especially small ones, the climate of the area is not so much important as the conditions of their immediate habitat. Very often, local elements of the environment (relief, exposition, vegetation, etc.) change the regime of temperatures, humidity, light, air movement in a particular area in such a way that it differs significantly from the climatic conditions of the area. Such modifications of the climate, which take shape in the surface layer of air, are called the microclimate. In each zone, the microclimate is very diverse. Microclimates of very small areas can be distinguished.

The light regime of the ground-air environment also has some features. The intensity and amount of light here are the greatest and practically do not limit the life of green plants, as in water or soil. On land, the existence of extremely photophilous species is possible. For the vast majority of terrestrial animals with diurnal and even nocturnal activity, vision is one of the main ways of orientation. In terrestrial animals, vision is essential for finding prey, and many species even have color vision. In this regard, the victims develop such adaptive features as a defensive reaction, masking and warning coloration, mimicry, etc.

In aquatic life, such adaptations are much less developed. The emergence of brightly colored flowers of higher plants is also associated with the peculiarities of the apparatus of pollinators and, ultimately, with the light regime of the environment.

The relief of the terrain and the properties of the soil are also the conditions for the life of terrestrial organisms and, first of all, plants. The properties of the earth's surface that have an ecological impact on its inhabitants are united by "edaphic environmental factors" (from the Greek "edafos" - "soil").

In relation to different properties of soils, a number of ecological groups of plants can be distinguished. So, according to the reaction to the acidity of the soil, they distinguish:

1) acidophilic species - grow on acidic soils with a pH of at least 6.7 (plants of sphagnum bogs);

2) neutrophils tend to grow on soils with a pH of 6.7–7.0 (most cultivated plants);

3) basiphilic grow at a pH of more than 7.0 (mordovnik, forest anemone);

4) indifferent ones can grow on soils with different pH values ​​(lily of the valley).

Plants also differ in relation to soil moisture. Certain species are confined to different substrates, for example, petrophytes grow on stony soils, and pasmophytes inhabit free-flowing sands.

The terrain and the nature of the soil affect the specifics of the movement of animals: for example, ungulates, ostriches, bustards living in open spaces, hard ground, to enhance repulsion when running. In lizards that live in loose sands, the fingers are fringed with horny scales that increase support. For terrestrial inhabitants digging holes, dense soil is unfavorable. The nature of the soil in certain cases affects the distribution of terrestrial animals that dig holes or burrow into the ground, or lay eggs in the soil, etc.

On the composition of air.

The gas composition of the air we breathe is 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen and 1% other gases. But in the atmosphere of large industrial cities, this ratio is often violated. A significant proportion is made up of harmful impurities caused by emissions from enterprises and vehicles. Motor transport brings many impurities into the atmosphere: hydrocarbons of unknown composition, benzo (a) pyrene, carbon dioxide, sulfur and nitrogen compounds, lead, carbon monoxide.

The atmosphere consists of a mixture of a number of gases - air, in which colloidal impurities are suspended - dust, droplets, crystals, etc. The composition of atmospheric air changes little with height. However, starting from a height of about 100 km, along with molecular oxygen and nitrogen, atomic oxygen also appears as a result of the dissociation of molecules, and the gravitational separation of gases begins. Above 300 km, atomic oxygen predominates in the atmosphere, above 1000 km - helium and then atomic hydrogen. The pressure and density of the atmosphere decrease with height; about half of the total mass of the atmosphere is concentrated in the lower 5 km, 9/10 - in the lower 20 km and 99.5% - in the lower 80 km. At altitudes of about 750 km, the air density drops to 10-10 g/m3 (whereas near the earth's surface it is about 103 g/m3), but even such a low density is still sufficient for the occurrence of auroras. The atmosphere does not have a sharp upper boundary; the density of its constituent gases

The composition of the atmospheric air that each of us breathes includes several gases, the main of which are: nitrogen (78.09%), oxygen (20.95%), hydrogen (0.01%) carbon dioxide (carbon dioxide) (0.03%) and inert gases (0.93%). In addition, there is always a certain amount of water vapor in the air, the amount of which always changes with temperature: the higher the temperature, the greater the vapor content and vice versa. Due to fluctuations in the amount of water vapor in the air, the percentage of gases in it is also variable. All gases in air are colorless and odorless. The weight of air varies depending not only on temperature, but also on the content of water vapor in it. At the same temperature, the weight of dry air is greater than that of moist air, because water vapor is much lighter than air vapor.

The table shows the gas composition of the atmosphere in volumetric mass ratio, as well as the lifetime of the main components:

Component % by volume % mass
N2 78,09 75,50
O2 20,95 23,15
Ar 0,933 1,292
CO2 0,03 0,046
Ne 1,8 10-3 1,4 10-3
He 4,6 10-4 6,4 10-5
CH4 1,52 10-4 8,4 10-5
kr 1,14 10-4 3 10-4
H2 5 10-5 8 10-5
N2O 5 10-5 8 10-5
Xe 8,6 10-6 4 10-5
O3 3 10-7 - 3 10-6 5 10-7 - 5 10-6
Rn 6 10-18 4,5 10-17

The properties of the gases that make up atmospheric air change under pressure.

For example: oxygen under pressure of more than 2 atmospheres has a toxic effect on the body.

Nitrogen under pressure over 5 atmospheres has a narcotic effect (nitrogen intoxication). A rapid rise from the depth causes decompression sickness due to the rapid release of nitrogen bubbles from the blood, as if foaming it.

An increase in carbon dioxide of more than 3% in the respiratory mixture causes death.

Each component that is part of the air, with an increase in pressure to certain limits, becomes a poison that can poison the body.

Studies of the gas composition of the atmosphere. atmospheric chemistry

For the history of the rapid development of a relatively young branch of science called atmospheric chemistry, the term “spurt” (throw) used in high-speed sports is most suitable. The shot from the starting pistol, perhaps, was two articles published in the early 1970s. They dealt with the possible destruction of stratospheric ozone by nitrogen oxides - NO and NO2. The first belonged to the future Nobel laureate, and then an employee of the Stockholm University, P. Krutzen, who considered the probable source of nitrogen oxides in the stratosphere to be naturally occurring nitrous oxide N2O that decays under the action of sunlight. The author of the second article, a chemist from the University of California at Berkeley G. Johnston, suggested that nitrogen oxides appear in the stratosphere as a result of human activity, namely, from the emissions of combustion products from jet engines of high-altitude aircraft.

Of course, the above hypotheses did not arise from scratch. The ratio of at least the main components in the atmospheric air - molecules of nitrogen, oxygen, water vapor, etc. - was known much earlier. Already in the second half of the XIX century. in Europe, measurements of ozone concentration in surface air were made. In the 1930s, the English scientist S. Chapman discovered the mechanism of ozone formation in a purely oxygen atmosphere, indicating a set of interactions of oxygen atoms and molecules, as well as ozone in the absence of any other air components. However, in the late 1950s, meteorological rocket measurements showed that there was much less ozone in the stratosphere than it should be according to the Chapman reaction cycle. Although this mechanism remains fundamental to this day, it has become clear that there are some other processes that are also actively involved in the formation of atmospheric ozone.

It is worth mentioning that by the beginning of the 1970s, knowledge in the field of atmospheric chemistry was mainly obtained through the efforts of individual scientists, whose research was not united by any socially significant concept and was most often purely academic in nature. Another thing is the work of Johnston: according to his calculations, 500 aircraft, flying 7 hours a day, could reduce the amount of stratospheric ozone by at least 10%! And if these assessments were fair, then the problem would immediately become a socio-economic one, since in this case all programs for the development of supersonic transport aviation and related infrastructure would have to undergo a significant adjustment, and perhaps even closure. In addition, then for the first time the question really arose that anthropogenic activity could cause not a local, but a global cataclysm. Naturally, in the current situation, the theory needed a very tough and at the same time prompt verification.

Recall that the essence of the above hypothesis was that nitric oxide reacts with ozone NO + O3 ® ® NO2 + O2, then the nitrogen dioxide formed in this reaction reacts with the oxygen atom NO2 + O ® NO + O2, thereby restoring the presence NO in the atmosphere, while the ozone molecule is irretrievably lost. In this case, such a pair of reactions, constituting the nitrogen catalytic cycle of ozone destruction, is repeated until any chemical or physical processes lead to the removal of nitrogen oxides from the atmosphere. So, for example, NO2 is oxidized to nitric acid HNO3, which is highly soluble in water, and therefore is removed from the atmosphere by clouds and precipitation. The nitrogen catalytic cycle is very efficient: one NO molecule manages to destroy tens of thousands of ozone molecules during its stay in the atmosphere.

But, as you know, trouble does not come alone. Soon, specialists from US universities - Michigan (R. Stolyarsky and R. Cicerone) and Harvard (S. Wofsi and M. McElroy) - discovered that ozone could have an even more merciless enemy - chlorine compounds. According to their estimates, the chlorine catalytic cycle of ozone destruction (reactions Cl + O3 ® ClO + O2 and ClO + O ® Cl + O2) was several times more efficient than the nitrogen one. The only reason for cautious optimism was that the amount of naturally occurring chlorine in the atmosphere is relatively small, which means that the overall effect of its impact on ozone may not be too strong. However, the situation changed dramatically when, in 1974, employees of the University of California at Irvine, S. Rowland and M. Molina, found that the source of chlorine in the stratosphere is chlorofluorohydrocarbon compounds (CFCs), which are widely used in refrigeration units, aerosol packages, etc. Being non-flammable, non-toxic and chemically passive, these substances are slowly transported by ascending air currents from the earth's surface to the stratosphere, where their molecules are destroyed by sunlight, resulting in the release of free chlorine atoms. The industrial production of CFCs, which began in the 1930s, and their emissions into the atmosphere steadily increased in all subsequent years, especially in the 70s and 80s. Thus, within a very short period of time, theorists have identified two problems in atmospheric chemistry caused by intense anthropogenic pollution.

However, in order to test the viability of the proposed hypotheses, it was necessary to perform many tasks.

First of all, expand laboratory research, during which it would be possible to determine or clarify the rates of photochemical reactions between various components of atmospheric air. It must be said that the very meager data on these velocities that existed at that time also had a fair (up to several hundred percent) errors. In addition, the conditions under which the measurements were made, as a rule, did not correspond much to the realities of the atmosphere, which seriously aggravated the error, since the intensity of most reactions depended on temperature, and sometimes on pressure or atmospheric air density.

Secondly, intensively study the radiation-optical properties of a number of small atmospheric gases in laboratory conditions. Molecules of a significant number of components of atmospheric air are destroyed by the ultraviolet radiation of the Sun (in photolysis reactions), among them are not only the CFCs mentioned above, but also molecular oxygen, ozone, nitrogen oxides and many others. Therefore, estimates of the parameters of each photolysis reaction were just as necessary and important for the correct reproduction of atmospheric chemical processes as were the rates of reactions between different molecules.

Thirdly, it was necessary to create mathematical models capable of describing the mutual chemical transformations of atmospheric air components as fully as possible. As already mentioned, the productivity of ozone destruction in catalytic cycles is determined by how long the catalyst (NO, Cl, or some other) stays in the atmosphere. It is clear that such a catalyst, generally speaking, could react with any of the dozens of atmospheric air components, quickly degrading in the process, and then the damage to stratospheric ozone would be much less than expected. On the other hand, when many chemical transformations occur in the atmosphere every second, it is quite likely that other mechanisms will be identified that directly or indirectly affect the formation and destruction of ozone. Finally, such models are able to identify and evaluate the significance of individual reactions or their groups in the formation of other gases that make up atmospheric air, as well as allow calculation of gas concentrations that are inaccessible to measurements.

And finally it was necessary to organize a wide network for measuring the content of various gases in the air, including nitrogen compounds, chlorine, etc., using ground stations, launching weather balloons and meteorological rockets, and aircraft flights for this purpose. Of course, creating a database was the most expensive task, which could not be solved in a short time. However, only measurements could provide a starting point for theoretical research, being at the same time a touchstone of the truth of the hypotheses expressed.

Since the beginning of the 1970s, at least once every three years, special, constantly updated collections containing information on all significant atmospheric reactions, including photolysis reactions, have been published. Moreover, the error in determining the parameters of reactions between the gaseous components of air today is, as a rule, 10-20%.

The second half of this decade witnessed the rapid development of models describing chemical transformations in the atmosphere. Most of them were created in the USA, but they also appeared in Europe and the USSR. At first these were boxed (zero-dimensional), and then one-dimensional models. The former reproduced with varying degrees of reliability the content of the main atmospheric gases in a given volume - a box (hence their name) - as a result of chemical interactions between them. Since the conservation of the total mass of the air mixture was postulated, the removal of any of its fraction from the box, for example, by the wind, was not considered. Box models were convenient for elucidating the role of individual reactions or their groups in the processes of chemical formation and destruction of atmospheric gases, for assessing the sensitivity of the atmospheric gas composition to inaccuracies in determining reaction rates. With their help, the researchers could, by setting atmospheric parameters in the box (in particular, air temperature and density) corresponding to the altitude of aviation flights, estimate in a rough approximation how the concentrations of atmospheric impurities will change as a result of emissions of combustion products by aircraft engines. At the same time, box models were unsuitable for studying the problem of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), since they could not describe the process of their movement from the earth's surface into the stratosphere. This is where one-dimensional models came in handy, which combined taking into account a detailed description of chemical interactions in the atmosphere and the transport of impurities in the vertical direction. And although the vertical transfer was set rather roughly here, the use of one-dimensional models was a noticeable step forward, since they made it possible to somehow describe real phenomena.

Looking back, we can say that our modern knowledge is largely based on the rough work carried out in those years with the help of one-dimensional and boxed models. It made it possible to determine the mechanisms of formation of the gaseous composition of the atmosphere, to estimate the intensity of chemical sources and sinks of individual gases. An important feature of this stage in the development of atmospheric chemistry is that new ideas that were born were tested on models and widely discussed among specialists. The results obtained were often compared with the estimates of other scientific groups, since field measurements were clearly not enough, and their accuracy was very low. In addition, to confirm the correctness of modeling certain chemical interactions, it was necessary to carry out complex measurements, when the concentrations of all participating reagents would be determined simultaneously, which at that time, and even now, was practically impossible. (Until now, only a few measurements of the complex of gases from the Shuttle have been carried out over 2-5 days.) Therefore, model studies were ahead of experimental ones, and the theory did not so much explain the field observations as contributed to their optimal planning. For example, a compound such as chlorine nitrate ClONO2 first appeared in model studies and only then was discovered in the atmosphere. It was even difficult to compare the available measurements with model estimates, since the one-dimensional model could not take into account horizontal air movements, which is why the atmosphere was assumed to be horizontally homogeneous, and the obtained model results corresponded to some global mean state of it. However, in reality, the composition of the air over the industrial regions of Europe or the United States is very different from its composition over Australia or over the Pacific Ocean. Therefore, the results of any natural observation largely depend on the place and time of measurements and, of course, do not exactly correspond to the global average.

To eliminate this gap in modeling, in the 1980s, researchers created two-dimensional models that, along with vertical transport, also took into account air transport along the meridian (along the circle of latitude, the atmosphere was still considered homogeneous). The creation of such models at first was associated with significant difficulties.

First of all, the number of external model parameters sharply increased: at each grid node, it was necessary to set the vertical and interlatitudinal transport velocities, air temperature and density, and so on. Many parameters (first of all, the above-mentioned speeds) were not reliably determined in experiments and, therefore, were selected on the basis of qualitative considerations.

Secondly, the state of computer technology of that time significantly hindered the full development of two-dimensional models. In contrast to economical one-dimensional and especially boxed two-dimensional models, they required significantly more memory and computer time. And as a result, their creators were forced to significantly simplify the schemes for accounting for chemical transformations in the atmosphere. Nevertheless, a complex of atmospheric studies, both model and full-scale using satellites, made it possible to draw a relatively harmonious, although far from complete, picture of the composition of the atmosphere, as well as to establish the main cause-and-effect relationships that cause changes in the content of individual air components. In particular, numerous studies have shown that aircraft flights in the troposphere do not cause any significant harm to tropospheric ozone, but their rise into the stratosphere seems to have negative consequences for the ozonosphere. The opinion of most experts on the role of CFCs was almost unanimous: the hypothesis of Rowland and Molin is confirmed, and these substances really contribute to the destruction of stratospheric ozone, and the regular increase in their industrial production is a time bomb, since the decay of CFCs does not occur immediately, but after tens and hundreds of years , so the effects of pollution will affect the atmosphere for a very long time. Moreover, if stored for a long time, chlorofluorocarbons can reach any, the most remote point of the atmosphere, and, therefore, this is a threat on a global scale. The time has come for coordinated political decisions.

In 1985, with the participation of 44 countries in Vienna, a convention for the protection of the ozone layer was developed and adopted, which stimulated its comprehensive study. However, the question of what to do with CFCs was still open. It was impossible to let things take their course on the principle of “it will resolve itself”, but it was also impossible to ban the production of these substances overnight without huge damage to the economy. It would seem that there is a simple solution: you need to replace CFCs with other substances capable of performing the same functions (for example, in refrigeration units) and at the same time harmless or at least less dangerous for ozone. But implementing simple solutions is often very difficult. Not only did the creation of such substances and the establishment of their production require huge investments and time, criteria were needed to assess the impact of any of them on the atmosphere and climate.

Theorists are back in the spotlight. D. Webbles from the Livermore National Laboratory suggested using the ozone-depleting potential for this purpose, which showed how much the molecule of the substitute substance is stronger (or weaker) than the CFCl3 (freon-11) molecule affects atmospheric ozone. At that time, it was also well known that the temperature of the surface air layer significantly depends on the concentration of certain gaseous impurities (they were called greenhouse gases), primarily carbon dioxide CO2, water vapor H2O, ozone, etc. CFCs were also included in this category, and many their potential replacements. Measurements have shown that during the industrial revolution, the average annual global temperature of the surface air layer has grown and continues to grow, and this indicates significant and not always desirable changes in the Earth's climate. In order to bring this situation under control, along with the ozone-depleting potential of the substance, they also began to consider its global warming potential. This index indicated how much stronger or weaker the studied compound affects the air temperature than the same amount of carbon dioxide. The calculations performed showed that CFCs and alternatives had very high global warming potentials, but because their concentrations in the atmosphere were much lower than the concentrations of CO2, H2O or O3, their total contribution to global warming remained negligible. For the time being…

Tables of calculated values ​​for the ozone depletion and global warming potentials of chlorofluorocarbons and their possible substitutes formed the basis of international decisions to reduce and subsequently ban the production and use of many CFCs (the Montreal Protocol of 1987 and its later additions). Perhaps the experts gathered in Montreal would not have been so unanimous (after all, the articles of the Protocol were based on the “thinkings” of theorists not confirmed by natural experiments), but another interested “person” spoke out for signing this document - the atmosphere itself.

The message about the discovery by British scientists at the end of 1985 of the "ozone hole" over Antarctica became, not without the participation of journalists, the sensation of the year, and the reaction of the world community to this message can be best described in one short word - shock. It is one thing when the threat of destruction of the ozone layer exists only in the long term, another thing when we are all faced with a fait accompli. Neither the townsfolk, nor politicians, nor specialists-theorists were ready for this.

It quickly became clear that none of the then existing models could reproduce such a significant reduction in ozone. This means that some important natural phenomena were either not taken into account or underestimated. Soon, field studies carried out as part of the program for studying the Antarctic phenomenon established that an important role in the formation of the “ozone hole”, along with the usual (gas-phase) atmospheric reactions, is played by the features of atmospheric air transport in the Antarctic stratosphere (its almost complete isolation from the rest of the atmosphere in winter), as well as at that time little studied heterogeneous reactions (reactions on the surface of atmospheric aerosols - dust particles, soot, ice floes, water drops, etc.). Only taking into account the above factors made it possible to achieve satisfactory agreement between the model results and observational data. And the lessons taught by the Antarctic “ozone hole” seriously affected the further development of atmospheric chemistry.

First, a sharp impetus was given to a detailed study of heterogeneous processes proceeding according to laws different from those that determine gas-phase processes. Secondly, a clear realization has come that in a complex system, which is the atmosphere, the behavior of its elements depends on a whole complex of internal connections. In other words, the content of gases in the atmosphere is determined not only by the intensity of chemical processes, but also by air temperature, the transfer of air masses, the characteristics of aerosol pollution of various parts of the atmosphere, etc. In turn, radiative heating and cooling, which form the temperature field of stratospheric air, depend on the concentration and spatial distribution of greenhouse gases, and, consequently, from atmospheric dynamic processes. Finally, non-uniform radiative heating of different belts of the globe and parts of the atmosphere generates atmospheric air movements and controls their intensity. Thus, not taking into account any feedback in the models can be fraught with large errors in the results obtained (although, we note in passing, and excessive complication of the model without urgent need is just as inappropriate as firing cannons at known representatives of birds).

If the relationship between air temperature and its gas composition was taken into account in two-dimensional models back in the 80s, then the use of three-dimensional models of the general circulation of the atmosphere to describe the distribution of atmospheric impurities became possible due to the computer boom only in the 90s. The first such general circulation models were used to describe the spatial distribution of chemically passive substances - tracers. Later, due to insufficient computer memory, chemical processes were set by only one parameter - the residence time of an impurity in the atmosphere, and only relatively recently, blocks of chemical transformations became full-fledged parts of three-dimensional models. Although the difficulties of representing atmospheric chemical processes in 3D in detail still remain, today they no longer seem insurmountable, and the best 3D models include hundreds of chemical reactions, along with the actual climatic transport of air in the global atmosphere.

At the same time, the widespread use of modern models does not at all cast doubt on the usefulness of the simpler ones mentioned above. It is well known that the more complex the model, the more difficult it is to separate the “signal” from the “model noise”, analyze the results obtained, identify the main cause-and-effect mechanisms, evaluate the impact of certain phenomena on the final result (and, therefore, the expediency of taking them into account in the model) . And here, simpler models serve as an ideal testing ground, they allow you to get preliminary estimates that are later used in three-dimensional models, study new natural phenomena before they are included in more complex ones, etc.

Rapid scientific and technological progress has given rise to several other areas of research, one way or another related to atmospheric chemistry.

Satellite monitoring of the atmosphere. When regular replenishment of the database from satellites was established, for most of the most important components of the atmosphere, covering almost the entire globe, it became necessary to improve the methods of their processing. Here, there is data filtering (separation of the signal and measurement errors), and restoration of vertical profiles of impurity concentrations from their total contents in the atmospheric column, and data interpolation in those areas where direct measurements are impossible for technical reasons. In addition, satellite monitoring is complemented by airborne expeditions that are planned to solve various problems, for example, in the tropical Pacific Ocean, the North Atlantic, and even in the Arctic summer stratosphere.

An important part of modern research is the assimilation (assimilation) of these databases in models of varying complexity. In this case, the parameters are selected from the condition of the closest proximity of the measured and model values ​​of the content of impurities at points (regions). Thus, the quality of the models is checked, as well as the extrapolation of the measured values ​​beyond the regions and periods of measurements.

Estimation of concentrations of short-lived atmospheric impurities. Atmospheric radicals, which play a key role in atmospheric chemistry, such as hydroxyl OH, perhydroxyl HO2, nitric oxide NO, atomic oxygen in the excited state O (1D), etc., have the highest chemical reactivity and, therefore, very small (several seconds or minutes ) “lifetime” in the atmosphere. Therefore, the measurement of such radicals is extremely difficult, and the reconstruction of their content in the air is often carried out using model ratios of chemical sources and sinks of these radicals. For a long time, the intensities of sources and sinks were calculated from model data. With the advent of appropriate measurements, it became possible to reconstruct the concentrations of radicals on their basis, while improving models and expanding information about the gaseous composition of the atmosphere.

Reconstruction of the gas composition of the atmosphere in the pre-industrial period and earlier epochs of the Earth. Thanks to measurements in Antarctic and Greenland ice cores, whose age ranges from hundreds to hundreds of thousands of years, the concentrations of carbon dioxide, nitrous oxide, methane, carbon monoxide, as well as the temperature of those times, became known. Model reconstruction of the state of the atmosphere in those epochs and its comparison with the current one makes it possible to trace the evolution of the earth's atmosphere and assess the degree of human impact on the natural environment.

Assessment of the intensity of the sources of the most important air components. Systematic measurements of the content of gases in the surface air, such as methane, carbon monoxide, nitrogen oxides, became the basis for solving the inverse problem: estimating the amount of emissions into the atmosphere of gases from ground sources, according to their known concentrations. Unfortunately, only inventorying the perpetrators of the global turmoil - CFCs - is a relatively simple task, since almost all of these substances do not have natural sources and their total amount released into the atmosphere is limited by their production volume. The rest of the gases have heterogeneous and comparable power sources. For example, the source of methane is waterlogged areas, swamps, oil wells, coal mines; this compound is secreted by termite colonies and is even a waste product of cattle. Carbon monoxide enters the atmosphere as part of exhaust gases, as a result of fuel combustion, as well as during the oxidation of methane and many organic compounds. It is difficult to directly measure emissions of these gases, but techniques have been developed to estimate the global sources of pollutant gases, the error of which has been significantly reduced in recent years, although it remains large.

Prediction of changes in the composition of the atmosphere and climate of the Earth Considering trends - trends in the content of atmospheric gases, estimates of their sources, growth rates of the Earth's population, the rate of increase in the production of all types of energy, etc. - special groups of experts create and constantly adjust scenarios for probable atmospheric pollution in the next 10, 30, 100 years. Based on them, with the help of models, possible changes in the gas composition, temperature and atmospheric circulation are predicted. Thus, it is possible to detect unfavorable trends in the state of the atmosphere in advance and try to eliminate them. The Antarctic shock of 1985 must not be repeated.

The phenomenon of the greenhouse effect of the atmosphere

In recent years, it has become clear that the analogy between an ordinary greenhouse and the greenhouse effect of the atmosphere is not entirely correct. At the end of the last century, the famous American physicist Wood, replacing ordinary glass with quartz in a laboratory model of a greenhouse and not finding any changes in the functioning of the greenhouse, showed that it was not a matter of delaying the thermal radiation of the soil by glass that transmits solar radiation, the role of glass in this case consists only in “cutting off” the turbulent heat exchange between the soil surface and the atmosphere.

The greenhouse (greenhouse) effect of the atmosphere is its property to let solar radiation through, but to delay terrestrial radiation, contributing to the accumulation of heat by the earth. The earth's atmosphere transmits relatively well short-wave solar radiation, which is almost completely absorbed by the earth's surface. Heating up due to the absorption of solar radiation, the earth's surface becomes a source of terrestrial, mainly long-wave, radiation, some of which goes into outer space.

Effect of Increasing CO2 Concentration

Scientists - researchers continue to argue about the composition of the so-called greenhouse gases. Of greatest interest in this regard is the effect of increasing concentrations of carbon dioxide (CO2) on the greenhouse effect of the atmosphere. An opinion is expressed that the well-known scheme: “an increase in the concentration of carbon dioxide enhances the greenhouse effect, which leads to a warming of the global climate” is extremely simplified and very far from reality, since the most important “greenhouse gas” is not CO2 at all, but water vapor. At the same time, the reservation that the concentration of water vapor in the atmosphere is determined only by the parameters of the climate system itself is no longer tenable today, since the anthropogenic impact on the global water cycle has been convincingly proven.

As scientific hypotheses, we point out the following consequences of the coming greenhouse effect. First of all, According to the most common estimates, by the end of the 21st century, the content of atmospheric CO2 will double, which will inevitably lead to an increase in the average global surface temperature by 3–5 o C. At the same time, warming is expected in drier summers in the temperate latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere.

Secondly, it is assumed that such an increase in the average global surface temperature will lead to an increase in the level of the World Ocean by 20 - 165 centimeters due to the thermal expansion of water. As for the ice sheet of Antarctica, its destruction is not inevitable, since higher temperatures are needed for melting. In any case, the process of melting Antarctic ice will take a very long time.

Thirdly, Atmospheric CO2 concentrations can have a very beneficial effect on crop yields. The results of the experiments carried out allow us to assume that under conditions of a progressive increase in the CO2 content in the air, natural and cultivated vegetation will reach an optimal state; the leaf surface of plants will increase, the specific gravity of the dry matter of leaves will increase, the average size of fruits and the number of seeds will increase, the ripening of cereals will accelerate, and their yield will increase.

Fourth, at high latitudes, natural forests, especially boreal forests, can be very sensitive to temperature changes. Warming can lead to a sharp reduction in the area of ​​boreal forests, as well as to the movement of their border to the north, the forests of the tropics and subtropics will probably be more sensitive to changes in precipitation rather than temperature.

The light energy of the sun penetrates the atmosphere, is absorbed by the earth's surface and heats it. In this case, light energy is converted into thermal energy, which is released in the form of infrared or thermal radiation. This infrared radiation reflected from the surface of the earth is absorbed by carbon dioxide, while it heats up itself and heats the atmosphere. This means that the more carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, the more it captures the climate on the planet. The same thing happens in greenhouses, which is why this phenomenon is called the greenhouse effect.

If the so-called greenhouse gases continue to flow at the current rate, then in the next century the average temperature of the Earth will increase by 4 - 5 o C, which can lead to global warming of the planet.

Conclusion

Changing your attitude to nature does not mean at all that you should abandon technological progress. Stopping it will not solve the problem, but can only delay its solution. We must persistently and patiently strive to reduce emissions through the introduction of new environmental technologies to save raw materials, energy consumption and increase the number of planted plantings, educational activities of the ecological worldview among the population.

So, for example, in the USA, one of the enterprises for the production of synthetic rubber is located next to residential areas, and this does not cause protests from residents, because environmentally friendly technological schemes are operating, which in the past, with old technologies, were not clean.

This means that a strict selection of technologies that meet the most stringent criteria is needed, modern promising technologies will make it possible to achieve a high level of environmental friendliness in production in all industries and transport, as well as an increase in the number of planted green spaces in industrial zones and cities.

In recent years, experiment has taken the leading position in the development of atmospheric chemistry, and the place of theory is the same as in the classical, respectable sciences. But there are still areas where it is theoretical research that remains a priority: for example, only model experiments are able to predict changes in the composition of the atmosphere or evaluate the effectiveness of restrictive measures implemented under the Montreal Protocol. Starting with the solution of an important, but private problem, today atmospheric chemistry, in cooperation with related disciplines, covers the entire complex of problems of studying and protecting the environment. Perhaps we can say that the first years of the formation of atmospheric chemistry passed under the motto: “Do not be late!” The starting spurt is over, the run continues.

  • II. Distribute the characteristics according to the organoids of the cell (put the letters corresponding to the characteristics of the organoid in front of the name of the organoid). (26 points)
  • II. EDUCATIONAL AND METHODOLOGICAL RECOMMENDATIONS FOR FULL-TIME STUDENTS OF ALL NON-PHILOSOPHICAL SPECIALTIES 1 page

  • Features of the ground-air environment of habitation. In the ground-air environment, there is enough light and air. But humidity and air temperature are very diverse. In swampy areas there is an excessive amount of moisture, in the steppes it is much less. There are also daily and seasonal fluctuations in temperature.

    Adaptation of organisms to life in conditions of different temperatures and humidity. A large number of adaptations of organisms in the ground-air environment are associated with temperature and humidity. Animals of the steppe (scorpions, tarantula and karakurt spiders, ground squirrels, mice, voles) hide from the heat in burrows. Plants are protected from hot sunlight by increased evaporation of water from the leaves. In animals, this adaptation is the release of sweat.

    With the onset of cold weather, birds fly away to warmer climes in order to return again in the spring to the place where they were born and where they will give birth. A feature of the ground-air environment in the southern regions of Ukraine or in the Crimea is an insufficient amount of moisture.

    Familiarize yourself with fig. 151 with plants that have adapted to similar conditions.

    Adaptation of organisms to movement in the ground-air environment. For many animals of the ground-air environment, it is important to move along the earth's surface or in the air. To do this, they have certain adaptations, and their limbs have a different structure. Some have adapted to running (wolf, horse), others to jumping (kangaroo, jerboa, grasshopper), others to flight (birds, bats, insects) (Fig. 152). Snakes, vipers do not have limbs. They move by bending the body.

    Much fewer organisms have adapted to life high in the mountains, since there is little soil, moisture and air for plants, and animals have difficulty moving. But some animals, such as mountain goats moufflons (Fig. 154), are able to move almost vertically up and down if there are even slight irregularities. Therefore, they can live high in the mountains. material from the site

    Adaptation of organisms to different lighting conditions. One of the adaptations of plants to different lighting is the direction of the leaves to the light. In the shade, the leaves are arranged horizontally: this way they get more light rays. Light-loving snowdrop and ryast develop and bloom in early spring. During this period, they have enough light, since the leaves on the trees in the forest have not yet appeared.

    Adaptation of animals to the specified factor of the ground-air habitat - the structure and size of the eyes. In most animals of this environment, the organs of vision are well developed. For example, a hawk from the height of its flight sees a mouse running across the field.

    Over many centuries of development, the organisms of the ground-air environment have adapted to the influence of its factors.

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    A NEW LOOK Adaptations of organisms to living in the ground-air environmentLiving organisms in ground-air environment surrounded by air. The air has a low density and, as a result, a low lifting force, insignificant support and low resistance to the movement of organisms. Terrestrial organisms live in conditions of relatively low and constant atmospheric pressure, also due to low air density.

    Air has a low heat capacity, so it heats up quickly and cools down just as quickly. The rate of this process is inversely related to the amount of water vapor it contains.

    Light air masses have greater mobility, both horizontally and vertically. This helps to maintain a constant level of the gas composition of the air. The oxygen content in air is much higher than in water, so oxygen on land is not a limiting factor.

    Light in conditions of terrestrial habitation, due to the high transparency of the atmosphere, does not act as a limiting factor, in contrast to the aquatic environment.

    The ground-air environment has different modes of humidity: from the complete and constant saturation of air with water vapor in some areas of the tropics to their almost complete absence in the dry air of deserts. The variability of air humidity during the day and seasons of the year is also great.

    Moisture on land acts as a limiting factor.

    Due to the presence of gravity and the lack of buoyancy, the terrestrial inhabitants of the land have well-developed support systems that support their body. In plants, these are various mechanical tissues, especially powerfully developed in trees. Animals have developed both an external (arthropod) and an internal (chordate) skeleton during the evolutionary process. Some groups of animals have a hydroskeleton (roundworms and annelids). Problems in terrestrial organisms with maintaining the body in space and overcoming the forces of gravity have limited their maximum mass and size. The largest land animals are inferior in size and mass to the giants of the aquatic environment (the mass of an elephant reaches 5 tons, and a blue whale - 150 tons).

    The low air resistance contributed to the progressive evolution of the locomotion systems of terrestrial animals. So, mammals acquired the highest speed of movement on land, and birds mastered the air environment, having developed the ability to fly.

    High mobility of air in vertical and horizontal directions is used by some terrestrial organisms at different stages of their development for settling with the help of air currents (young spiders, insects, spores, seeds, plant fruits, protist cysts). By analogy with aquatic planktonic organisms, as adaptations for passive soaring in the air, insects have developed similar adaptations - small body sizes, various outgrowths that increase the relative surface of the body or some of its parts. Seeds and fruits dispersed by the wind have various pterygoid and paragayate appendages that increase their ability to plan.

    The adaptations of terrestrial organisms to the preservation of moisture are also diverse. In insects, the body is reliably protected from drying out by a multilayer chitinized cuticle, the outer layer of which contains fats and wax-like substances. Similar water-saving adaptations are also developed in reptiles. The ability for internal fertilization developed in terrestrial animals made them independent of the presence of an aquatic environment.

    The soil is a complex system consisting of solid particles surrounded by air and water.

    Depending on the type - clayey, sandy, clayey-sandy and others - the soil is more or less permeated with cavities filled with a mixture of gases and aqueous solutions. In the soil, in comparison with the surface layer of air, temperature fluctuations are smoothed out, and at a depth of 1 m, seasonal temperature changes are also imperceptible.

    The uppermost soil horizon contains more or less humus, on which plant productivity depends. The middle layer located under it contains washed out from the top layer and converted substances. The bottom layer is mother breed.

    Water in the soil is present in voids, the smallest spaces. The composition of soil air changes dramatically with depth: the oxygen content decreases, and carbon dioxide increases. When the soil is flooded with water or intensive decay of organic residues, anoxic zones appear. Thus, the conditions of existence in the soil are different at its different horizons.

    In the course of evolution, this environment was mastered later than the water. Its peculiarity lies in the fact that it is gaseous, therefore it is characterized by low humidity, density and pressure, high oxygen content.

    In the course of evolution, living organisms have developed the necessary anatomical, morphological, physiological, behavioral and other adaptations.

    Animals in the ground-air environment move through the soil or through the air (birds, insects), and plants take root in the soil. In this regard, animals developed lungs and tracheas, while plants developed a stomatal apparatus, i.e.

    organs by which the land inhabitants of the planet absorb oxygen directly from the air. The skeletal organs, which provide autonomy of movement on land and support the body with all its organs in conditions of low density of the medium, thousands of times less than water, have received a strong development.

    Environmental factors in the terrestrial-air environment differ from other habitats in high light intensity, significant fluctuations in air temperature and humidity, the correlation of all factors with geographical location, the change of seasons of the year and time of day.

    Their impact on organisms is inextricably linked with the movement of air and the position relative to the seas and oceans and is very different from the impact in the aquatic environment (Table 1).

    Table 5

    Living conditions of air and water organisms

    (according to D. F. Mordukhai-Boltovsky, 1974)

    air environment aquatic environment
    Humidity Very important (often in short supply) Does not have (always in excess)
    Density Minor (except for soil) Large compared to its role for the inhabitants of the air
    Pressure Has almost no Large (can reach 1000 atmospheres)
    Temperature Significant (fluctuates within very wide limits - from -80 to + 100 ° С and more) Less than the value for the inhabitants of the air (fluctuates much less, usually from -2 to + 40 ° C)
    Oxygen Minor (mostly in excess) Essential (often in short supply)
    suspended solids unimportant; not used for food (mainly mineral) Important (food source, especially organic matter)
    Solutes in the environment To some extent (only relevant in soil solutions) Important (in a certain amount needed)

    Land animals and plants have developed their own, no less original adaptations to adverse environmental factors: the complex structure of the body and its integument, the frequency and rhythm of life cycles, thermoregulation mechanisms, etc.

    Purposeful mobility of animals in search of food developed, wind-borne spores, seeds and pollen of plants, as well as plants and animals, whose life is entirely connected with the air, appeared. An exceptionally close functional, resource and mechanical relationship with the soil has been formed.

    Many of the adaptations we have discussed above as examples in the characterization of abiotic environmental factors.

    Therefore, it makes no sense to repeat now, because we will return to them in practical exercises

    Soil as habitat

    Earth is the only planet that has soil (edasphere, pedosphere) - a special, upper shell of land.

    This shell was formed in a historically foreseeable time - it is the same age as land life on the planet. For the first time, the question of the origin of the soil was answered by M.V. Lomonosov ("On the layers of the earth"): "... the soil came from the bending of animal and plant bodies ... by the length of time ...".

    And the great Russian scientist you. You. Dokuchaev (1899: 16) was the first to call soil an independent natural body and proved that soil is "... the same independent natural-historical body as any plant, any animal, any mineral ... it is the result, a function of the cumulative, mutual activity of the climate of a given area, its plant and animal organisms, the relief and age of the country ..., finally, the subsoil, i.e.

    ground parent rocks. ... All these soil-forming agents, in essence, are completely equivalent in magnitude and take an equal part in the formation of normal soil ... ".

    And the modern well-known soil scientist N.A.

    Kachinsky ("Soil, its properties and life", 1975) gives the following definition of soil: "Under the soil should be understood all the surface layers of rocks, processed and changed by the combined influence of climate (light, heat, air, water), plant and animal organisms" .

    The main structural elements of the soil are: the mineral base, organic matter, air and water.

    Mineral base (skeleton)(50-60% of the total soil) is an inorganic substance formed as a result of the underlying mountain (parent, parent) rock as a result of its weathering.

    Sizes of skeletal particles: from boulders and stones to the smallest grains of sand and silt particles. The physicochemical properties of soils are mainly determined by the composition of parent rocks.

    The permeability and porosity of the soil, which ensure the circulation of both water and air, depend on the ratio of clay and sand in the soil, the size of the fragments.

    In temperate climates, it is ideal if the soil is formed by equal amounts of clay and sand, i.e. represents loam.

    In this case, the soils are not threatened by either waterlogging or drying out. Both are equally detrimental to both plants and animals.

    organic matter- up to 10% of the soil, is formed from dead biomass (plant mass - litter of leaves, branches and roots, dead trunks, grass rags, organisms of dead animals), crushed and processed into soil humus by microorganisms and certain groups of animals and plants.

    The simpler elements formed as a result of the decomposition of organic matter are again assimilated by plants and are involved in the biological cycle.

    Air(15-25%) in the soil is contained in cavities - pores, between organic and mineral particles. In the absence (heavy clay soils) or when the pores are filled with water (during flooding, thawing of permafrost), aeration in the soil worsens and anaerobic conditions develop.

    Under such conditions, the physiological processes of organisms that consume oxygen - aerobes - are inhibited, the decomposition of organic matter is slow. Gradually accumulating, they form peat. Large reserves of peat are characteristic of swamps, swampy forests, and tundra communities. Peat accumulation is especially pronounced in the northern regions, where coldness and waterlogging of soils mutually determine and complement each other.

    Water(25-30%) in the soil is represented by 4 types: gravitational, hygroscopic (bound), capillary and vaporous.

    Gravity- mobile water, occupying wide gaps between soil particles, seeps down under its own weight to the groundwater level.

    Easily absorbed by plants.

    hygroscopic, or bound– is adsorbed around colloidal particles (clay, quartz) of the soil and is retained in the form of a thin film due to hydrogen bonds. It is released from them at high temperature (102-105°C). It is inaccessible to plants, does not evaporate. In clay soils, such water is up to 15%, in sandy soils - 5%.

    capillary- is held around soil particles by the force of surface tension.

    Through narrow pores and channels - capillaries, it rises from the groundwater level or diverges from cavities with gravitational water. Better retained by clay soils, easily evaporates.

    Plants easily absorb it.

    Vaporous- occupies all pores free from water. Evaporates first.

    There is a constant exchange of surface soil and groundwater, as a link in the general water cycle in nature, changing speed and direction depending on the season and weather conditions.

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    Gas composition of the atmosphere is also an important climatic factor.

    Approximately 3-3.5 billion years ago, the atmosphere contained nitrogen, ammonia, hydrogen, methane and water vapor, and there was no free oxygen in it. The composition of the atmosphere was largely determined by volcanic gases.

    It was in the terrestrial environment, on the basis of the high efficiency of oxidative processes in the body, that animal homoiothermia arose. Oxygen, due to its constantly high content in the air, is not a factor limiting life in the terrestrial environment. Only in places, under specific conditions, is a temporary deficit created, for example, in accumulations of decaying plant residues, stocks of grain, flour, etc.

    For example, in the absence of wind in the center of large cities, its concentration increases tenfold. Regular daily changes in the carbon dioxide content in the surface layers, associated with the rhythm of plant photosynthesis, and seasonal, due to changes in the intensity of respiration of living organisms, mainly the microscopic population of soils. Increased air saturation with carbon dioxide occurs in zones of volcanic activity, near thermal springs and other underground outlets of this gas.

    Low air density determines its low lifting force and insignificant bearing capacity.

    The inhabitants of the air must have their own support system that supports the body: plants - a variety of mechanical tissues, animals - a solid or, much less often, a hydrostatic skeleton.

    Wind

    storms

    Pressure

    The low density of air causes a relatively low pressure on land. Normally, it is equal to 760 mm Hg, Art. As altitude increases, pressure decreases. At an altitude of 5800 m, it is only half normal. Low pressure may limit the distribution of species in the mountains. For most vertebrates, the upper limit of life is about 6000 m. A decrease in pressure entails a decrease in oxygen supply and dehydration of animals due to an increase in respiratory rate.

    Approximately the same are the limits of advancement to the mountains of higher plants. Somewhat more hardy are arthropods (springtails, mites, spiders), which can be found on glaciers, above the vegetation boundary.

    In general, all terrestrial organisms are much more stenobatic than aquatic ones.

    Ground-Air Habitat

    In the course of evolution, this environment was mastered later than the water. Environmental factors in the terrestrial-air environment differ from other habitats in high light intensity, significant fluctuations in air temperature and humidity, the correlation of all factors with geographical location, the change of seasons of the year and time of day.

    The environment is gaseous, therefore it is characterized by low humidity, density and pressure, high oxygen content.

    Characterization of abiotic environmental factors of light, temperature, humidity - see the previous lecture.

    Gas composition of the atmosphere is also an important climatic factor. Approximately 3-3.5 billion years ago, the atmosphere contained nitrogen, ammonia, hydrogen, methane and water vapor, and there was no free oxygen in it. The composition of the atmosphere was largely determined by volcanic gases.

    At present, the atmosphere consists mainly of nitrogen, oxygen, and relatively smaller amounts of argon and carbon dioxide.

    All other gases present in the atmosphere are contained only in trace amounts. Of particular importance for the biota is the relative content of oxygen and carbon dioxide.

    It was in the terrestrial environment, on the basis of the high efficiency of oxidative processes in the body, that animal homoiothermia arose. Oxygen, due to its constantly high content in the air, is not a factor limiting life in the terrestrial environment.

    Only in places, under specific conditions, is a temporary deficit created, for example, in accumulations of decaying plant residues, stocks of grain, flour, etc.

    The content of carbon dioxide can vary in certain areas of the surface layer of air in a fairly significant range. For example, in the absence of wind in the center of large cities, its concentration increases tenfold. Regular daily changes in the carbon dioxide content in the surface layers, associated with the rhythm of plant photosynthesis, and seasonal, due to changes in the intensity of respiration of living organisms, mainly the microscopic population of soils.

    Increased air saturation with carbon dioxide occurs in zones of volcanic activity, near thermal springs and other underground outlets of this gas. The low content of carbon dioxide inhibits the process of photosynthesis.

    Under indoor conditions, the rate of photosynthesis can be increased by increasing the concentration of carbon dioxide; this is used in the practice of greenhouse and greenhouse farming.

    Air nitrogen for most inhabitants of the terrestrial environment is an inert gas, but a number of microorganisms (nodule bacteria, Azotobacter, clostridia, blue-green algae, etc.) have the ability to bind it and involve it in the biological cycle.

    Local impurities entering the air can also significantly affect living organisms.

    This is especially true for toxic gaseous substances - methane, sulfur oxide (IV), carbon monoxide (II), nitrogen oxide (IV), hydrogen sulfide, chlorine compounds, as well as particles of dust, soot, etc., polluting the air in industrial areas. The main modern source of chemical and physical pollution of the atmosphere is anthropogenic: the work of various industrial enterprises and transport, soil erosion, etc.

    n. Sulfur oxide (SO2), for example, is toxic to plants even at concentrations from one fifty-thousandth to one millionth of the volume of air .. Some plant species are especially sensitive to SO2 and serve as a sensitive indicator of its accumulation in the air (for example , lichens.

    Low air density determines its low lifting force and insignificant bearing capacity. The inhabitants of the air must have their own support system that supports the body: plants - a variety of mechanical tissues, animals - a solid or, much less often, a hydrostatic skeleton.

    In addition, all the inhabitants of the air environment are closely connected with the surface of the earth, which serves them for attachment and support. Life in a suspended state in the air is impossible. True, many microorganisms and animals, spores, seeds and pollen of plants are regularly present in the air and are carried by air currents (anemochory), many animals are capable of active flight, but in all these species the main function of their life cycle is reproduction. - carried out on the surface of the earth.

    For most of them, being in the air is associated only with resettlement or the search for prey.

    Wind It has a limiting effect on the activity and even distribution of organisms. Wind can even change the appearance of plants, especially in habitats such as alpine zones where other factors are limiting. In open mountain habitats, wind limits plant growth, causing plants to bend to the windward side.

    In addition, wind increases evapotranspiration in low humidity conditions. Of great importance are storms, although their action is purely local. Hurricanes, as well as ordinary winds, are capable of transporting animals and plants over long distances and thereby changing the composition of communities.

    Pressure, apparently, is not a limiting factor of direct action, but it is directly related to weather and climate, which have a direct limiting effect.

    The low density of air causes a relatively low pressure on land. Normally, it is equal to 760 mm Hg, Art. As altitude increases, pressure decreases. At an altitude of 5800 m, it is only half normal.

    Low pressure may limit the distribution of species in the mountains.

    For most vertebrates, the upper limit of life is about 6000 m. A decrease in pressure entails a decrease in oxygen supply and dehydration of animals due to an increase in respiratory rate. Approximately the same are the limits of advancement to the mountains of higher plants. Somewhat more hardy are arthropods (springtails, mites, spiders) that can be found on glaciers above the vegetation boundary.

    The land-air habitat throughout evolution was studied much later than the aquatic one. Its distinctive feature is that it is gaseous, therefore, a significant oxygen content predominates in the composition, as well as low pressure, humidity and density.

    For a long time of such an evolutionary process, the flora and fauna needed to form a certain behavior and physiology, anatomical and other adaptations, they were able to adapt to changes in the surrounding world.

    Characteristic

    The environment is characterized by:

    • Constant changes in temperature and moisture levels in the air;
    • The passage of time of day and seasons;
    • Great light intensity;
    • Dependence of factors of territorial location.

    Peculiarities

    A feature of the environment is that plants are able to take root in the ground, and animals can move in the expanses of air and soil. All plants have a stomatal apparatus, with the help of which the land organisms of the world can take oxygen directly from the air. The low humidity of the air and the predominant presence of oxygen in it led to the appearance of respiratory organs in animals - the trachea and lungs. A well-developed skeletal structure allows independent movement on the ground and provides a strong support for the body and organs, given the low density of the environment.

    Animals

    The main part of animal species lives in the ground-air environment: birds, animals, reptiles and insects.

    Adaptation and fitness (examples)

    Living organisms have developed certain adaptations to the negative factors of the surrounding world: adaptation to temperature and climate changes, a special body structure, thermoregulation, as well as the change and dynamics of life cycles. For example, some plants, in order to maintain their normal state during the period of cold and drought, change shoots and root systems. In the roots of vegetables - beets and carrots, in the leaves of flowers - aloe, in the bulb of a tulip and leek, nutrients and moisture are stored.

    To keep the body temperature unchanged in summer and winter, animals have developed a special system of heat exchange and thermoregulation with the outside world. Plants developed pollen and seeds carried by the wind for reproduction. These plants are uniquely positioned to improve pollen properties, resulting in efficient pollination. Animals have gained purposeful mobility to obtain food. An absolute mechanical, functional and resource connection with the earth has been formed.

    • The limited factor for the inhabitants of the environment is the lack of water sources.
    • Living organisms can change the shape of the body due to the low density in the air. For example, the formation of skeletal sections is important for animals, while birds require a smooth wing shape and body structure.
    • Plants need flexible connective tissues, as well as the presence of a characteristic crown shape and flowers.
    • Birds and mammals owe the acquisition of the function of warm-bloodedness to the presence of air properties - thermal conductivity, heat capacity.

    findings

    The ground-air habitat is unusual in terms of environmental factors. The stay of animals and plants in it is possible due to the appearance and formation of many adaptations in them. All inhabitants are inseparable from the surface of the earth for fastening and stable support. In this regard, the soil is inseparable from the aquatic and terrestrial environment, which plays a major role in the evolution of the world of animals and plants.

    For many individuals, it was a bridge through which the organisms of water sources passed to terrestrial living conditions and thereby conquered the land. The distribution of flora and fauna throughout the planet depends on the composition of the soil and the terrain, depending on the way of life.

    Recently, the ground-air environment has been changing due to human activities. People artificially transform natural landscapes, the number and size of water bodies. In such a situation, many organisms are not able to quickly adapt to new living conditions. It is necessary to remember this and stop the negative interference of people in the ground-air habitat of animals and plants!