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Transcript
Water
Earth’s Hydrosphere
• Hydrosphere = all the parts of the earth
that are made up of water
– Oceans, Lakes, Rivers
– Underground water, clouds
The Hydrosphere
• More than 70% of
Earth’s surface is
covered by water.
• > 97% of the
hydrosphere is salt
water
– Oceans
– Salt Lakes (Great Salt
Lake in Utah)
• Salt water = Water that
contains dissolved salts
– 35 g of salt/liter of ocean
water
Fresh Water
• Less dissolved salt
than salt water
• Lakes, ponds,
streams &
underground water
• <3% of the
hydrosphere
– >2/3 = frozen glaciers
and ice caps
Fresh Water
• Surface water = water in lakes, streams, and
rain runoff
• Ground water = found beneath the surface of the
earth
– Moves more easily through rock layers that are
porous
– Aquifer = an underground layer of porous rock that
contains water
Aquifers
• Sometimes flow between two
layers of rock that water cannot
seep through
• Pressure accumulates
– Water pressure
– Weight of rock layer above
water
• Artesian Wells = wells in which
water flows to the surface due
to high pressure
• Water contained in aquifers is
replenished very slowly
Aquatic Biomes
Aquatic Biomes
• Water covers more than 70% of earth.
• Aquatic Habitat = a habitat in which
organisms live in or on water.
Aquatic Biomes
• Not grouped
geographically
the way that
terrestrial
biomes are
• Aquatic biomes
are:
– Scattered
– Determined by
depth rather
than location
Abiotic Factors
• Abiotic factors which
determine aquatic
biomes and terrestrial
biomes are not the
same
• Abiotic factors in
terrestrial biomes:
– Temperature
– Rainfall
Abiotic Factors: Aquatic Biomes
•
•
•
•
Amount of dissolved salts in the water
Depth of the water
Rate of water flow
Amount of dissolved oxygen in the water
Salinity
• Aquatic biomes can be divided into two main groups
based on the amount of dissolved minerals in the water.
– Saltwater
– Freshwater
• All water contains some dissolved salts and other
minerals.
– Saltwater contains more than freshwater.
Salinity
• Salinity = the amount
of dissolved salts in a
sample of water.
– Measured in parts per
thousand or parts per
million (ppm)
– Ocean water = 30
parts per thousand
– Freshwater = < .5
parts per thousand
Salinity
• Brackish Water =
water that is more
saline than
freshwater but less
saline than ocean
water.
Ex: Where the Mississippi
River meets the Gulf of
Mexico
– Common in river
deltas and coastal
marshes
– Where fresh water
meets the ocean
Freshwater Salinity
• Lakes, Ponds,
Rivers
• Exceptions =
hypersaline (more
saline than the
ocean!) lakes
– Great Salt Lake in
Utah, Mono Lake
in California
– 40 parts per
thousand
Salinity vs. Density
• Saltwater is denser than
fresh water:
– Salinity is tested using a
hydrometer
– Measures buoyancy (how
much mass can float on
the water)
Temperature vs. Density
• Warm water is
less dense
than cooler
water
– Water
temperatures
decrease &
density
increases at
lower water
depth zones
Depth
• Ecosystem is greatly influenced by the
amount of sunlight that penetrates to the
bottom.
– Determines the type of plants that grow
– Remember: producers (includes plants) form
the base of the food web!
Depth Zones
• Photic Zone = the top
layer of water, which
receives enough
sunlight for
photosynthesis to
occur
– Depth of the photic
zone depends upon the
turbidity of the water
– Open ocean - photic
zone = up to 200 m
deep
Depth Zones
• Aphotic Zone = below the photic zone,
sunlight never reaches the aphotic zone
– Only found in the ocean and deep lakes
Depth Zones
• Benthic Zone = The floor of a body of water
– Ocean = supports microscopic decomposers &
scavengers
– Shallow freshwater = sunlight allows insect larvae,
snails, catfish and turtles to survive