FIGURE 7.1 (a) Fringe mangrove along Shark River slough dominated by Rhizophora mangle. (b) Interior mangrove forest in Puerto Rico dominated by Avicennia.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Mangroves as organic records Miguel Ángel Mateo Mínguez - Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Blanes - CSIC Máster Universitario en Cambio Global Doctorado.
Advertisements

Day 3 Topic 2 – Ecosystems.
PARTICIPATING INSTITUTIONS: Florida International University College of William & Mary Florida Gulf Coast University Harbor Branch Ocean. Institute Louisiana.
CENTURY ECOSYSTEM MODEL Introduction to CENTURY. WHY CENTURY Evaluate Effects of Environmental Change Evaluate Changes in Management.
Lesson Overview 4.5 Aquatic Ecosystems.
Wetlands  Wetlands contain fresh water for part of the year -trap and filter sediments and pollutants -protect shorelines from erosion -spawning grounds.
Ch 23: Global Ecology. Ecology Terms Ecology - the study of the interactions of organisms with one another and with the physical environment Biosphere.
Figure 54.0 A terrarium, an example of an ecosystem.
Ecosystem Ecology. “organisms in the ecosystem regulating the capture and expenditure of energy, and the cycling of chemicals.” Ecosystem Ecology is.
A. Mangroves Or Mangal from mangue (tree) and grove (stand of trees) a.Replace salt marsh as the dominant coastal ecosystem in subtropical and tropical.
Carbon metabolism in marine ecosystems C.M. Duarte and S. Agusti (1998) J.-P. Gattuso, M. Frankignoulle and S.V. Smith (1999) J.-P.Gattuso, M. Frankignoulle.
U.S. Department of Interior U.S. Geological Survey Landscape-scale assessments of climate impacts to tidal wetlands along the northern Gulf of Mexico Michael.
Aquatic Ecosystems Determining factors:
Estuaries Payton Collins December 1 st, The Basics and Terminology  An estuary is the area in which rivers meet the sea.  One of the most productive.
Aquatic Biodiversity Ocean 91% of all water Polar ice caps and glaciers 2.3% Lakes, streams, and rivers 2.8% Rest largely groundwater.
Chapter 5 The Biosphere: The Carbon Cycle of Terrestrial Ecosystems
FIGURE 5.1 Examples of submersed vascular plants that occur in estuarine systems: (a) Myriophyllum spicatum (photo: O. Pedersen), (b) Stuckenia pectinata.
Topic 10 cont’d Marine Biomes. Abiotic Factors  Wind  Dissolved gases  Waves  Nutrient availability  Salinity and pH  Depth  Pressure  Temperature.
Model Specifics Maps of nearshore marine veg. Amt. stored in 4 carbon ‘pools’ Aboveground biomass Belowground biomass Sediments Dead organic matter Rate.
QUIZ #8 1.Draw the IDH curve. When and why is species diversity highest according to IDH? 2.Explain how anthropogenic disturbance can be either beneficial.
Wet lands. Standing water ecosystem Lakes, ponds, puddles H2O circulates within themself Has O2 and nutrients.
Major Ecosystems of the World
FIGURE 3.1 Bacterial decomposition of organic matter in marine/estuarine sediments through a sequence of terminal electron acceptors (e.g., O2, NO3¯,
InVEST Blue Carbon model October F =Feedback please.
FACTORS AFFECTING OLIGOHALINE MARSH MACROPHYTE ZONATION AND PRODUCTION AT THE PLUM ISLAND ECOSYSTEM LTER SITE Robert J. Daoust and James T. Morris Department.
Effects of Rising Nitrogen Deposition on Forest Carbon Sequestration and N losses in the Delaware River Basin Yude Pan, John Hom, Richard Birdsey, Kevin.
Mangrove Ecology with a case study from Ecuador Introduction to Coastal Management.
Welcome Grant from National Science Foundation: Fire, Atmospheric pCO 2, and Climate as Alternative Primary Controls of C 4 -Grass Abundance: The Late-Quaternary.
FIGURE 8.1 Benthic diatom assemblages viewed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). (a) Epipsammic diatoms (Achnanthes and Navicula) in the cavity of a.
Copyright © 2007 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Pearson Addison-Wesley Organisms and Their Environment Ecology is the study of how organisms interact.
FIGURE 16.1 A simple food chain with three trophic levels illustrated using energy systems language (e.g., Odum, 967; Odum, 1971). Arrows indicate transfer.
MANGROVE FOREST.
FIGURE 2.1 The variation of mean sea level for the past 35,000 years based on data from the Atlantic continental shelf of the United States: the solid.
Chapter 13 Final Review. 13.1: Ecologists Study Relationships Ecology is the study of relationships among organisms and their environment. Ecologists.
FIGURE 6.1 Worldwide distribution of coastal marshes and mangrove swamps. Source: After Chapman (1960). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day.
FIGURE 15.1 Regression of ecosystem respiration and ecosystem gross primary production across many types of aquatic ecosystems. Gross production and respiration.
A diverse group of trees that are salt tolerant (halophyte) and are viviparous. shallow and protected tropical and subtropical regions restricted to intertidal.
FIGURE 11.1 Size classification of plankton based on Sieburth et al. (1978). Note the logarithmic scale on the size axis. Most estuarine zooplankton range.
Chapter 2 Ecosystems: Everything is Connected What are the living and non-living factors that interact in various biomes.
Found in tropical and subtropical regions Largest and most diverse mangrove ecosystems are found in the Indo-Pacific, where reefs are the most numerous.
2. Name two of the four biogeochemical cycles.
FIGURE 17.1 A simple nitrogen and water balance for ‘‘Dave the Sea Lion.’’ Both nitrogen and water flows are in units of grams per 40 days. See text for.
EEMB 595P Winter 2011 SBC LTER Research Seminar Instructor: S. Holbrook Time :Wednesdays noon-1 pm Room: MSRB auditorium 5-JanOrganizational meeting SBC.
FIGURE 12.1 Diagram representing the various types of estuarine benthos. Source: From Day et al. (1989). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day.
Mangrove Swamps & Salt Marshes
Coastal Ecosystems: Mangroves
Estuaries.
Chapter 7-2 Marine Ecosystems.
Aquatic Ecosystems.
Major Ecosystems of the World Part 2
ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W
Section 3: Aquatic Ecosystems
ESTUARIES Estuaries are semi-enclosed, transition areas where fresh water mixes with salt water (called brackish). U.S. has nearly 900 estuaries. Most.
Section 3: Aquatic Ecosystems
Lesson Overview 4.5 Aquatic Ecosystems.
FIGURE Idealized scheme of carbon flow in a planktonic food web
FIGURE 13.1 The distribution of fish species richness in estuaries by habitat type and latitude. Source: From Houde (1989). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second.
4-5 Aquatic Ecosystems Photo Credit: © Belinda Wright/DRK Photo.
Estuaries: Where Rivers Meet the Sea
Estuaries – Florida Mangroves Materials in this PowerPoint adapted from the Everglades Foundation lesson “Living on the Edge” (
Estuaries.
Biogeochemistry of Wetlands
Mangroves also known as Mangal
하구및 연안생태Coastal management
Section 3: Aquatic Ecosystems
Nutrients that limit growth in the ocean
Ecosystems and Restoration Ecology
하구및 연안생태Coastal management
Above ground biomass (AGB) Below ground biomass (BGB)
Presentation transcript:

FIGURE 7.1 (a) Fringe mangrove along Shark River slough dominated by Rhizophora mangle. (b) Interior mangrove forest in Puerto Rico dominated by Avicennia germinans. (c) Fringe mangrove in carbonate islands off coast of Belize dominated by R. mangle with sea grasses in the subtidal zone. (d) Riverine mangrove forest along Guayas River estuary in Ecuador dominated by Rhizophora harrisonii. ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.2 Global distribution of mangroves based on Duke et al. (1998) in upper panel and Ellison et al. (1999) in lower panel. ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.3 (a) Seedling development showing viviparity of Rhizophora mangle and (b) cryptoparity of Avicennia germinans (Panel A is from Tomlinson 1986 and Panel B is from Chapman 1976). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.4 Factorial interactions controlling the productivity of coastal wetlands including regulators gradients, resource gradients, and hydroperiod. Source: From Twilley and Rivera-Monroy (2005). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.5 Adaptations of mangroves to intertidal environment. (a) Salt excretion rates for mangrove species (Tomlinson, 1986). (b) Adaptations of root structures to anaerobic environments (Saenger, 2002). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.6 Hierarchical classification system to describe patterns of mangrove structure and function based on global, geomorphological (regional), and ecological (local) factors that control the concentration of nutrient resources and regulators in soil along gradients from fringe to more interior locations from shore. Source: Modified from Twilley et al and Twilley and Rivera-Monroy (2005). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.7 The geomorphological classification of mangroves by Woodroffe (2002) and ecological classification of Lugo and Snedaker (1974). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.8 Mangrove biomass and net primary productivity grouped by latitude including (a) aboveground biomass, (b) net primary productivity, and (c) net production/ biomass ratios. In panel (b), yellow is litterfall, blue is wood production, and green is fine root production. ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.9 (a) Litter fall for 5 years at four sites in the Florida Coastal Everglades (from Castañeda 2010). (b) Summary of organic matter input (litter fall) and loss (export and decomposition) for different ecological type of mangrove based on studies in neotropics. (After Twilley et al as modified by Mitsch and Gosselink 2000). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.9 (Continued) ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.10 Schematic of the detrital food chain of the North River estuary in Everglades National Park. From Odum and Heald ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.11 Biogeochemistry pathways in mangrove forests. Source: Modified from Twilley and Rivera- Monroy ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.12 Survey of nutrient density (upper panel is total nitrogen and middle panel is total phosphorus) from sixty-eight mangrove sites around the world (based on mg per volume of sediment). Lower panel is the nitrogen/phosphorus ratio (atomic) of these nutrient concentrations for each respective site. (b) Survey of nitrogen fixation rates and denitrification rates based on literature values reported in Twilley and Rivera- Monroy (2009). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~

FIGURE 7.13 Diagram of the linkages among environmental setting, ecosystem properties, ecological functions, and uses of mangrove ecosystems, including feedback effects of human utilization on ecosystem properties. Source: Modified from Twilley (1995). ESTUARINE ECOLOGY, Second Edition. John W. Day JR, Byron C. Crump, W. Michael Kemp, and Alejandro Yánez-Arancibia. Copyright © 2013 by Wiley-Blackwell. All rights reserved ~