+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico Fresh + Salt =...

Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico Fresh + Salt =...

Date post: 05-Jan-2016
Category:
Upload: frank-ross
View: 216 times
Download: 3 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
25
Transcript
Page 1: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 2: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico

Fresh + Salt = Brackish water

Page 3: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 4: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 5: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

List 1: Dissolved Oxygen Tides Wind speed and

direction Salinity Water depth

List 2: Brown shrimp Oysters Chord grass Dolphin Blue crab Red drum

Page 6: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico

Fresh + Salt = Brackish water

Page 7: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

On your map, add shading: more blue near mouth of rivers and bayous,

More yellow at mouth of Bay

Trinity River – 54% inflow

San Jacinto River – 28% inflow

Add these numbers to your map!

Page 8: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Tides are caused by the moon. Two high tides and two low tides each day. Tides are most dramatic closer to the

ocean.

On your map, mark a point where there would be most dramatic tides (TIDES!!!) and least dramatic tides (tides) and (no tides)

Page 9: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Title: Abiotic Factors in an Estuary

Date: check the board!

Page 10: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Important abiotic factors in Galveston Bay Dissolved Oxygen Tides Wind speed and direction Salinity Water depth Nitrates/Phosphates pH

Page 11: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Where would you expect to find these? Add them to your map!

Juvenile blue crab - 0.0 - 0.5 ppt salt

Oysters - 0.5 - 15.0 ppt salt

Lady fish- 25.0 ppt salt Nurse shark – 35 ppt salt

Ocean 35 ppt

Page 12: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 13: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

All organisms have a limit for each abiotic factors in their habitat. There is an upper and lower limit for how much they can tolerate.

Page 14: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Blue water = salty Colorless = fresh

What happens when they mix?

Page 15: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 16: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Natural Human caused

Page 17: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Salts occur naturally in soil on the land. Rainwater picks up salts in runoff. Rivers bring salts to the ocean. Evaporation in the ocean removes water,

leaving salt behind. Over millions of years, oceans become

salty.

Page 18: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

1. Which is more dense – salt water or fresh water?

2. What river contributes the greatest amount of fresh water in Galveston Bay?

3. Why couldn’t a juvenile crab live at the mouth of Galveston Bay?

4. List three abiotic factors that affect organisms in an estuary.

5. Why is the ocean salty?

Page 19: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Title: Barrier IslandsDate: check the board!

Page 20: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 21: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 22: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 23: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

One white board One marker One playdough

Page 24: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.
Page 25: Freshwater inflows from rivers and bayous meet saltwater from the Gulf of Mexico  Fresh + Salt = Brackish water.

Draw what you built. Include:

◦ Ocean ◦ Bay ◦ Beach◦ Dune◦ Swale◦ Prairie◦ Wetland

◦ Fresh water◦ Salt water◦ Brackish water


Recommended