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Aquatic Biomes
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Factors that Affect Aquatic Biomes
In an aquatic ecosystem the most important non-living factors are water temperature, amount of sunlight present, and amount of dissolved oxygen in the water
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Factors that Affect Aquatic Biomes
- All living things in the water “breathe”, they just do it in a different way than land creatures
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Factors that Affect Aquatic Biomes
- Fish, worms, octopi, clams, corals, frogs, and many, many others all breathe oxygen
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Factors that Affect Aquatic Biomes
The oxygen needed by these biotic factors is dissolved - This means that oxygen gas is mixed into the water the same way carbon dioxide is mixed into soda pop
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Factors that Affect Aquatic Biomes
There are areas within the water that don’t receive sunlight - This greatly impacts the food chains that can form there
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Factors that Affect Aquatic Biomes
Water temperature affects the amount of dissolved oxygen a body of water can hold and can be determined by the amount of sunlight present
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Freshwater Ecosystems
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Freshwater Ecosystems
The freshwater ecosystems include rivers, streams, lakes, ponds, and wetlands
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Rivers and Streams
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Green River, UT MacArthur-Burney Falls State Park, CA Brooks River, AK Trout
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Rivers and Streams - Rivers and streams are flowing water - As the water moves, air mixes in, changing the amount of dissolved oxygen in the water
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Rivers and Streams - Fast-moving streams usually have a higher dissolved oxygen level than slow moving streams
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Rivers and Streams - Most of the nutrients found in rivers and streams have been washed there from land - Where the water slows nutrients are left
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Rivers and Streams - This area is home to more plant growth and slower moving animals like minnows and leeches
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Lakes and Ponds
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Lakes and Ponds - Lakes and ponds are formed when low places fill with rainwater, snowmelt, or water from streams
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Manzanita Lake, CA A pond in Idaho Great Blue Heron Paranagat Lake, NV
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Lakes and Ponds - This water is standing water because it hardly ever moves - Plant growth usually takes place around the edges where it is shallow and warm
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Lakes and Ponds - Few, if any plants grow on the bottom of lakes because sunlight cannot reach there
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Lakes and Ponds - Some plants will grow on the bottom of ponds because they are shallower and light can reach the bottom - Ponds tend to be high in nutrients because they are high in plant life
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Lakes and Ponds - Floating on the upper levels of ponds and lakes is a mixture of microscopic plants, algae, and animal- like organisms called plankton
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Lakes and Ponds - This is a major food source in aquatic environments
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FYI: Pond Scum is NOT a plant
FYI: Pond Scum is NOT a plant. It is a plant-like protist called algae; this is related to the plant-like protists in plankton.
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Wetlands
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Wetlands Regions that are wet for all or most of the year are wetlands
- They are also called swamps, bogs, and fens
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Wetlands Only plants adapted to water-logged soil can grow there
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Wetlands Wetlands animals include beavers, muskrats, alligators, and bog turtles - Many migratory bird populations use the wetlands as breeding grounds
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Human Impact Rivers and streams were once used for many activities
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Human Impact - However, many factories and people thought that they were places to dump sewage and pollutants - Now, treating sewage and restricting pollution have led to improvements in water quality
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Ponds and Lakes These areas are often victim to run-off from land
- Fertilizers, sewage, and other pollutants run off into the water
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Ponds and Lakes This reduces the dissolved oxygen and makes the water unfit to live in Fines and regulations are helping prevent some pollution of ponds and lakes
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Wetlands These areas were once considered useless and full of disease
They were drained to make way for human engineering
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Wetlands Now, the wetlands are being saved and protected
Some products that come from the wetlands include cranberries, fish, shellfish, and plants
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Saltwater Ecosystems
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Saltwater Ecosystems 95% of the water on earth is salty
- The concentration of salt in the water is called salinity
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Saltwater Ecosystems Saltwater ecosystems are found in oceans, seas, coastal inlets, estuaries, and a few inland places
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Open Oceans
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Open Oceans Scientists divide the ocean into regions based on where light can penetrate to
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Amberjack fish Brain coral and sea fan Mussels, worms, and spider crabs in Gulf of Mexico
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Open Oceans The photic zone is only about 200 m deep
- There plankton is the major food source because most plankton are able to produce their own food
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Open Oceans The aphotic zone is below 200 m deep
- There organisms feed on dead material sinking from the photic zone
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Open Oceans - They also eat each other because few can make their own food
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Coral Reefs
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Coral Reefs One of the most diverse ecosystems in the world is the coral reef In the Red Sea Fanning Island Reef Florida Keys
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Coral Reefs Coral reefs are formed by microscopic animals secreting shells of calcium carbonate - These shells build up over hundreds of years and form the reef
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Coral Reefs Reefs do not adapt to long-term stress well
- Run-off from fields, sewage, and increased amounts of sediment have polluted the reef, killing some areas
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Sediments from land can cause large amounts of damage to reefs.
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Blast fishing off the coast of Indonesia not only killed the fish but also the reef.
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Coral Reefs - There are regulations in place to protect the reefs and the areas that surround them
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Coral Reef transplant after Indonesian tsunami of 2004.
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Seashores
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Seashores All of earth’s landmasses are boarded by ocean water
- These shallow salt-water environments are influenced by the tides and waves
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Seashores - The gravitational pull of the moon on the earth causes tides to move water in and out over the shoreline
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Seashores The intertidal zone is an area that is covered with water at high tide and exposed to the air during low tide
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Bay of Fundy
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Seashores - Organisms that live here must be adapted to large changes in salinity, moisture, temperature and waves
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Estuaries
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Estuaries There a river meets the ocean, causing freshwater and saltwater to mix, an estuary forms - They are also called bays, lagoons, harbors, inlets, and sounds
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Tidal stream near Charleston, SC
A mangrove forest in Florida Salt marsh near Georgetown, SC
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This estuary is off the coast of Florida.
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Estuaries - Here salinity and temperature change often
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Estuaries - These regions are extremely fertile because of nutrients being brought in by the freshwater
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Estuaries - They are rich in nutrients and are a place where many organisms raise their young
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Estuaries Estuaries are home to algae, salt-tolerant grasses, shrimp, crabs, clams, oysters, snails, worms, and fish
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Estuaries - They are home to much of the seafood consumed by humans
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