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Aquatic Ecosystems

Aquatic Ecosystems

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Page 1: Aquatic Ecosystems

Aquatic Ecosystems

Page 2: Aquatic Ecosystems

What type of Freshwater ecosystem are these?

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Flowing Water

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Streams and Rivers• Rivers change from source point to end point (where they empty out, usually

ocean)– Source: usually cold (water is from springs), low in nutrients and clear

• shallow and narrow• few phytoplankton• major producers are algae on rocks in river bed• Arthropods in benthic zone that feed on algae and leaves• Common fish is trout

– Downstream from source• Wider and deeper• Marshes and other wetlands• Warmer and murkier water• Phytoplankton• Frogs, catfish, insect larvae

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Organisms adapt

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What type of fresh water ecosystem is this?

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Standing Water Ecosystem

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Ponds and Lakes

• Water bodies with very little dissolved salt• Standing water• Photic zone: surface of water

– Phytoplankton and water plants that use photosynthesis

• Aphotic zone: no light/little light– Light levels too low to support photosynthesis– Benthic zone

• Rock, sand, sediment• Floor

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Plankton

• Phytoplankton– Unicellular

algae– cyanobacteria

• Zooplankton– Planktonic

animals that feed on phytoplankton

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Name this marine ecosystem…

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Fresh water Wetlands

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Wetlands

• Aquatic ecosystem where water covers the soil or is present near the surface of soil for at least part of the year

• Water may be flowing or standing, salty, or brackish

• Very productive ecosystem• Four types

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Bogs

Small depressions where water collectsLots of mosses

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Marsh

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Marsh

Shallow wetlands along riversGrass-like plants in waterLooks like river of grass

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Swamp

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Swamp

Water is slowly flowing through these wetlandsLooks like a flooded forest

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Name this ecosystem(hint: unique to Florida)

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Everglades

• Covers much of south florida

• Unique• Water from Lake

Okeechobee flows to the Gulf of Mexico and Atlantic

• Wet season (May to October)

• Dry season (November to April)

• Unique Wildlife• Endangered species

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Estuary• Wetlands where rivers meet ocean• Mix of fresh and salt water (brackish)• Affected by rise and fall of ocean tides• Many are shallow• Photosynthesis plays a major role

even in benthic zone• Primary producers are plants and

bacteria, who use both photosynthesis and chemosynthesis

• Estuary food webs differ from other ecosystems because primary production is not consumed by herbivores

• Most organic material enters food web as detritus• Detritus: made of tiny pieces of

organic material that provide food for organisms at the base of the estuary food web

• Clams, worms, and sponges feed on this

• Support large biomass• Fewer species than fresh water

ecosystems• 2 types

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Salt Marsh

Salt tolerant plants above low tide lineSea grasses underwaterFound along eastern North America (Maine to Georgia)Chesapeake Bay in Maryland

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Mangrove Swamp

Coastal estuaries found in tropical regionsHawaii and FloridaSalt tolerant trees (mangroves)Sea grassesPrevalent in Everglades

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Marine Ecosystems

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Zones of Marine ecosystems• 2 Main Divisions Based on Light

– Photic• 200 m• photosynthesis

– Aphotic• Permanent darkness• chemosynthesis

• Depth/Distance Divisions– Intertidal Zone

• Rocky• zonation

– Coastal Ocean (neritic zone)• Low tide mark to outer edge of

continental shelf– Open Ocean (pelagic zone)

• Edge of continental shelf and outward• 500m to 11000m• Largest division

– Benthic Zone• Ocean floor• Attached organisms…

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Name this Marine Ecosystem

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Intertidal Zone

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ZONATIONprominent horizontal banding of organisms in particular

habitat

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Coastal ocean (Neritic)

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Kelp Forests

• Pacific Ocean• Cold, nutrient rich water• Support many organisms• Grow up to 50 feet tall!

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Open Ocean Ecosystem (largest)(Oceanic/Pelagic)

• Phytoplankton drifting in photic layer• Zooplankton-feed off phytoplankton• Whales, squid, dolphins

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Benthic Zone

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• Depth of 2,500 meters• Spots on the ocean floor where hot

gases and minerals spew out of Earth’s crust from its interior

• No sunlight (aphotic)• Producers are prokaryotes that use

chemosynthesis to make hydrogen and sulfur containing compounds into carbohydrates they can use

• Tube worms (up to 3m long!) and clams feed on these prokaryotes

Hydrothermal Vents

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Coral Reefs

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Coral Reefs• Biologically diverse• Equivalent to the tropical rainforest but the watery version• All invertebrates are found here

– Sponges, sea anemones, worms, star fish, mollusks, sea urchins

• Vertebrates also roam the reefs– Sea turtles and tropical fish

• Reefs are formed from colonies of coral polyps– Animals in the Phylum Cnidarian (Jellyfish phylum)

• These organisms secrete hard exoskeletons made of calcium bicarbonate that make up the hard, stone like base of the reef

• This is the home to many coral polyps, sponges and algae

• Coral polyps use photosynthesis During the day to make their own food

• Coral polyps also have stinging tentacles to help them capture zooplankton

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Zones of Marine ecosystems• 2 Main Divisions Based on Light

– Photic• 200 m• photosynthesis

– Aphotic• Permanent darkness• chemosynthesis

• Depth/Distance Divisions– Intertidal Zone

• Rocky• zonation

– Coastal Ocean/neritic• Low tide mark to outer edge of

continental shelf– Open Ocean/pelagic

• Edge of continental shelf and outward• 500m to 11000m• Largest division

– Benthic Zone• Ocean floor• Attached organisms…