Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byMerilyn Nicholson Modified over 9 years ago
1
Aquatic Biomes Categorized by depth, salinity, temperature, dissolved oxygen Freshwater : streams, rivers, lakes and wetlands Marine: estuaries, intertidal zones, coral reefs and open oceans
2
Rivers & Streams Originate from underground springs or as runoff from rain or melting snow. Few plants or algae to act as PP. Inputs of organic matter are from terrestial biomes (falling leaves)
3
Lakes and Ponds Standing water. Divided into several zones Littoral Zone: Shallow area near shore where emergent plants and algae grow. Photosynthesis occurs Limnetic Zone: Open water. Rooted plants can no loner survive. Phytoplankton are the only photosynthetic organisms. Extends as deep as sunlight penetrates Profundal Zone: No sunlight. Producers cannot survive. Bacteria decompose detritus, consuming oxygen in the process. DO levels not sufficient to support large organisms. Benthic Zone: Muddy bottom of the lake or pond.
4
Lake Zones
5
Freshwater Wetland Swamps: emergent trees Marshes : nonwoody vegetation Bogs: acidic wetlands – sphagnum moss and spruce trees ◦Take in large amounts of rainwater and release slowly into groundwater or streams. Therefore, reducing flooding ◦Filter pollutants ◦Recharge groundwater ◦Migration and breeding ground for birds and fish ½ of US wetlands have been drained for agriculture or urbanization
6
SWAMP MARSH
7
Salt Marshes Many found in estuaries: ◦Where freshwater of a river meets saltwater of the ocean Very productive areas 2/3 of marine fish and shellfish spend larval stages in an estuary
8
Coral Reefs Found in warm shallow waters Large diversity of organisms Great Barrier Reef: ◦400 sp. Of coral ◦1500 sp of fish ◦200 sp of birds Coral Bleeching: Algae inside the coral dies. w/o the algae the coral die, turning the reef white.
9
Coral Bleeching
10
Intertidal Zone Coastline between high tide and low tide Lowtide :Organisms have a high tolerance for exposure to direct sunlight, high temperatures and desiccation. Hightide : Organisms must anchor themselves against the force of wave motion
11
Open Ocean
12
Euphotic Zone: Upper layer of the ocean with available sunlight. Phytoplankton found here. Rich in DO. Many large predatory fish. Low in nutrients (unless ‘upwelling’ area) Bathyl Zone: Mid-layer, twilight, no photosynthetic organisms, Low DO. Small fish and zooplankton. Abyssal Zone: No sunlight, Plenty of nutrients. “Marine Snow” The deeper the water : less sunlight, DO and temperature falls
13
phytoplankton
14
Ocean food chain
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.