Based on Mader, Sylvia S. 1996. Biology - 5th Ed. WCB
and
Cox, G.W. 1997. Conservation Biology - 2nd ed. WCB
and
Levine, J.S. and K.R. Miller. 1994. Biology: Discovering Life. D.C. Heath
Reading: Chapters 15, 16 in Cox pp. 55-57 in Levine and Miller
Aquatic Communities
Freshwater
- lakes (lentic)
- Know Figure 3.5 (review)
- rivers and streams (lotic)
Marine
Figure 3.35 p60
nearshore
- estuary
- rocky shore
- sandy beach
- coral reef
offshore
- pelagic
- benthic
Wetlands
- transitional between aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems
- often covered by water at least part of the year
- plant community has many hydrophilic species
examples:
- marshes - dominated by grasses
- bogs - acidic, carnivorous plants, fewer grasses
- fens - alkaline waters
- salt marshes - mostly grasses
- often in estuaries
- grade into mud flats
- intermediate salt contents, high nutrient levels
- swamps - dominated by woody plants
- mangrove swamps
- hardwood bottomland forests
- prairie potholes
- vernal pools
wetlands occupy 6% of Earths surface
- high productivity
- water
- lots of light
- nutrients
- refuge and breeding ground for migratory birds
- lots of invertebrates, fish, frogs, etc.
- high activity during wet season
Wetland destruction
often drained:
- agriculture
- reduce disease
- urban sprawl (cities located near water)
- filled on floodplains (Marietta)
- canals (oil exploration in Mississippi delta)
useful:
- absorbing floods
- reduce erosion
- groundwater recharge
- filtering wastes
- wildlife habitat
- breeding ground
- commercial products:
- cranberries, blueberries, blackberries, rice, peat moss
threats:
- agriculture
- pollution
- dams
- flood wetlands
- prevent silt from accumulating at delta
- dumps
- levees - prevents seasonal filling
- up to 1/2 of wetlands in lower 48 states destroyed
- only 10% of Ohio wetlands remain
legislation
- the 1972 Clean Water Act - protects coastal wetlands
- Emergency Wetlands Resources Act - 1986 -designate and acquire critical wetlands
- Wetlands reserve program - reclaim farmland as wetlands
- Bush administration - narrowed definition of wetlands, excluding many (1/3) from protection
Eutrophication:
Nutrient Levels
- Low nutrient levels oligotrophic
- High nutrient levels eutrophic
Movement from oligotrophic to eutrophic is natural, but slow
Humans accelerate movement - eutrophication
Causes of Eutrophication
- Sewage
- Fertilizer runoff & contamination of groundwater
- Soil erosion
- Phosphorous principle problem in freshwater
Problems posed by eutrophication
- Algal blooms
- Taste, odor
- Shade out tracheophytes
- Deplete O2 levels at night
- Change in species composition of lakes
- Problems exacerbated by stratification, particularly in hypolimnion
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