Lesson Plan 3 Seagrass Power Point

Download Report

Transcript Lesson Plan 3 Seagrass Power Point

Seagrasses: Underwater
Food Factories
A Tampa Bay Example
of a Food Web
Seagrasses: So What Are They?

Seagrasses are
flowering underwater
plants
 Found at shallow
depths in estuaries:
bays and lagoons
with good water
quality
 What are some
reasons that these
plants can grow only
in shallow water?
Leaves
Flowers
Rhizome
(underground stem)
Source: http://tbep.org/portrait/habitats.html
Line drawing of Manatee grass
(Syringodium filiforme)
They grow in shallow
water because...
 Seagrasses
require good water clarity and
quality to survive.
 They possess structures similar to
terrestrial plants like roots, leaves and
flowers.
 They need sunlight to penetrate the water
in order to perform photosynthesis.
3 Types of Seagrasses in
Tampa Bay

turtle grass
(yes, sea turtles eat it!)

shoal grass
(usually the first
species to appear)

manatee grass
(yes, manatees love it!)
Pictures from
http://www.dep.state.fl.us/coast
al/habitats/seagrass/awareness
/healthy_images.htm
So, Why are Seagrass Beds
Important?



As a nursery environment, seagrasses
support small fish, shrimp, and crabs that
hide among the blades and feast on
decaying leaves.
They help stabilize shifting sands on the
bottom of the bay.
They improve water clarity by trapping
fine sediments and particles.
The Decline of Seagrass Beds
 After
1950, the seagrass beds in Tampa
Bay seriously declined.
 The
major reason for decline in seagrass
beds is probably water pollution.
 As
a class, list reasons why water pollution
in Tampa Bay would increase after 1950.
Reasons Why Water Pollution
Would Increase

Population increased; more garbage, sewage dumped
into bay





Oil, gasoline spills from cargo ships
Port of Tampa receives more cargo ships (sewage,
garbage and fuel spills from ships)
More nitrogen entered the bay:



More people lived near the Bay; more workplaces built
More cars, trucks -- air pollution (mercury, NOx, lead ends up in
water)
Sewage treatment plants were not like today (untreated sewage
common in bay)
Industries dumped chemically polluted waste directly into water
No real government control of water pollution before
1972
Compare the Seagrass Beds
40,420 ac in 1950
26,920 ac in 1996
It Takes a Lot of People to
Clean Up The Bay!

The Tampa Bay Estuary
Program was established in 1991.
 Group coordinates the protection and restoration
of the bay (including seagrass beds).
 The group is a partnership consisting of:



3 counties: Hillsborough, Manatee and Pinellas
3 cities: Tampa, St. Petersburg and Clearwater
Government Agencies:
• Southwest Florida Water Management District
• Florida Department of Environmental Protection
• U.S. Environmental Protection Agency

Citizen groups and industries are active as well.
A Big Improvement
 Improvements
in water quality have fueled
steady gains in seagrass recovery
 Tampa
Bay is now gaining about 500
acres of seagrass a year, and has about
29,647 acres baywide as of 2008
 The
goal is to get
to 38,000 acres
Seagrass Change Through The
Years
Tampa Bay 2006
Segments
2008
Change %
in Acres Change
-504
-6
Boca Ciega
Bay
8,961
8,457
Hillsborough
Bay
415
810
395
95
Lower Tampa
6,578
6,322
-256
-4
Manatee River
814
638
-176
-22
Middle Tampa
Bay
5,089
6,659
1,570
31
Old Tampa
Bay
5,434
5,829
395
7
Terra Ceia Bay
1,007
932
-75
-7
1,349
5
Bay
Tampa
28,299 29,647
Bay Total
Life in a Tampa Bay Seagrass Bed
 Bacteria,
Fungi
 Algae
 Invertebrates
 Fish
 Reptiles
 Birds
 Mammals
Life in a Tampa Bay Seagrass Bed

Bacteria, Fungi


Algae






Decompose seagrass leaves
Grows on seagrass leaves, becomes detritus
Invertebrates
Fish
Reptiles
Birds
Mammals
Life in a Tampa Bay Seagrass Bed
 Bacteria,
Fungi
 Algae
– scallops, crabs
 Fish – snook, sharks
 Reptiles – sea turtles
 Birds – wading birds
 Mammals - manatees
 Invertebrates
Watch
“Seagrasses: Underwater
Food Factories”
On the Tampa Bay: Living Legacy
DVD
Your Assignment
1.
Create a color postcard describing (in pictures
and/or words) a food chain or web using Tampa
Bay aquatic life. Begin with sunlight and
seagrass, and include examples of:
Bacteria/fungi
Algae
Invertebrates
Fish
Reptiles
Birds
Mammals
2.
Use the Life in a Tampa Bay Seagrass Bed info
sheet
3.
Label (or list) the producers, carnivores,
omnivores, herbivores, decomposers on your
postcard.
Your Assignment (continued)

Answer the following questions on the back of
your postcard:
1.
Fishing in Tampa Bay became less productive
after 1950 because of poor water quality. List
three factors and explain how these factors
caused poor water quality in Tampa Bay.
2.
What would you expect to happen if all the
plants on your postcard died? Explain your
answer.
Bibliography

Tampa Bay Estuary Program
Http://www.TBEP.org

Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary
http://Floridakeys/noaa.gov

Florida Department of Environmental Protection
http://www.dep.state.fl.us

Ichthyology at the Florida Museum of Natural
History

http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/fish/southflorida