EVPP 550 Waterscape Ecology and Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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EVPP 550 Waterscape Ecology and Management

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Includes small lakes such as cirques formed at the head of glacial valleys ... Finger Lakes, NY. Origin of Lakes. Drift Basins ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EVPP 550 Waterscape Ecology and Management


1
EVPP 550Waterscape Ecology and Management
  • Professor
  • R. Christian Jones
  • Fall 2007

2
Adaptation to Flowing Water
  • Life Cycles are often adaptive
  • Many aquatic insects are aerial as adults to
    facilitate dispersal and crossbreeding
  • Some species concentrate their growth phases in
    periods of favorable conditions (moderate temp,
    plenty of water and food) and revert to dormant
    stages (eggs, pupae) during other stages

3
Adaptation to Flowing Water
  • Feeding mechanisms
  • Scrapers radula in snails, mayfly nymphs use
    bristles
  • Filtering mechanisms
  • Fringes of hairs on mouthparts and legs
  • Caddisfly Nets
  • Blackfly

4
Adaptation to Flowing Water
  • Anchoring
  • Flattening of bodies to stay in boundary layer
  • Suckers, hooks, silky secretions
  • Ballast

5
Adaptation to Flowing Water
  • Modes of existence (habits)
  • Skaters (water striders)
  • Divers (water boatmen and diving beetles)
  • Swimmers (streamlined mayfly nymphs)
  • Clingers (net-spinning caddisflies, blackflies)
  • Sprawlers (some mayflies and dragonflies)
  • Climbers (damselflies, mayflies, chironomids)
  • Burrowers (chironomids, oligochaetes, bivalves)

6
Comparative Energy Flow in Streams
  • Bear Brook
  • Wooded second order stream in New England
  • Dominated by allochthonous inputs from forest
    canopy directly and from upstream

7
Comparative Energy Flow in Streams
  • New Hope Creek, NC
  • Third order stream with more open canopy, but
    still allochthonous material is more important

8
Comparative Energy Flow in Streams
  • Thames River
  • Larger stream with more varied sources of primary
    production

9
Comparative Energy Flow in Streams
  • Silver Spring
  • Large underground source of clear water
  • Almost all production is autochthonous

10
Stream Energy Flow
  • Importance of insects to stream food web is shown
    by experiments that substantially removed insects
    from the stream food web

11
Stream Energy Flow
  • Importance of autochthonous production in small
    to medium streams?
  • Minshall (1978) argues that it has been
    underestimated

12
Stream Energy Flow
  • Streams in some areas have little or no canopy,
    eg prairie, desert, urban, farm

Example Deep Creek, Idaho Small stream (1-6 m
wide, 10-60 cm deep) In Great Basin
13
Stream Energy Flow
  • In streams with deciduous canopy, during periods
    with no leaves, light reaching stream is
    substantial
  • Periphyton production tends to be highest in
    spring and fall when consumers are most active

14
Stream Energy Flow
  • Even in streams with relatively closed canopy and
    apparent low algal density, periphyton may be
    important
  • High rates of production may occur under low
    light (shade-adapted)
  • High rates of production may be masked by high
    rates of production (grazing rate production)
  • Periphyton are a high quality food source and
    important food supplement

15
Large Rivers
  • In large rivers, interactions between main river
    channel and floodplain become increasingly
    important
  • Lengthgt2000 km, Ordergt7

16
Large Rivers
  • Channel is deep and turbid
  • Substrate is fine and in constant motion
  • Upstream food supplies are of poor quality, best
    compounds have already been utilized
  • Many backwaters and side channels with slower
    flow
  • Flood plain inundation is relatively predictable
    so aquatic communities can adapt to this as a
    resource

17
Large Rivers
  • Many large rivers show a single strong annual
    discharge peak which inudates the floodplain
  • Flood-pulse concept

18
Large Rivers
  • Flood pulse concept emphasizes lateral or
    latitudinal gradients whereas RCC emphasizes
    longitudinal processes

19
Large Rivers
  • Single large pulse inundates the entire flood
    plain
  • Land-water interface (littoral) is pushed to the
    edge of the floodplain
  • As year proceeds, the moving littoral (ATTZ)
    slowly edges back toward the channel margin
  • ATTZ-aquatic-terrestrial transition zone

20
Large Rivers
  • The flood plain has high productivity due to
  • High nutrient concentration
  • Shallow water depth
  • Low current velocity resulting increase in
    transparency
  • Lots of edges

21
Large Rivers
  • Habitats within the floodplain
  • Backwaters
  • Lakes
  • Wetlands

22
Large Rivers Exchanges of Materials
  • River brings
  • Plant nutrients (NP), organic particulates,
    inorganic particles from upstream
  • NP ? fuel high production
  • Particulates ? build up flood plain, carry P
  • Flood plain contributes
  • Fresher CPOM, FPOM, DOM than upstream sources
  • Nursery ground for many invertebrate prey
    organisms
  • Many larger predator animals enter flood plain to
    feed

23
Large Rivers - Biota
  • Plants
  • Respond to water levels
  • Amazon plants grow fastest at rising water levels
  • At this time water and nutrient levels are high
    and no low DO stress that occurs later
  • Seed production coincides with peak O2 levels

24
Large Rivers - Biota
  • Animals enter the flood plain to feed
  • On rising tide much of food consists of pollen,
    fruits, seeds, terrestrial insects dropping from
    the canopy
  • Spawning occurs near the beginning of the rising
    water
  • Larvae and juveniles feed in the flood plain,
    adults move back into the main channels

25
Large Rivers - Animals
  • Timing of flood waters affects usefulness to
    differing groups of biota in temperate areas

26
Origins of Lakes
  • Glacial
  • Tectonic
  • Volcanic
  • Solution
  • Fluviatile
  • Impoundments

27
Origins of Lakes
  • Glacial phenomena are responsible for the
    greatest number natural lakes esp the immense
    number of small lake basins

28
Origins of Lakes
  • Glacial action in currently restricted to
    Antarctic, Greenland and high mountains, but
    during the Pleistocene glaciation, vast ice
    sheets covered much of the Northern hemisphere

29
Origins of Lakes
  • Definitions
  • Drift accumulation of material directly or
    indirectly resulting from glacial action
  • Moraine drift deposited directly by glacier
    either at its end (terminal) or underneath
    (ground)
  • Outwash drift washed away from a glacier and
    deposited

30
Origins of Lakes
  • Glacial Rock Basins
  • Lakes formed by direct glacial scour of rocky
    basins
  • Includes small lakes such as cirques formed at
    the head of glacial valleys
  • Also includes larger fjord lakes like Loch Ness
    and Lake Windermere

31
Origin of Lakes
  • Moraine or outwash dams
  • Back up water into an existing valley
  • Finger Lakes, NY

32
Origin of Lakes
  • Drift Basins
  • Irregularities in the ground moraine such as ice
    blocks left behind which then melt
  • Kettle lakes
  • Northern Wisconsin, Walden Pond
  • Vast number in flat glaciated areas

33
Origin of Lakes
  • Tectonic Activity (crustal instability and
    movement)
  • Graben fault-trough rift lake
  • Formed between two faults

34
Origin of Lakes
  • Some are symmetrical such as Lake Tahoe
  • Some are assymetrical such as Lake Tanganyika

35
Origin of Lakes
  • The Worlds oldest and deepest lake Lake Baikal
    is a graben complex
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