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AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS

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AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS What are the basic needs of aquatic biota (organisms)? CO2 O2 Sunlight Nutrients- food & minerals Types of Aquatic Ecosystems Freshwater ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS


1
AQUATIC ECOSYSTEMS
2
What are the basic needs of aquatic biota
(organisms)?
  • CO2
  • O2
  • Sunlight
  • Nutrients- food minerals

3
Types of Aquatic Ecosystems
  • Freshwater Ecosystems
  • Standing Water- lakes ponds
  • Moving Water- rivers streams
  • Transitional Communities
  • Estuaries
  • Wetlands- bogs/fens, swamps, marshes
  • Marine Ecosystems
  • Shorelines
  • Barrier Islands
  • Coral Reefs
  • Open Ocean

4
Freshwater Ecosystems
  • Usually 0.005 salt
  • Some exceptions
  • Great Salt Lakes-
  • 5-27 salt
  • Dead Sea- 30 salt
  • Moving water- high elevations cold high O2
    trout streamlined plants
  • Standing water- lower elevations warmer less
    O2 bass, amphibians cattails, rushes
  • Why would there be less oxygen in standing water?

5
Plankton
  • Plankton is a general term for the tiny,
    free-floating organisms that live in both
    freshwater and saltwater environments.
  • Unicellular algae, or phytoplankton, are
    supported by nutrients in the water and form the
    base of many aquatic food webs.
  • Planktonic animals, or zooplankton, feed on the
    phytoplankton.

6
Transitional Communities
Delta
  • ESTUARIES
  • Where freshwater dumps into ocean
  • Brackish water (less salty than seawater)
  • Has rich sediments that often form deltas
  • Productive biodiverse
  • Organisms adapted to varying levels of salinity
    as tide ebbs flows
  • Nursery for larval forms of many aquatic
    species of commercial fish shellfish

7
Transitional Communities
  • WETLANDS
  • Land saturated at least part of the year
  • Swamps- have trees like bald cypress high
    productivity
  • Marshes- no trees tall grasses high
    productivity
  • Bogs/Fens- may or may not have trees waterlogged
    soil with lots of peat low productivity
  • Fens- fed by groundwater surface runoff
  • Bogs- fed by precipitation

Swamp
Marsh
Bog
Fen
8
Importance of Wetlands
  • Highly productive- get lots of sunlight, ? plants
  • ? animals
  • Nesting, breeding ground for migratory birds
  • Slows flooding by absorbing runoff
  • Silt settles, making water clearer nutrient
    rich
  • Trap filter water, Bacteria in soil break down
    contaminants
  • Natures Septic Tank
  • Natural chemical rxns neutralize and detoxify
    pollutants
  • Gives H2O time to percolate (filter thru soil)
    replenish underground aquifers
  • Threats- artificial eutrophication (see slide
    13), draining, sedimentation via construction

9
Marine Ecosystems
  • Benthic zone - lowest level. Organisms living in
    this zone are called benthos.
  • Photic Zone well-lit upper layer of the oceans.
  • Aphotic Zone - permanently dark layer of the
    oceans below the photic zone

10
MARINE ECOSYSTEMS
  • CORAL REEFS
  • Clear, warm shallow seas
  • Made up of accumulated calcareous (made of
    calcium) skeletons of coral animals
  • Formation of reefs depends on light penetration.
  • Corals have a symbiotic relationship with algae
    (which are photosynthetic) .
  • Very diverse, abundant (Rainforests of Sea)
  • Threats- destructive fishing (cyanide dynamite
    to stun fish), pet trade about 75 of coral
    reefs have been destroyed

11
What factors can alter aquatic ecosystems?
  • Natural Succession- normal cycle of pond becoming
    forest
  • Artificial Succession- humans add Nitrogen
    Phosphate to water via fertilizer sewage
    causing succession to happen faster
    EUTROPHICATION

12
What factors can alter aquatic ecosystems?
  • Humans!
  • Find food
  • Recreation
  • Waste disposal
  • Cooling of power plants
  • Transportation
  • Dams, canals
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