Aquatic Ecosystems
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Transcript Aquatic Ecosystems
Aquatic Ecosystems
Chapter 54
In general…
Aquatic ecosystems are classified primarily on
abiotic factors:
temperature, salinity, dissolved oxygen, current
These factors are often related to water depth
Three ecological categories of organisms:
Plankton – at the mercy of current and waves:
• Phytoplankton – photosynthetic organisms
• Zooplankton – heterotrophic protozoa and animals
Nekton – stronger swimmers (fish)
Benthic – live on or in the bottom (worms)
Freshwater ecosystems
Flowing water
Headwater streams are usually shallow, fastflowing, highly oxygenated. They depend
primarily on detritus for energy input
Rivers – typically deeper, slower flowing, with
less dissolved oxygen
Organisms in different locations are adapted
accordingly, especially for O2 levels and current
Freshwater ecosystems…
Standing-water ecosystems
Ponds and lakes
Large lakes can be divided into zones:
Littoral zone – shallow area around shore; may
contain emergent and nonemergent plants
Limnetic zone – deeper water; phytoplankton is the
base of the food chain
Profundal zone – below the depth of light penetration
Thermal stratification may occur in temperate
lakes and have areas of warm water over cold
Thermocline – the zone of rapid temperature change
Turnover – in the fall and spring the waters mix
Freshwater ecosystems…
– transitional between aquatic
and terrestrial ecosystems
Include hardwood bottomland forests,
prairie potholes, and peat bogs, as well as
swamps (with trees) and marshes (without
trees)
Are important in flood control, breeding
sites for birds, recharge of groundwater
Wetlands
Transitional ecosystems
– where freshwater and salt
water meet
Salt marshes – in temperate locations
Mangrove forests – in tropical areas
Undergo marked changes in temperature,
salinity, current, and other abiotic factors
Extremely productive areas
Threatened by pollution and human
population growth
Estuaries
Marine Ecosystems
zone – transition between land
and ocean between high and low tide
Highly productive but very stressful habitat
Intertidal
Marine ecosystems…
zone – ocean floor
Seagrass beds – flowering plants adapted
to being submerged
Kelp forests – the largest brown algae
Coral reefs – very productive habitats;
restricted to shallow water because coral
polyps have a symbiotic relationship with
photosynthetic zooxanthellae
Benthic
Marine ecosystems…
Neritic
province – shallow waters close to
shore
Euphotic region – the lit zone where
photosynthesis occurs
Phytoplankton zooplankton nektonic
organisms
Marine ecosystems…
province – most of the ocean;
greater than 200 m deep
Marine ‘snow’ – organic debris that ‘rains’
down into the darker regions
Oceanic
Marine Ecosystems…
Overfishing
Many commercially important fishes have
reached commercial extinction due to
overfishing
Pollution
is a threat
is also a threat
Many of the world’s largest cities began as
ports
Garbage has long been dumped in the sea