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UNDERC HABITATS (terrestrial & aquatic)
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CHANGE CONTINUES EVOLUTIONARY AND GEOLOGICAL CHANGE (inherent) ECOLOGY OF AQUATIC HABITATS (inherent) ECOLOGY OF TERRESTRIAL HABITATS (inherent) HISTORICAL CHANGES WITH HUMANS (Native Americans and Europeans) – environmental history
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FORESTS (taught by Dr. Walt Carson, U. of Pittsburgh) AQUATICS (taught by Dr. Todd Crowl, Utah State U. & NSF)
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Aquatic Environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens
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Streams Open systems, constant input of water and nutrients Precipitation flows into streams via 2 routes: –Overland flow through surface runoff –Infiltrating soil surface, then flowing underground and into streams as groundwater Types of flow – permanent, intermittent, interrupted
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Watershed The area that a stream drains, a.k.a, drainage basin, or catchment area UNDERC area is near continental divide between Great Lakes drainage basin and Mississippi River basin Water flows downhill –Upstream –Downstream
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River Continuum Hypothesis Predictable structure of river (physical features, dominant organisms) from upstream “headwaters” to downstream
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Lakes May be created by a variety of geologic and climatic events: –Movement of tectonic plates –Volcanic eruptions –Landslides –Fluvial processes –Glaciation
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Lake Zonation
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Lake Stratification Different zones or layers due to water temperature and water density
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Nutrients Temperature not the only stratified element of a lake –Oxygen: highest concentration near surface (photosynthesis) –Nitrogen: NO 3 - at surface, NH 4 + at benthos –Sulfur: SO 4 at surface, H 2 S at benthos –Iron: Fe +3 at surface, Fe +2 at benthos
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Crampton Lake (oligotrophic)
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Brown Lake (mesotrophic - eutrophic)
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Aquatic Succession Marsh (Eutrophic) Bog (Dystrophic) Oligotrophic Lake Mesotrophic to Eutrophic Lake Terrestrial Sphagnum
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Wetlands: technical definition Vegetation –presence of “hydrophytic” (water-loving, flood-tolerant) plants Soils –presence of “hydric” (flooded, reduced) soils Hydrology –water table at or near the surface for part of the growing season
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Wetland examples Marshes Swamps Glades Bogs Fens
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Bogs Acidic (pH < 4.1) Nutrient-poor soils Ombrotrophic: precipitation-fed system Dominant vegetation: Sphagnum moss, Vaccinium (cranberries and blueberries), and other low-lying species Slightly less acidic (pH 4.1-6.0) Soil more nutrient-rich Minerotrophic: groundwater-fed system Dominant vegetation: sedges, rushes, and grasses Fens
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Ziesnis Bog (dystrophic)
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Ecological succession results in change over time as lakes gradually become terrestrial habitats.
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Succession in Terrestrial Plant Communities After a community reverts from aquatic to terrestrial, succession continues resulting in successive species replacements until a climax community is established. The species composition of the climax community is determined by climate.
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TYPES OF SUCCESSION PRIMARY -- from bedrock (no soil) through a series of communities (seres) to climax. SECONDARY -- successional progression is pushed back by a disturbance to a point where soil still exists and then proceeds. What did the glaciers do at UNDERC? What does a large windstorm do? What does aquatic succession represent?
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Modeling Forest Dynamics (SimForest, a simplified version of JABOWA, a model by Dr. Dan Botkin, http://ddc.hampshire.edu/simforest/ you will try to parameterize the model for UNDERC, learn about it to be prepared) http://ddc.hampshire.edu/simforest/ White Pine Hemlock Other 2% 10% 88% 0.08 trees/m 2
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CHANGES WITH FOREST SUCCESSION
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ANIMALS CAN MODIFY FORESTS & AQUATIC HABITATS
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FROM A CONSERVATION PERSPECTIVE : WHAT FOREST & AQUATIC HABITAT AGES DO WE WANT TO ENCOURAGE?
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