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Estuarine Dynamics David Nash and Jenny McDaniel
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Overview Definition of estuary Estuarine influences Intertidal estuary Subtidal estuary Producers Consumers Decomposers
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What is an estuary? Cowardin et al. 1977: “...deepwater tidal habitats and adjacent tidal wetlands which are usually semi-enclosed by land, but have open, partially obstructed, or sporadic access to the open ocean and in which ocean water is at least occasionally diluted by freshwater runoff from the land.”
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Estuarine Boundaries The limits of an estuarine system extend: 1) upsteam and landward to the place where ocean-derived salts measure less than 0.5 ppt during the period of average annual low flow
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Estuarine Boundaries The limits of an estuarine system extend: 2) - seaward to a line closing the mouth of a river,bay, or sound - seaward to a line enclosing an offshore area of diluted seawater with typical estuarine flora and fauna - seaward limit of wetland emergents, shrubs or trees where these plants grow seaward of the line closing the mouth of a river, bay, or sound
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Estuaries: 2 Major subdivisions Intertidal - those areas where the substrate is periodically exposed and inundated by tides including the associated splash zone Subtidal- those areas where the substrate is continuously submerged
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Estuarine influences oceanic tides currents precipitation runoff from the land evaporation wind river flow meteorological pressure centers
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Estuarine influences...cont. salinity size and shape of estuary water temperature turbidity substrates erosion deposition pollution
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Intertidal Estuary Characteristics: high environmental stress low species diversity often dominated by salt marshes and flats transitional area b/w uplands and permanently flooded estuaries and bays includes both terrestrial and marine organisms
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Intertidal Estuary: Producers Species occurrence limited by: salinity drainage temperature tidal influence
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Intertidal Estuary: Producers nonvascular flora - various micro/macrophytes including diatoms, blue- green algae, red and brown algae, etc. vascular flora - diversity is low, Spartina alterniflora tends to be the dominant species.
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Producers: nonvascular microphyte substrates mud flats marsh pannes (unvegetated sand flats) creek banks soils of halophytic angiosperms macroscopic algae oyster shells submerged marsh vegetation
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Producers: nonvascular macrophyte substrates mud flats marsh pannes (unvegetated sand flats) creek banks soils of halophytic angiosperms oyster reefs shell banks pilings and sea walls surface and subsurface waters
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Producers: nonvascular macrophyte substrates…cont. dead and living spartina stems marsh periwinkle
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Producers: Vascular Flora Influenced by: water level fluctuations salinity substratum type acidity fire nutrient availability aeration
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Producers: Vascular Flora…cont. Influenced by: temperature light plant competition salt spray animal activity human activity
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Subtidal Estuary Characteristics: environmental factors fluctuate more frequently and more widely than in either freshwater or seawater systems. Abundant nutrients supplied by sediments, seawater, freshwater, precipitation, groundwater,microbial decomposition, bacterial and algal nitrogen fixation, and runoff from intertidal salt marsh and land areas.
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Subtidal Estuary: Producers Phytoplankton Macrophytes
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Subtidal Estuary: Phytoplankton Influenced and limited by: salinity temperature light intensity at surface light intensity below surface nutrients pollutants
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Subtidal Estuary: Macrophytes Macroscopic algae limited by: substrates (solid, permanent substrate often absent) scouring action of the tides turbidity
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Subtidal Estuaries Productivity is limited by three separate, but interdependent, units of primary production marshes and their resulting detritus benthic micro and macrophytes phytoplankton
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Consumers Benthic meiofauna-animals living in the sediments (0.5-.063mm in size) - most of these animals are nematodes with copepods second in abundance
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Consumers Benthic macroinvertebrates - animals that live in the sediments and are >0.5mm in size - the number of these organisms is limited due to the stressful environmental conditions (salinity, drainage, temp, etc.) - inverts play an important role of reworking the benthic sediments (burrowers, etc.)
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Benthic macroinvertebrates marsh periwinkle ribbed mussel oyster reef
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Benthic macroinvertebrates fiddler crabpolychaete worm
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Insects Insects are significant pathways of energy flow within the marsh ecosystem Insect fauna is varied and abundant in almost all salt marsh habitats Diptera (flies, mosquitoes, and midges), Coleoptera (beetles), and Hemiptera (true bugs) comprise about 75% of the species in marshes
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Insects Coleoptera Diptera Hemiptera
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Insects Most non-aquatic species tend to avoid areas subject to tidal inundation Carnivrous insects- most common are spiders, beetles, and mosquitoes Low plant diversity limits food sources for herbivorous insects examples: grasshoppers, ants Insects are also important prey items for predators such as birds (marsh wren)
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Fishes Most resident species move in and out with the tide or remain in standing pools of water - example: mummichog, sheepshead minnow Other species use the marsh for different life stages - example: mullets, spotted seatrout, spot
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Fishes Striped mullet Spot Spotted sea trout
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Amphibians and Reptiles Few species are represented in the saltmarshes of the southeast US Amphibian examples: Eastern narrowmouth toad Southern leopard frogs
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Reptiles Banded water snake Eastern glass lizard Diamondback terrapin
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Reptiles: American alligator
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Birds Salt marsh vegetation serves as a base for reproduction, feeding, and roosting activites - examples: long-billed marsh wren- defends its feeding and breeding territory individually white ibis- colonial nesters remove large amounts of marsh grasses to build nests red-winged blackbirds- roost in marsh
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Birds White ibis Red-winged blackbird long-billed marsh wren
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Birds Presence of birds helps to cycle nutrients - dispersal of seeds - fecal material fertilizes marsh plants and has been shown to enhance growth
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Birds Wood stork- federally endangered species that relies on fish found in marshes for primary food source
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Birds Great egret- year round resident in estuarine marsh habitat. Feeds on small fish, shrimp, and crabs.
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Birds Clapper rail- permanent resident that feeds, nest, and roosts in the Spartina marsh.
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Birds Willet- shorebird that is seen seasonally in the estuarine marsh system. Feeds on crustaceans, molluscs, and annelids.
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Birds Marsh hawk- raptor that preys on clapper rails and small mammals.
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Mammals Herbivores: Marsh rabbit-feeds on cordgrass, but populations are limited due to predation by marsh hawks White-tailed deer-tends to graze in the higher marsh regions
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Mammals Omnivore Marsh rice rat- remains persistently in the marsh. Feeds on cordgrass, crabs, and insects.
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Mammals Carnivores Racoons- feeds heavily on crustaceans, molluscs, and bird eggs and young
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Mammals Carnivores River otter- depends on fishes and crabs. Has few predators, yet populations remain low.
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Decomposers: bacteria and fungi 3 primary roles: decomposition of dead organic matter conversion of indigestible plant material (cellulose) to a form that is readily used by detritivores and deposit feeders conversion of dissolved organic and inorganic materials into consumable particulate matter
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Subtidal estuarine consumers Zooplankton - animals that live in the water column and are at the mercy of the currents - able to tolerate salinity fluctuations up to 12ppt during a single tidal cycle - zoo. biomass is greatest in estuaries - serve important role in estuarine food web - food for many larval and juvenile fish
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Zooplankton...cont.
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Human impacts: Effluent discharges- indirect effects Channel dredging- decrease primary production which in turn lowers zoo. populations Pesticides and heavy metals- not only effect zoo.populations, but also impact larval fish and invertebrates by causing developmental delays, abnormalities, and death Zooplankton...cont.
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Benthic meiofauna Benthic meiofauna-animals living in the sediments (0.5-.063mm in size) - most of these animals are copepods, including both interstitial and burrowing species - these animals are highly sensitive to both temperature and oxygen fluctuations
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Benthic macroinvertebrates Species diversity depends on 2 factors: Substrate silt, sand, or clay - high diversity medium to fine grain sand- low diversity clay and either silt or fine grain sand- low diversity
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Benthic macroinvertebrates Species diversity depends on 2 factors: Salinity < 5 ppt (oligohaline waters) 5-18 ppt (mesohaline waters) > 18 ppt (polyhaline/euhaline waters) * Species diversity tends to increase with an increase in salinity
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Benthic macroinvertebrates amphipods, polychaetes, bivalves
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Benthic macroinvertebrates Sand dollarGreen Jacknife Clam
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Commercially important macroinvertebrates White shrimp Brown shrimp Blue crab
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Fishes Species composition is abundant and diverse Atlantic croaker Spot
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Trophic relationships Primary Producers Herbivores Mullet and Menhaden 1° Carnivores Bay Anchovy Top Carn Shark
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Reptiles One of the only reptiles truly found in the subtidal estuarine system is the: Diamondback terrapin
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Birds Birds use the subtidal region for: resting and feeding Species include: Herring gull- scavenger Ring-billed gull- scavenger Laughing gull-scavenger Brown pelicans- piscivore Royal terns- piscivore ect….
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Birds Herring gull Ring-billed gull Laughing gull
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Birds Brown pelican Royal Tern
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Mammals Only 2 consistent components of the subtidal estuarine system: River otter
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Mammals Only 2 consistent components of the subtidal estuarine system: Atlantic bottlenosed dolphin
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References http://www-staff.lboro.ac.uk/~cvcfs/simulations/estuarinedynamics/frame.html http://www.tulane.edu/~eeob/Courses/Ecology_Materials/estuary_biome.html http://inlet.geol.sc.edu/nerrsintro/nerrsintro.html http://riceinfo.rice.edu/armadillo/Galveston/Chap8/ch8.estuarine.food.html http://www.geog.ucl.ac.uk/~jfrench/EEI.html http://www.nwrc.gov/about/web/nutrient.html http://www.ucc.uconn.edu/~skoog/Michaelb.htm http://www.environment.gov.au/portfolio/anca/mpa/c_ray.html http://www.epa.gov/nep/ http://www.estuarylive.org/ http://www.epa.gov/ceisweb1/ceishome/atlas/maiaatlas/maia__condition_of_the_mid.html http://pelotes.jea.com/fidcrab.htm http://oak.conncoll.edu/~dmwhi/milfordpaper.html http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/expltx/eft/gulf/cspecies/wildlife.htm http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~seeb/pheromone/pcWorms.html
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References…cont http://ag.arizona.edu/tree/eukaryotes/animals/arthropoda/hexapoda/hemiptera/hemiptera.html http://www.mdarchives.state.md.us/msa/mdmanual/01glance/html/symbols/reptile.html http://www.mbr-pwrc.usgs.gov/id/framlst/i1840id.html http://www.kwic.com/~pagodavista/harrier.htm http://www.cviog.uga.edu/Projects/gainfo/wildlife/marshrabbit.htm http://employeeweb.myxa.com/rrb/Audubon/VolV/00541.html http://donb.furfly.net/malheur/birds/willet.html http://www.otternet.com/galleries/naotter/ http://www.csc.noaa.gov/otter/htmls/ecosys/ecology/estuary.htm#top http://www.bio.swt.edu/Lavalli/guides/phylum_arthropoda.htm http://endangered.fws.gov/i/B2S.html http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/DesJardin/LaughingGull.html
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