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Blackwater

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Title: Blackwater


1
Maryland Biogeography
  • Coastal Plain
  • Piedmont Province
  • Upland
  • Lowland
  • Ridge/Valley Province Middle
  • Appalachian Plateau Province
  • Allegheny Mountain section

2
The Coastal Plain
  • The coastal plain is defined as the region that
    was once submerged continental shelf 280 mya
  • Boundaries
  • Atlantic ocean from Cape Cod south
  • Fall line (Routes 1 and I-95

3
Abiotic factors that created the Chesapeake Bay
  • Glacial History
  • Watershed
  • Estuary
  • Salinity
  • Dissolved oxygen
  • pH
  • Turbidity

4
Glacial History of the Chesapeake Bay
5
Criteria that define Estuaries
  • Semi- enclosed coastal area
  • Free access to open ocean
  • Fresh water derived from land drainage
    (measurably diluted)

6
Major Tributaries of the Bay
Sassafras
Susquehanna
Chester
Choptank
Potomac
Nanticoke
James
7
Abiotic factors in the Chesapeake
  • Salinity
  • Dissolved Oxygen
  • Water Circulation

8
Abiotic Factors
  • Abiotic Factors can limit the
  • Distribution
  • Abundance
  • Growth of organisms
  • Remember that organisms are adapted to their
    particular environment or habitat
  • They have a range of tolerance for abiotic
    conditions
  • Abiotic factors can limit the types of organisms
    that survive in a habitat

9
1. Salinity (g/L) ppt Fresh 0-0.5 ppt
oligohaline 0.5-5 ppt mesohaline 5-18
ppt polyhaline 18-32 ppt Ocean gt32 ppt
  • Salinity affects the behavior of Animals
  • Fish spawn in fresh water
  • White perch and striped bass
  • Eels spawn in ocean water
  • Plant communities

10
Salinity is a limiting factor
11
2. Oxygen Content
  • Layering of water prevents mixing of oxygen
    content
  • Anoxic conditions tend to occur in the summer
  • In the lower water levels of the Bay (organisms
    use up all the O2)
  • Crab jubilee
  • Fish kills
  • Phytoplankton Blooms (Algal blooms) occur in the
    upper water levels of the Bay

12
Nutrient Loading and Oxygen content
  • Nitrogen and Phosphorus are often limiting
    factors for plant growth
  • Addition of fertilizers
  • Excessive inputs of nitrogen and phosphorus can
    lead to nutrient overloading
  • Agricultural fertilizers
  • Sewage
  • Live stock facilities
  • Result in Algal blooms

13
Algal Blooms
  • Phytoplankton grow rapidly
  • Produce oxygen during the day through
    photosynthesis
  • Consume oxygen at night through cellular
    respiration

14
Algal Blooms
  • Water turns green, brown, or even red
  • The red tide
  • The cell from hell Pfiesteria piscicida
  • Dinoflagellate that produces a toxin that
    paralyzes fish and causes open sores
  • Affects people too

15
River flow strongly influences dissolved oxygen
and nutrient input in the Chesapeake Bay
16
Preventing Nutrient Loading
  • In 1987 Pennsylvania, Maryland, and Virginia
    agreed to reduce nutrient loading by 40 by
    2000.
  • Controlling run-off from agriculture
  • Suburbs and urban areas
  • Removing more nutrients from sewage and
    industrial facilities
  • Banning phosphorus containing detergents
  • Reducing fertilizer use
  • Some changes happened, but nutrient loading was
    reduced by only 21
  • A new agreement for reducing levels by the year
    2010

17
3. Water Circulation
  • Transports plankton
  • Eggs
  • Larvae
  • Sediments
  • Dissolved gases
  • Minerals
  • Nutrients

18
Water fluctuation changes seasonally
  • Spring and summer
  • Fresh water from the northern part of the Bay
    forms a layer over the colder, more dense salt
    water coming up from the southern part of the Bay
  • No mixing
  • Fall and Winter
  • Less fresh water from the north
  • Atmosphere cools the upper layer of water
  • More mixing

19
  • Temperature
  • Temperature affected seasonally
  • 0-32 º F in winter
  • Up to 84 º F in summer
  • Shallow or Deep waters have different temps
  • Influences feeding
  • Reproduction
  • Movement of Organisms

20
  • Water turnover is important for circulating
    nutrients and replenishing oxygen
  • Fall turnover
  • Winter
  • Spring turnover
  • Summer thermal stratification

21
3. Water Circulation
  • Zones where fresh water and salt water collide
  • Some fish use this zone as a nursery
  • Turbidity increases nutrient cycling
  • Increases phytoplankton growth
  • Great food for young fish

22
Dissolved oxygen content in the deepest parts of
the Bay (30m)
23
Habitats and Communitiesof the Bay
  • Habitat is any part of the environment where
    organisms live
  • Forests
  • Wetlands
  • Islands
  • Rivers and Streams
  • Shallow water areas
  • Open water
  • Aquatic Reefs

24
How deep is the Bay?
25
Biotic Components of the BayHome to some 2000
species
  • Bacteria
  • Cyanobacteria
  • Marsh and soil bacteria
  • Protists
  • Phytoplankton
  • Zooplankton
  • Plants
  • Aquatic vegetation
  • Marsh plants
  • Forest species
  • Animals
  • Invertebrates
  • insects
  • crabs, snails, clams
  • Vertebrates
  • Fish
  • Amphibians
  • Reptiles
  • Mammals
  • Birds
  • Fungi

26
Marine Biomes Zones where plants and animals live
  • Intertidal zone
  • Shoreline between low and high tides
  • Benthic zone
  • The floor
  • The Pelagic zone
  • Open water
  • Abyssal zone
  • 4000-6000m
  • Hadal zone
  • Deeper than 6000m

27
Primary Producers The Plankton Soup
  • Phytoplankton
  • Habitat Open and Shallow waters
  • Primary Producers in the Estuary
  • Cyanobacteria
  • Diatoms
  • Green algae
  • Brown algae
  • Dinoflagellates

28
Habitats Shallow Waters
  • Provide resources and conditions for survival of
    most of the species of the Bay
  • Receives light
  • Warm temperature
  • Rich mud community
  • SAVs
  • Proximity to wetlands

29
Submerged Aquatic Vegetation
  • Also called sea grasses and seaweed, many are
    called Pond Weeds
  • Are flowering plants belonging to the Monocots
  • Adaptations to life underwater
  • SAV leaves and stems lack the waxy 'cuticle'
    present in most terrestrial plants. Gases and
    nutrients can thus be exchanged between the plant
    and surrounding water.
  • SAV leaves and stems also contain specialized,
    air-filled cells, called 'aerenchyma,' which
    provide the plants with additional bouyancy and
    support.

30
Important Functions of SAVs
  • Provide critical food and shelter for fish and
    wildlife, especially blue crabs
  • Help remove nutrient harmful nutrient and
    sediments pollution from the Bay
  • Stabilize sediment and reduce wave energy
  • Vast areas of shallow water habitats have
    disappeared. So have the SAVs.
  • Down to 10 of their historical range
  • Development, marinas, pollution

31
Shallow water species of the Bay
Crossostrea virginicus
  • Oysters filter impurities out of water
  • Scientists calculate that in earlier days when
    they were more numerous, they could have filtered
    the whole Chesapeake Bay in six days.

32
Beautiful SwimmersCallinectes sapidus
33
Aquatic Secondary Consumers
  • Nekton of the Pelagic Zone
  • Anchovies
  • Menhaden
  • Herring
  • Shad

34
Aquatic Tertiary Consumers
  • Occupy the pelagic zone
  • Mergansers
  • Striped Bass
  • Bluefish
  • Sturgeon

35
Why is this happening to the Bay?
  • Population doubled within 50 years
  • 8 million in 300 years
  • 16 million in the last 50 years
  • High resource-consuming and high-waste producing
    lifestyle
  • Chesapeake Bay Foundation (CBF) evaluates the Bay
    is operating at 27 of its capacity

36
The State of the Bay 2008
  • Shows modest improvement, with the health index
    up two points to 29 this year
  • Much of the improvement was driven by Mother
    Nature,
  • with near record low spring rains.
  • Even with the improvement, the health of the Bay
    gets an unacceptable D grade.

37
The Good News
  • Were at a stasis point, we have stopped the
    decline
  • Striped Bass population is recovering. Limited
    fishing is now permitted
  • SAVs are returning!

38
Local and State Efforts to Restore the Bay
  • Smart Growth sustainable development
  • CBF pushing for a new Bay governance that would
    have the authority and means to set firm limits
    on pollution
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