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Species, Populations, Communities Interactions in Water Ecosystems.

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Presentation on theme: "Species, Populations, Communities Interactions in Water Ecosystems."— Presentation transcript:

1 Species, Populations, Communities Interactions in Water Ecosystems

2 We are being hired to:

3 Our job: Provide comprehensive input about: Physical, chemical, and biological properties of water environments Species interactions Population dynamics Human impacts

4 water ecosystems Marine (Ocean) / Reefs Mangroves / swamps Estuaries / Wetlands / Lagoons River / Riparian Lake Ice / Glaciers

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6 Biological Species and Niche Community Properties Environmental Pressures Population Dynamics

7 Properties of Water Makes up 70% of Earth’s surface 97% is salt, 2% is frozen, 1% is fresh Greatest density at 4° C. Due molecular polarity, it has high adhesion High Specific heat - can absorb energy without rapid temperature increase Ice (solid) is less dense than liquid form The most common solvent – ionic compounds dissolve readily Acid, base, neutral pH depending on solutes Conducts electricity if salts are dissolved

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12 While water depth determines how much light gets through, turbidity is also a huge factor. Turbidity of a water body can be impacted by natural and human activity, and turbidity impacts water ecosystems.

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14 Arrows show the direction of water flow. The white current is the Gulf Stream, which flows along the East Coast of NA, across the Atlantic Ocean, and warms Western Europe.

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16 Rare Earth metal deposits Sea sediment Jasper

17 Human Impact Chemicals – – Fossil fuel combustion biproducts – Manufacturing effluent – N 2 and PO 4 Fertilizers  eutrophism, algal blooms – Herbicides, pesticides, pH Sediment – Land management – Forest management (or mismanagement) Fecal matter – human and animal waste Garbage Temperature – Manufacturing effluent – Global warming

18 Biosphere Tolerance for environmental conditions Limiting factors – temperature, nutrients, space, oxygen

19 Community properties Primary productivity Biodiversity – species richness Abundance – # of organisms of a species Complexity – # of species at each trophic level – The more complex the food web, the more resistant it is to disturbance

20 Communities in Transition

21 Species and Niche NICHE – an organism’s role in the community Generalists – can survive in a wide range of habitats Specialists – survive in only a narrow range of habitats

22 LAW OF COMPETITIVE EXCLUSION No two species can occupy the same niche and compete for the same resources. This will lead to either: – Extinction of one species – Behavior change Temporal isolation Geographic isolation Symbiotic cooperation – Genetic change: Adaptation

23 Adaptation - Natural Selection Genetic traits that survive in harsh conditions are passed onto offspring When members of a population are isolated by (ecologic or geographic) barriers, they can change enough to become a separate species

24 Population Change J-curve - exponential growth without limit S-curve - growth that responds to limits Doubling time – 70 / rate of growth Oscillation – cycles of growth and decline Species Type – r-adapted: high reproduction, high mortality – K-adapted: few offspring, larger, live longer

25 Factors that impact populations Fertility Mortality Life expectancy Emigration Abiotic factors – human impact on Earth Systems – natural disasters Stress and crowding Conservation / Restoration efforts


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