Title: Wildlife and Water
111
2Wildlife and Water
3Properties of Water
- Heat capacity
- water absorbs heat w/o corresponding temperature
increase - High percentage body weight
- homeotherms (warm-blooded) utilize this
- Universal solvent
- dissolves nutrients for transport
- carries harmful materials in soil
- closed watersheds and salt concentrations
4Ecological Influences of Water
- Light penetration into water influences
productivity - Water erosion impacts landscape and topography
- River channels, oxbows, wetlands, and habitat
- Patterns in rain distribution
- tall vs. short-grass prairie
- Glaciers shaping landscape
- Permafrost
- rain, snow cant seep into frozen soil
- water remains at root zone
- Sedimentation
5Table 11-1
6Figure 11-2
71996 Grand Canyon Experimental Flood
- 1963 completion of Glen Canyon Dam on Colorado
River - formed Lake Powell
- Changed depth, temperature, clarity of water
flowing through Grand Canyon - Native fish reproduction and recruitment impaired
by cold - habitat increased for trout
- increased predation of trout on humpback chub
- reduced sandbar developed/ backwater habitat
- Eliminated repeated scouring of riparian
communities - before had washed away plant invasions
- salt cedar flourished, out competed natives
- Experimental flood sent large volume water
downstream - increased sandbars/ backwater habitat
8Water, Distribution, Isolation
- Distribution impacts geographical distribution
organisms - Wallaces Line
- zoo-geographical boundary
- trench in seabed
- effective barrier to faunal dispersal
- Cascade Mountain barrier except gorge Columbia
River - Width/velocity of rivers vs. swimming ability
- Wolves reaching Isle Royale on 29 km ice
- Water barriers serving as isolation mechanism
- development of new forms by adaptive radiation
- Darwins finches
- Land barriers to fish
9Water Wildlife Populations
- Successful breeding limited to water conditions
- precipitation
- wetlands
- nesting habitat
- Drought reduces habitat, carrying capacity of
waterfowl - Spring rain and pheasant chick mortality
- Bobwhites reduced with limited rainfall
- pairing, covey breakup, nesting delayed or
limited - smaller clutches, high nest abandonment
- females emaciated, die incubating, desiccation
traps chicks/shells - larger percentage adults lack broods
- normal 2nd hatching peak in August does not occur
10Figure 11-4
11Figure 11-5
12Physiological Behavioral Responses
- Quails trigger mechanism for breeding dependent
on rainfall - reduced vitamin A in dry years limit breeding
- carotene in green foliage (dependent on
vegetation) A - CA quail need phytoestrogen-free diet from green
plants to breed - Australia fish respond to warm water temperatures
during flooding to induce breeding - Australian waterfowl develops directly in
response to rising water levels, due to gonadal
development - perhaps due to massive production of
invertebrates
13Figure 11-8
14- Physiological compatibility (or incompatibility)
with local rainfall suggests wildlife management
strategies - wild turkeys races dependent on rainfall regime
of some sites - restore the right race for the rain conditions
- migration of moose with snow depth
- ice is important in breeding of polar species
15Figure 11-9
16Water, Disasters, Hard Times
- Aftermaths of flooding, blizzards, storm tides,
droughts - tighten harvest regulations following short-term
calamity - heavy snow limiting deer
- Snow depths affect interactionso f predators and
prey - Coyote predation on pronghorns
- Isle Royale
- moose seek cover on shorelines, wolves run on
adjacent ice to get them - Dall sheep young higher mortality in years of
heavy snowfall - El Nino
- surges of warm water
- the interruption of upwelling of nutrient rich
water, plankton, etc.
17Table 11-3
18Table 11-4
19Figure 11-10
20Figure 11-11
21Reservoir Effect Management
- Reservoir effect
- impounded water enriched rapidly
- production at all trophic levels increased
substantially - system eventually stablizes at lower nutrient
level - Reservoir Environments
- ephemeral wetlands, prairie potholes
- river-bottom forests
- Utilization of Reservoir Effect
- drawdown
- deliberate seasonal drying of wetlands
- moist soil vegetation benefit for songbirds,
shorebirds, waterfowl, mammals
22Beaver, Water, Wildlife
- Beavers manipulate water
- dams alter water movement
- produce significant changes in local ecosystem
- trees flooded die
- dead trees over habitat for cavity nesters
- light penetrating canopy increased
- impounded water is warmed
- siltation behind dam increased
- nitrogen accumulates
- less diversity of biotic organisms on bottom
- numbers and biomass of organisms overall greater
23- Beavers impact on waterways
- larger, increased numbers of trout
- dams sometimes prevent obstacles to trout/fish
movement upstream - problem if denied spawning habitat
- nesting habitat for waterfowl
- interspersion of cover with water
- composition of cover types
- water depth
- amount and types of food resources
- freedom from human disturbances
- proximity of nesting cover to brood habitat
24- Beavers a manageable resource
- trapping/pelt prices vary
- fur prices impact beaver population numbers
- dams impact other wildlife
- river otter
- ruffed grouse
- age of beaver ponds important influence on
waterfowl production - newer ones used more
- temporary drainage plus seeding can improve
habitat/food - beaver dams reduce erosion
- stabilize streamside communities
25- Alligators Marsh Ecology
- Everglades
- Gator holes overlay natural depression
- gators clear vegetation then move debris to rim,
forming pool surrounded by a levee - willows invade
- bald cypress eventually grow on levees
- shade tolerant plants grow underneath
- offers diversity lacking in much of everglades
- many organisms depend on habitat
- breeding
- food
- cover
- gator holes refuges of fresh water during winter
dry season
26Figure 11-12
27Oil, Water, Birds
- Water pollutants
- ag/urban chemicals
- heavy metals
- industrial wastes
- large-scale oil spills
- Torrey Canyon 1967
- Exxon Valdex 1989
- Impact on wildlife of Exxon Valdex
- contaminated shoreline, wildlife refuges, tidal
estuaries - seabirds and marine mammals killed
- not all died immediately
- occurred just prior to biologically active
breeding season
28- Critical factors of incidents associated with
high mortality - location of spill
- time of year
- Bird reactions species specific
- only small percentage survive rehabilitation
process - even less survive after release
- Effect of oil on birds in aquatic environments
- loss of insulation when plumage covered with oil
- small amounts render plumage useless
- rapid increases in their metabolic rates to
overcome heat loss - experience greatly accelerated starvation
- oil is ingested as birds preen their plumage
- toxic to birds
- combined with environmental stresses
- impacts reproduction
29- Oiling and bird reproduction
- ceased laying eggs for two weeks
- eggs exposed to oil had 68 less hatching success
- prolonged incubation by birds with oil
- no hatching
- toxic action kills up to 94 embryos within 96
hours - Other types oil reaching birds
- oil pits/sumps near oil fields/factories
- waterfowl mistake oil for water
- songbirds killed in summer
- especially dangerous when water is frozen
30Water Sewage
- Upstream water high in dissolved oxygen DO
- downstream from contamination low oxygen
dissolved - Upstream low biological oxygen demand BOD
- downstream high biological demand
- Zone of degradation
- nutrient bloom, then decomposition sucking up
oxygen - Zone of Active Decomposition
- higher life forms adapted to sludge and oxygen
famine - Recovery zone
- replenishment of DO and reduced BOD
- Recovery
- 8 days of flow, 154 km
31Figure 11-15 Stream zones
32Table 11-8
33Acid Rain/Precipitation
- Combustion of fossil fuels releases particles
into air - sulfur dioxide
- nitrogen oxides
- Acids form with they combine with oxygen
- Environmental damage
- impact most apparent in lakes
- limestone bedrock buffers impact in IA
- lime lakes in East
- erodes surface of buildings
- IA pH slightly acidic
- East/West coast much more so
34- Acid rain components
- lead, cadmium, mercury
- other heavy metals
- slowly eliminated in wildlife (birds and mammals)
- but readily absorbed
- important concept in aquatic food chains
- biomagnification
- components increase in drinking water
- implicated in human disorders
- kidney disease
- Alzheimers
- amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (Lou Gehrigs
disease)
35Figure 11-17
36- Impact first noticed in fish populations
- reproduction impacted
- egg fertility, hatching, juvenile survival
limited - physical deformities
- cease spawning
- eventually lose all age classes of that species
- fewer species
- disrupts diversity of aquatic ecosystem
- stresses natives
- may allow non-natives to prosper
- relation of this to frog mutations in MN???
- May impact migratory behavior of salmon
37Figure 11-18
38- Other wildlife impacts
- Amphibian impact
- high mortality of amphibian embryos
- Fish-eating birds impacted
- declines in ospreys
- future breeding efforts/nesting may be fruitless
if on impacted waters - Acidity eliminates snails and clams
- source of calcium needed during egg laying
- Invertebrate sensitivity varies
- mayflies sensitive
- environmental indicators
- IoWater utilizes for measuring water quality
39Water Developments Wildlife
- Uneven distribution of water impacted
civilization - wells
- dams and reservoirs
- Cadillac Desert
- irrigation
- wetland reclamation
- wetland mitigation
- channelization
- flooding
- removal of woody vegetation, riparian habitat
- watershed approach
- canals
40- Water impacts
- prairie potholes
- agricultural conversion/drainage
- swamp buster
- stock ponds
- water developments specifically for wildlife
- guzzlers
- collection basin with cover
41Summary
- Water distribution not uniform
- Ecological relationships direct/indirect based on
water - Precipitation impact on vegetation
- Waterfowl habitat
- Wildlife adaptations
- Reservoir effect
- Manipulating water levels
- Beaver impoundments impacts
- Alligators and Everglade ecology
- Pollution Impacts
- Acid Rain
42Figure 11-19 pH impacts of Acid Rain
43Figure 11-3 Wallaces Line