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Aquatic Ecosystems
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4 things determine aquatic ecosystems:
Depth Flow Temperature Chemistry
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Only 3% of the Earth’s surface is fresh water.
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Two types of freshwater ecosystems:
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Flowing water ecosystems
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Standing water ecosystems
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Flowing Water Ecosystems
Rivers Streams Creeks Brooks
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Animals that live in Flowing –Water ecosystems:
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Catfish
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Trout
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Turtles
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Beavers
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River Otters
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Standing Water Ecosystems
Lakes ponds
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Plankton General term for the tiny, free-floating or weakly swimming organisms that live in both fresh and salt water environments. Phytoplankton – single celled photosynthetic algae Zooplankton – small animals, usually microscopic, that feed on the phytoplankton.
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Wetlands Wetlands are productive because they are shallow with a lot of organic plant matter in the water that serves as breeding grounds for insects, fishes and other aquatic animals, amphibians, and migratory birds.
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Wetland Bogs Form in depressions left by sheets of ice.
Thick mats of sphagnum moss grow and the bogs tend to be very acidic.
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Bog Finds Many ancient bodies are preserved in the acidic / oxygen free bogs. This man found in 1950 is estimated to be over 2000 years old.
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Venus Flytrap Pitcher Plants
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Wetland Marshes are shallow wetlands along streams that remain wet at least half the year.
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Sawgrass marsh in the Everglades
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Wetland Swamps Wet year round
Often look like flooded forests with trees and shrubs.
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Okefenokee Swamp
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Estuaries are wetlands formed where rivers meet the sea.
They contain a mixture of fresh and salt water.
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Estuaries Freshwater and saltwater mix - brackish
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Estuary Examples Salt marshes: temperate zone estuaries dominated by salt-tolerant grasses above the low tide line, and by seagrasses under water. Mangrove swamps are coastal wetlands that are widespread across tropical regions, including southern Florida and Hawaii.
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Salt Marsh
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Marine Ecosystems Contain salt water
Photic zone: well lit upper layer down to 200 meters where algae and other producers can grow. Aphotic zone: permanently dark area where no photosynthetic organisms live, but some chemosynthetic organisms live.
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Marine zone based on depth of water & distance from shore:
Intertidal zone Coastal ocean Open ocean
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Tides The portion of the shoreline that lies between the high and low tide lines is called the intertidal zone.
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Intertidal zone Barnacles Seaweed Snails Sea urchins Sea stars
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Intertidal Zone
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Coastal ocean Kelp forests Snails Sea urchins Sea otters Fishes Seals
whales
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Coral Reefs Corals are relatives to the jellyfish that secrete a hard substance called calcium carbonate. They live in symbiosis with algae contained within the body of each coral animal. Almost all grow within 40 meters of the surface.
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Coral Reefs
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Open Ocean Begins at the edge of the continental shelf and extends
outward. Largest marine zone 500 meters to 11,000 meters. Swordfish, octopus, dolphins, whales
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Plankton Small organisms that live in the waters of the photic zone.
phytoplankton–microscopic plants and bacteria zooplankton–microscopic animals
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Benthic Zone Ocean floor
Organisms that live near or attached to the bottom Sea stars, anemones, marine worms – all referred to as benthos. Clams, sea cucumbers
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Harris Neck NWR
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Baby Alligator
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Sapelo Island
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Sapelo Island - Blackbeard
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