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Aquatic Ecosystems Habitats • Surface film: This is the place where the water meets the air. Animals found here include air-breathing insects that may walk on or hang from the surface of the water. Open Water: The area where rooted plants do not reach the surface of the water. In this habitat you will find fish, turtles , and water birds Habitats: • Bottom-the area of rocks, sand, or mud that is the habitat for a variety of small organisms including bacteria, snails, worms,sponges, crayfish, and the larvae of some insects. • Water’s edge-is where the water meets the land. This area is home for the greatest number of species of plants and animals. Deep Lake Zones • Deep lakes contain three distinct zones, each with a characteristic community of organisms: • Limnetic zone-The layer of open water where the sun’s light reaches and photosynthesis can occur • Profundal zone-The area that is deep enough that not enough light reaches to support primary productivity • Littoral zone-The zone closest to shore Limnetic zone • This is the zone of open water where photosynthesis can occur. Also known as the photic zone. • Life in the limnetic zone is dominated by • Floating microorganisms called plankton • Actively swimming animals called nekton Profundal Zone •Many lakes, and a few ponds, are so deep that a zone exists where not enough light reaches for photosynthesis to occur. •This zone depends on things that drift down from above for its calories. •This zone is inhabited chiefly by primary consumers that either attach to something or crawl along the bottom •Such bottom dwellers are called benthos Littoral Zone • The zone closest to shore • Here light reaches all the way to the bottom • Producers in the zone include algae and plants that are rooted to the bottom • Consumers include crustaceans, larvae, flatworms, snails, frogs, turtles and others Creatures that live in the water: • Benthic macroinvertebrates: aquatic insects or other small organisms that have no backbone and are large enough to be seen without a microscope. • Benthic- means that their habitat is at the bottom of the water • A survey of the benthic macroinvertebrates in a body of water can be an indication of the quality of the water since some of them can only be found in clean water. Macroinvertebrate survey • Clean water organisms-some organisms will only be found in the cleanest of pond water. They cannot tolerate any pollution • Pollution-tolerant-some species can tolerate polluted water • Index species-certain organisms are called index species because their presence in large numbers can tell us whether the water is clean or polluted Macroinvertebrate Diversity • The diversity of macroinvertebrate populations is a good indicator of the health of the ecosystem. • In general, the more species found in an area, particularly the more sensitive species, the healthier the ecosystem • If a body of water is found to be decreasing in its diversity it can be assumed that it is most likely because of some environmental stress (human interference, drought, extreme temperatures etc) FRESHWATER LIFE ZONES • Freshwater life zones include: • Standing (lentic) water such as lakes, ponds, and inland wetlands. • Flowing (lotic) systems such as streams and rivers. Figure 6-14 Natural Capital Ecological Services of Rivers • Deliver nutrients to sea to help sustain coastal fisheries • Deposit silt that maintains deltas • Purify water • Renew and renourish wetlands • Provide habitats for wildlife Fig. 12-11, p. 267 Freshwater Wetlands Wetland definition: • Covered by water all or part of the year • Characteristic hydric soils (saturated) • Characteristic plant life (plants that are adapted to having their roots covered by water part of the time) Freshwater Inland Wetlands: Vital Sponges Filter and degrade pollutants. Reduce flooding and erosion by absorbing slowly releasing overflows. Help replenish stream flows during dry periods. Help recharge ground aquifers. Provide economic resources and recreation. Swamps • A lowland region permanently covered with water. Importance of freshwater wetlands • They filter & purify water. • Habitat for many animals and plants. Definition Estuaries • A partially enclosed area of coastal water where sea water mixes with freshwater. Salt Marshes • The ground here is saturated with water and there is little oxygen, so decay takes place slowly. It has a surface inlet and outlet, and contains many invertebrates. It is also the breeding ground for many ocean animals. Ex. crabs and shellfish. Mangrove Forests • These are along warm, tropical coasts where there is too much silt for coral reefs to grow. It is dominated by salttolerant trees called mangroves (55 different species exist). It also helps to protect the coastline from erosion and provides a breeding nursery for some 2000 species of fish, invertebrates, and plants. The Everglades Southern Florida to the Keys Case Study: Restoring the Florida Everglades • The world’s largest ecological restoration project involves trying to undo some of the damage inflicted on the Everglades by human activities. • 90% of park’s wading birds have vanished. • Other vertebrate populations down 75-95%. • Large volumes of water that once flowed through the park have been diverted for crops and cities. • Runoff has caused noxious algal blooms. Problems • As Miami develops, it encroaches on everglades. Plus, it prompts people vs. wildlife. It is freshwater and local areas are draining it. Restoring the Florida Everglades • The project has been attempting to restore the Everglades and Florida water supplies. Figure 12-10 Restoration • Build huge aqueduct, or find other sources of fresh water an protect it federally under endangered species act, etc. Case Study: The Aral Sea Disaster • Diverting water from the Aral Sea and its two feeder rivers mostly for irrigation has created a major ecological, economic, and health disaster. • About 85% of the wetlands have been eliminated and roughly 50% of the local bird and mammal species have disappeared. • Since 1961, the sea’s salinity has tripled and the water has dropped by 22 meters most likely causing 20 of the 24 native fish species to go extinct. Colorado River Basin • These are dams & reservoirs that feed from the Colorado River all the way to San Diego, LA, Palm Springs, Phoenix & Mexico. So far has worked because they haven’t withdrawn their full allocations. See pg306. The Colorado River Basin • The area drained by this basin is equal to more than one-twelfth of the land area of the lower 48 states. Figure 14-14 IDAHO WYOMING Dam Aqueduct or canal Salt Lake City Upper Basin Denver Grand Junction UPPER BASIN Lower Basin UTAH NEVADA Lake Powell Grand Canyon Las Vegas COLORADO Glen Canyon Dam NEW MEXICO Boulder City CALIFORNIA Los Angeles ARIZONA Palm Springs San Diego All-American Canal Albuquerque LOWER BASIN Phoenix Yuma Mexicali Gulf of California Tucson 0 100 mi. 0 150 km MEXICO Fig. 14-14, p. 318 Case Study: The Colorado Basin – an Overtapped Resource • The Colorado River has so many dams and withdrawals that it often does not reach the ocean. • 14 major dams and reservoirs, and canals. • Water is mostly used in desert area of the U.S. • Provides electricity from hydroelectric plants for 30 million people (1/10th of the U.S. population). Case Study: The Colorado Basin – an Overtapped Resource • Lake Powell, is the second largest reservoir in the U.S. • It hosts one of the hydroelectric plants located on the Colorado River. Figure 14-15