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Published byMuriel Booth Modified over 9 years ago
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Bio 126 Marsh and Wetlands
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Current state: In California we have lost 90% of our wetlands – Much of the Great Central valley was a seasonal marsh – Our Largest lakes with miles of marshy shoreline were by Bakersfield. They had 2,100 miles of marshy shoreline – 40% of the SF Bay has been filled in with land. – Rivers have been channelized, shoreline reduced
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Types of Marshes: Salt water – marine or sea water marshes – along bays and sea shore Mangrove swamps, important for island building in warm waters Brackish – mix of salt or sea water and fresh water – locations may vary by seasonal flow Estuaries – river meets a bay, or sea Fresh water – along streams and lakes
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Ecological Roles of Wetlands: High productivity Filters water – Laminar flow Fisheries Migrating & resident birds Food, cover, nesting sites Traps nutrients, pollutants
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Salt Marsh Plants Halophytes at leading edge Plants adapted to salty conditions Many have Salt glands Succulents have swollen tissues that store water – like Pickleweed
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Anatomy of Salt Marsh Open sea water Mudflats – still under water Salt marsh – above ground by inches, right next to mudflats. Salt content of soil high Fresh water marsh, higher up, and farther back from mud flats Salt content of soil very low
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Mudflats Forms new land by silting, Limited by high-tide line Area still under water at high tides Wind blows dust, plant trap sediments settling down & slowly build up soil Differences in compaction create tidal meanders – deeper channels Highest salt content – same as sea Eel grass and sea lettuce- dominants Wading birds eat animals in mud
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Salt Marsh edge with sea water Cordgrass dominates Hollow stems, 2-3 ft. tall Rhizomes trap detritus, and sediments add to soil Highly productive Has nitrogen fixing bacteria in roots Few things eat cordgrass Fuels a detrivore based food chain Decays in mud, microorganism eat detritus Worms, snails, fish larvae eat microorganisms Birds, larger fish, eat worms etc.
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Salt Marsh farther inland Salt in soil is less than 2% Saltgrass most common Other salt-tolerant species may be present such as: Saltbush Sea Blite Marsh Grindelia – a “gum weed”
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Fresh Water Marsh On inflow of creeks into salt marshes Around lakes streams inland Deltas of rivers
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Fresh Water Marsh Plants Floating plants – microphytes Duckweed and Water-ferns Water hyacinth an introduce weedy species Tule – Bullrush small spike of flowers and seeds Triangular stems up to 6 ft. Cattails – column of small flowers / feather seeds Round hollow stems up to 10 ft. Can not tolerate water deeper than 4 ft. Shrubs and Trees – Riparian areas may include Willows, Alder, Cottonwood, Sycamore
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A Saltwater Marsh in California
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Good website to view marshplants www.msnucleus.org/.../ mudslough/mudplants.html
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Cord grass
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Pickleweed
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Marsh Grindelia Gumplant
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Cattails
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Bull rush - Tule
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Marsh Birds Northern Harrier Rails Black Phoebe Kingfishers Egrets, Herons Ducks Western Meadowlark Smaller Waders: Stilts, Avocet, Peeps Brewers and Red-winged Black birds
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Northern Harrier the marsh Hawk
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Great Egret
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Snowy Egret
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Great Blue Heron
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Green Heron
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Belted Kingfisher
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American White Pelican
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Canvasback Duck
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Lesser Scuap
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Ruddy Duck
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Pintail Duck
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American Wigeon
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Common Golden Eye
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Barrow’s Golden Eye
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Northern Shoveler
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Pied Billed Grebe
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Bufflehead
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Double Crested Cormorant
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American Avocet
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Black necked Stilt
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Killdeer
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Green winged teal
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Blue winged teal
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Cinnamon Teal
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Experimental field research in Marsh Ecology
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Other Marsh Animals Black-tailed Jack Rabbit Tule Elk Racoons Skunks Muskrats Otters Salt Marsh Harvest Mouse Norway Rats Introduced red fox – hunts marsh birds
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Harrier, Northern
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A new Dawn for the Delta Glen Martin SF Chronicle December 30, 2005
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SAN FRANCISCO BAY Bonanza of birds on the bay Tidal marshes' recovery has brought record counts Jane Kay, Chronicle Environment Writer Saturday, March 26, 2005
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SAN FRANCISCO BAY Bay researchers try to mow down enemy Invasive hybrid weed is suffocating mudflat habitats Glen Martin, Chronicle Environment Writer Tuesday, October 11, 2005
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Spartina alternifolia- Atlantic Smooth Cord Grass
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