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Brackish estuarine species: true estuarine animals found in salinity between 5 ... Brackish water the middle reaches of the estuary in salinity between 5-18 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PeiYuan Qian


1
Estuary Ecology
  • Pei-Yuan Qian
  • Chapter 8 328-369

2
Outline of Lecture
  • Definition
  • Classification of estuaries
  • Physical characteristics of estuary environment
  • Animal adaptation
  • Food-web of estuaries

3
Definition
  • Estuary is a semienclosed coastal body of water
    that has a free connection with the open sea and
    within which seawater is measurably diluted with
    freshwater. The decrease in salinity in an
    estuary precludes those species incapable of
    volume regulation. A critical salinity of 5 to
    8 precludes species incapable of extensive
    regulation of specific inorganic ion
    concentrations.
  • Estuary is coastal bays in which freshwater and
    salt water mix, thus permanent impoundments

4
Pearl River Estuary
5
(No Transcript)
6
Significance of estuaries
  • Biologically productive, together with salt
    marshes and mud flat
  • Nursery ground for fisheries
  • Migration pathways for many important commercial
    fisheries
  • A link for global geochemical cycling of elements
    between terrestrial water and oceans
  • Gateways of inputs of both natural and
    anthropogenic substance (nutrients, metals, and
    contaminants)
  • Entrance for riverine sediments from land to the
    sea
  • Estuarine delta regions often become most
    populated cities in the world, Shanghai, San
    Francisco, New York

7
Classification of estuary
  • Based on the origination
  • Coastal plain estuary
  • Tectonic estuary
  • Semienclosed bay or lagoon
  • Fjord

8
Classification of estuary
9
Coastal plain estuaries on US east coast
Delaware Bay
Chesapeake Bay
Coastal plain estuary -- formed at the end of the
last ice age when the rising sea level invaded
low-lying coastal river valleys. Most common
estuaries, broad shallow, found along the
northern and central Atlantic coast, e.g.
Chesapeake Bay, Pearl River estuary in China.
10
Tectonic Estuary
Tectonic estuary -- the subsidence of the land in
response to crustal movements allows the sea
water reinvading, e. g. the San Francisco Bay.
11
Semienclosed bay or Lagoon
Semienclosed bay or lagoon Sand bars build up
parallel to the coastline and partially cut off
the waters behind them from the sea. Common in
USA, such as Matagorda and San Antonio Bays
12
Fjord
Fjord -- Valleys have been deepened by glacial
action and are then invaded by the sea. Very
common in British Columbia.
13
The general pattern of fw and sw mixing in an
estuary
Freshwater from river
Seawater from ocean
14
Well-mixed estuary
15
Stratified estuary
16
Typical estuary
17
Salinity changes in estuary
18
High Tide
River Flow Decrease
or
River Flow Increase
or
Low Tide
19
River
Estuarine Plume
Salt Wedge
Oceanic Water
Flood-HHW
Estuarine Front
Riverine Front
Riverine Plume
Estuarine Plume
Entrainment
Nutrient-rich water
Ebb-LLW
20
Classification of estuary
  • Based on physiograph
  • Positive (highly stratified) estuary --
    freshwater flows downstream over a deeper layer
    of higher salinity ocean water. Highly
    stratified estuaries only exist where river flow
    strongly dominates over tidal motion.
  • Negative estuary -- exist where tidal flow
    strongly dominates over river flow.
  • Neutral estuary -- vertically homogeneous
    estuary--At low tide, the salinity is dominated
    by downstream river flow whereas at high tide the
    inrush of SW determines the salinity. Only
    estuaries of very small extent permit such
    domination by tidal motion.
  • Seasonal estuary -- Seasonal variation in
    rainfall (or tropical storms and hurricanes)
    increase freshwater drainage and shift downstream
    lines demarking constant surface salinity
    (isohalines). During dry seasons isohalines
    shift upstream.

21
Classification of estuary
22
FW inputgtE
FW inputltE
23
Physical processes in an estuary
Entrainment a process of vertical mixing between
two layers of water which flow at different
velocity in the water column. Riverine Plume a
surface layer of water which flows out of the
river channel into the estuary, usually distinct
in color (brown), and bounded by the riverine
front. Front an interface or zone between two
different water bodies which move toward each
other. Riverine Front a front where the river
outflow meets with saline water, usually distinct
in color, debris gathering line Salt Wedge A
body of saline water invading the river channel
underneath the freshwater flow Estuarine Plume
a surface layer of water which flows out of the
estuary into the open region of the coastal
ocean. Estuarine Front a front where the
estuarine plume meets with oceanic water. This
front is much wider than the riverine front
24
This is the riverine front (color front) between
the riverine plume and seawater.
Riverine front
Salt water
Riverine plume
25
Physical characteristics
  • The freshwater derives from land drainage and
    tends to float as a low-density surface layer
    over denser seawater tidal mixing can reduce or
    obliterate this stratification.
  • Large amount of nutrient input from land
  • Salinity decreases toward land
  • Restricted exchange allows rapid changes in
    salinity, temperature, nutrients, and sediment
    load
  • Muddy substrata
  • Depleted oxygen in substrata
  • Limited wave action, highest current velocities
    occur in the middle of channels

26
Effects of River outflow on coastal oceans
  • Stabilization of the water column mixing
    increase the stability of water
    column(stratification mixing)
  • Sedimentation turbidity due to suspended solids
    reduces light sedimentation affects coastal
    benthic communities
  • Nutrients primary productivity high nutrient
    input leads to high productivity
  • River delta formation or erosion
  • Sedimentation sediment particles sinking to the
    bottom of the estuarine bed or coastal ocean
    bottom
  • Hypoxia of near bottom water
  • Muddy substrata
  • High current velocities, different water masses
    (including different layers) flow in different
    directions or changing directions due to tidal
    cycles, river discharge and winds
  • Pollutants

27
Physical characteristics
  • Variability in salinity due to seawater heavier
    than freshwater periodical tide events the
    Coriolis effect that causes a moving body to the
    deflected from a straight path.

28
A summary of physical-biological coupling
processes in an estuary
29
Features of faunal composition in estuary
Freshwater species
Marine species
Transitional
Stenohaline species
Number of species
Euryhaline marine species
Brackish water species
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
Salinity
30
Features of faunal composition
Stenohaline marine animals, usually restricted to
the mouth of estuaries, salinity gt 25, as they
are unable or barely able to tolerate salinity
changes. Euryhaline marine animals, more
tolerable to salinity change between 10-30, few
down to 5, and so can be found throughout the
range of estuarine salinities Brackish estuarine
species true estuarine animals found in salinity
between 5-18, not found in freshwater and not in
full seawater. Freshwater species can not
tolerate salinities gt 5, are restricted to upper
reaches of estuaries Transitional species
migratory fishes that pass through the estuary
31
Faunal composition
  • Marine the largest in terms of numbers of
    species, restricted to the mouths in salinity gt25
  • Freshwater restricted to the upper reaches in
    salinity lt5
  • Brackish water the middle reaches of the
    estuary in salinity between 5-18
  • Limited in the number of large plants,
    seagrasses, macroalgae and diatoms can be common
  • Diatoms are dominant phytoplanktons but
    composition and abundance varied with tubulence,
    turbidity, and flushing rate

32
Terms
  • Osmoregulators the organisms have physiological
    mechanisms to control the salt content of
    internal fluids (ture esturine species)
  • Move water move ions
  • Adjust internal water-ion balance
  • Osmoconformers the organisms unable to regulate
    its internal fluid and salt balance, therefore
    ones with a varying internal salt concentration
    tolerate fluctuations in salinity without tissue
    damage (ture marine species)

33
Biotic responses to the estuarine gradient
  • Two transitions in estuaries
  • The critical salinity This region encompasses
    an approximate salinity range of 5-8 and marks
    a pronounced minimum of benthic invertebrate
    species richness. A relatively rich fauna of
    bivalve mollusks and other invertebrates reside
    in freshwater. Freshwater species decrease,
    however, in numbers at a maximum salinity of
  • The mouth and lower reaches of the estuary
    organisms must adjust physiologically to lowered
    salinity. Salinity can change from fresh to
    completely marine in these area. If salinity is
    tidally regulated, benthic organisms may
    experience fresh and saltwater in a single tidal
    cycle--more of a physiological challenge because
    of the time require for acclimation. Seasonal
    estuaries show seasonal shifts up- and
    down-estuary, but the rate of salinity change at
    any point is slow--permitting acclimation.

34
Adaptation in distribution pattern
  • Species richness generally diminishes steadily
    up-estuary and reaches a minimum at salinity of
    5-8. Species richness then increases again in
    freshwater.--Estuarine marine bivalves are also
    rare at this salinity but increase steadily in
    species richness with increasing salinity.
  • The steady decrease in the estuary must be
    related to the steady reduction of species
    capable of extensive cell volume regulation.
  • Changes in physiological adaptations
  • Changes in body size and genetically determined
    morphological features. In many cases, the
    maximum size of bivalve mollusks decreases with
    decreasing salinity--may simply be related to the
    negative role of decreased salinity in growth.

35
Adaptation in distribution pattern(cont)
  • An increase in niche breadth as competitors
    disappear in the decreased salinity.
  • The diminution of species richness in brackish
    water is accompanied by niche expansion of those
    species capable of invading the estuary or
    surviving in a brackish sea.
  • A related phenomenon to niche expansion is the
    presence of enormous populations of a relatively
    few species--may be due to lack of competitors
    and the nutrient enrichment of estuaries. Large
    fluctuating populations of phytoplankton,
    invertebrates, and fishes dominate the
    estuary.--rich invertebrate fisheries
  • Adaptations to avoid transport in the surface
    layer to the open sea. Estuarine flow results in
    a net transport of surface water to the open
    sea--dilute the larval populations of estuarine
    species. In many species, larvae are adapted to
    stay near the bottom during ebb tide and rise up
    into the water during the flood--counteract the
    seaward dilution effect.

36
Adaptation in distribution pattern(cont)
  • Genetic divergence from open marine conspecifics.
    Sharp differentiation (changes in gene
    frequencies) has been found over a short
    geographic space (from the mouths of estuaries to
    brackish water seas). Selection may act on
    variation at individual loci, but it is probable
    that estuarine populations have diverged broadly
    into genetically distinct races relative to their
    open marine conspecifics. Consequently,
    fine-scale adaptation to local estuarine
    conditions has resulted.

37
Adaptation in distribution pattern(cont)
  • Many fish species spawn offshore but spend some
    period feeding in estuaries (estuaries are
    therefore crucial to many species as nurseries.
    The abundance and fluctuating nature of the food
    supply have favored the following characteristics
    of the feeding ecology of juveniles of common
    marine fishes
  • flexibility of feeding habits in time and space
  • omnivore
  • sharing a common pool of food resources among
    species
  • exploitation of food chains at different levels
    by the same species
  • ontogenetic changes in diet with rapid growth
  • short food chains based on detritus-algal feeders

38
Animals adaptation
39
Nutrient inputs
  • River input--freshwater drainage delivers large
    amounts of nutrients in dissolved and particulate
    form
  • Oceanic import --Dissolved nutrients arrive with
    deep-water flow into estuaries. Vertical mixture
    with the surface water permits the phytoplankton
    to use this nutrient source benthic algae and
    sea grasses may also benefit.
  • Regeneration from the bottom -- Bottom sediments
    consist of an active microbial community whose
    ability to decompose particulate organic matter
    permits the continuous recycling of nutrients
    between the bottom and the overlying water.

40
Food-web of estuary
41
Food-web of a typical estuary
42
Characteristics of food webs in estuaries
  • Highly dynamics--The extensive variation of size,
    nutrient input, and tidal exchange among
    estuaries suggests a large variation in the
    pattern of connections between primary and
    secondary production.
  • Detritus is a major factor in the webs, and
    detritus pathways dominate webs.
  • Detritivorous are the major consumers in many
    webs.
  • Phytoplankton and seaweeds may still play
    important roles in the webs.
  • Relative short food-chains.
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