+ All Categories
Home > Documents > Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant...

Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant...

Date post: 20-Dec-2015
Category:
View: 216 times
Download: 1 times
Share this document with a friend
Popular Tags:
34
Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography
Transcript
Page 1: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems

Shallow vs DeepFresh vs SaltSwift vs StagnantChanging vs ConstantEphemeral vs Permanent

Limnology vs Oceanography

Page 2: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Patterns of Aquatic Ecosystems

• Important Properties of Water• Types of Organisms• Freshwater Ecosystems • Marine Ecosystems• Transition Areas

Page 3: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Important Properties of Water

• High specific heat–Warms and cools slowly–Large amount of heat necessary to raise temperature

• Reaches max density at 4oC–Ice floats–Warm water above cold water

Page 4: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Properties of Water

• 800x more dense than air– Organisms still more dense

– Need buoyancy

Page 5: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Properties of Water

• More viscous than air– More energy to move through water

– Leads to streamlined shapes

Page 6: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Properties of water…• Light attenuates quickly– Photosynthesis only in shallow waters

Page 7: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Properties of Water

• Phosphorus and Nitrogen limiting nutrients

• Less oxygen than air– Enters at surface and via photosynthesis

– Cold water holds more• Carbon dioxide and

buffering

Page 8: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Properties of Water

• High surface tension– Can have organisms on surface

Page 9: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Types of Organisms

• Can classify based on mode of life/location

• Can classify based on trophic mode

Page 10: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Mode of life

• Benthos - attached or resting on bottom– Epifauna: live on bottom (crabs, scallops)

– Periphyton: attach to stems & leaves of rooted plants

– Infauna: buried in sediment (clams, worms)

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 11: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Mode of life

• Plankton– Floating, weak swimmers•Phytoplankton: photosynthesize

•Zooplankton: herbivores & carnivores

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 12: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Mode of life

• Nekton– Swimming organisms

– Go where they want

– Fish, squid, frogs, turtles, seals, octopus

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2005/03/images/aculeatus_walk.mov

Page 13: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Mode of life

• Neuston– Rest or swim on surface

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 14: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Trophic Mode

• Decomposers– Many insects, bacteria

– Break down organic matter

– Bacteria, fungi

• Photsynthesizers (primary producers)– Derive energy from sunlight

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 15: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Trophic Mode

• Deposit feeders– Eat organic material on bottom

– Worms, some snails and clams

• Filter feeders– Remove food from water

– Clams, mussels, baleen whales… QuickTime™ and a

TIFF (Uncompressed) decompressorare needed to see this picture.

Page 16: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Trophic Mode

• Grazers– Eat living plant material– Insects, sea urchins..

• Carnivores– Eat animals

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

QuickTime™ and aTIFF (Uncompressed) decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 17: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Types of Aquatic Ecosystems

• Freshwater • Marine• Transitions between land & sea

Page 18: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Freshwater Ecosystems• Lentic

– Standing water– Lakes, ponds, bogs

• Lotic– Running water– Streams, rivers

Page 19: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Lentic Zonation

• Limnetic: to depth of light penetration

• Profundal zone: beyond depth of light penetration– Usually absent in ponds

Page 20: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Lentic Zones

• Littoral zone– Shallow, light penetrates to bottom

– Rooted plants– High diversity– Subzones of vegetation

•Emergent, floating, submergent

Page 21: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Lentic Zonation

• Limnetic zone– Depth of effective light penetration - compensation point

– No benthos and few if any neuston

Page 22: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Lentic Zonation

• Profundal zone– Bottom and deep water region– Fewer plankton and no neuston– Absent in ponds

Page 23: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Physical Factors

• Transparency– Turbidity– Secchi Disk

• Alkalinity (buffering capacity)

Page 24: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Thermal Stratification

• Epilimnion: warm surface water• Metalimnion: 0C changes with depth

• Hypolimnion: cold deeper waters

• Changes with season

Page 25: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Thermal Stratification

Page 26: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.
Page 27: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Seasonal Changes

Page 28: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Stratification

• Temperate lakes - mixed twice/year– Brings oxygen to bottom, nutrients to top

• Tropical lakes– Low elevation:

• Warm water on top, doesn’t cool regularly• Poor to no mixing

– High elevation• Can stratify and mix daily

Page 29: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Lake Productivity

• Oligotrophic– Deep, sandy or gravel bottom

– Low nutrients– low plant growth

•low productivity

– Low decomp at bottom •oxygen not depleted

Page 30: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Lake Productivity

• Eutrophic– Shallow, muddy, nutrient rich

– High plant growth•high productivity

– Summer stratifies•no mixing

– Decomposition•depletes O2

Page 31: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Oligotrophic vs Eutrophic

Page 32: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Oligotrophic vs. Eutrophic

Page 33: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Times of Low Oxygen Interesting

• Dimictic vs. Meromictic lakes• Hypolimnion in the summer when no oxygen input– Productive lakes– Deep water fishery disappears

• Heavy Snow Cover– No algal photosynthesis

Page 34: Patterns in Aquatic Ecosystems Shallow vs Deep Fresh vs Salt Swift vs Stagnant Changing vs Constant Ephemeral vs Permanent Limnology vs Oceanography.

Dystrophic

Kettlehole bog


Recommended