Title: Aquatic Ecosystems
1Aquatic Ecosystems
Comparative Approach
Colorado Plateau Example
Exam
2Aquatic Ecosystems
- Governed by same principles as terrestrial
ecosystems - Radically different environmental controls
3Terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems have
fundamentally different physical environment
4Aquatic plants have No physical support
structures Small size to maximize diffusion
rates Rapid reproduction to cope with water
mixing and grazing
Aquatic
Terrestrial
5lv K
Reynolds number
Ratio of inertial to viscous forces
Where l length v velocity K viscosity
constant
6Size determines feeding strategy Small organisms
cant swim Depend on diffusion Large cells can
sink or float Move vertically Medium-sized
organisms can filter-feed Large organisms can
swim Can chase prey
diffusion
Filter feeding, swimming
7Biomass, productivity, C storage, and C residence
time ? Higher on land than in ocean, absolute and
areal bases
8There are more species on land than in the
oceans, But
Ocean
P
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Symbiotic
Terrestrial
Freshwater
benthic
pelagic
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Metazoan diversity is higher in the oceans than
on land, at higher taxonomic levels (e.g.,
Phylum) - Longer evolutionary history?
9Some marine ecosystems are just as productive as
the most productive terrestrial ecosystems The
most widespread marine ecosystems are
unproductive
10What limits marine production?
- Water? (no, except intertidal)
- Strong contrast with terrestrial systems, where
water is the dominant limiting factor - CO2? (no, except sometimes intertidal)
- CO2-bicarbonate-carbonate equilibrium supplies
CO2 - Light? (always at depth)
- Nutrients? (usually)
11More light penetrates to depth in oceans than on
land Marine production is restricted to top 200m
(Euphotic zone) Light limits production within
and below this zone
12Light quality differs between marine and
terrestrial Ecosystems 1. Ocean water enriched
in blue (high-energy wavelengths penetrate
deeper) 2. Forests enriched in red (plants
remove high-energy wavelengths for Ps
13Marine phytoplankton are like terrestrial shade
plants
- Low photosynthetic capacity
- Spend most time in light-limiting environ
- (due to frequent mixing)
- Sensitive to UV radiation
- Some specialized to use blue light
- e.g., kelps
- High diversity of primary producers (algal
diversity gtgt vascular plant diversity), maybe due
to variable light environment
14Ocean currents create radically different
environments Centers of gyres have little
mixing Off-shore currents cause upwelling Warm
oceans have high vertical stability (not much
vertical mixing)
15Euphotic zone of oceans are frequently nutrient
poor spatial separation of light and
nutrients Terrestrial plants overcome this via
vascular transport
Some phytoplankton swim or alter buoyancy to
reduce nutrient limitation
Nutrient concentrations of euphotic zone are
highest in upwelling currents Always depleted
at surface by algal uptake
16Latitudinal gradients in productivity
- Polar oceans are most productive
- More effective mixing of nutrients from depth
because of lower surface T, and weaker vertical T
gradient - Polar lands are least productive
- Less rapid nutrient release from SOM
- Consequences
- Bipolar bird, fish and mammal migrations to
capitalize on spring blooms of phytoplankton - Polar distribution of anadromous fish (eat
marine, breed fresh)
17Major upwelling zones off Peru, Africa Outer
Banks, North Pacific California, North
Africa Wind-mixing off Antarctica
18Strength of tropical upwelling off Peru depends
on ENSO
19Carbon and Nutrient Cycling in the Oceans
- 1. Herbivory is 3X greaterin pelagic vs.
terrestrial - Phytoplankton are not
- made of wood
- 2. Microbial loop rapidlyrecycles C and
nutrients- because low CN andhigh quality C - 3. Biological pump
- transports C to deeper ocean- about 25 is
carbonatethe rest is dead cells, feces - 4. Only about 0.01 of NPP
- accumulates in ocean sediments
20Herbivory is 3X greater in pelagic vs.
terrestrial -- Phytoplankton are not made of wood
21What are the limiting nutrients in the ocean?
- NP ratio of ocean waters centers on 141 (ratio
found in algae) - Phosphorus is the master element
- N fixation adds N, whenever P is available
22NP ratio in oceans centers around 141 Redfield
ratio
23Water chemistry conforms to same element ratio
as in algae--141 N fixers always add N,
whenever this ratio drops
24Some regions of oceans have high N and P conc.
- Common in subtropical gyres and southern ocean
- Two processes contribute to this
- 1. Micronutrient limitation
- Iron addition experiments
- 2. Grazing
25Coastal oceans and estuaries
- More nutrient-rich
- Closer to terrestrial inputs
- Benthic decomposition more important
- Less time for decomposition to occur in water
- Often nitrogen-limited
- Perhaps due to denitrification in sediments
26Lakes
- Intermediate between oceans and land
- Pelagic zone functions like ocean
- Littoral zone is like wetland
27Lakes
- Production is seldom carbon-limited
- Groundwater and lake water is often
super-saturated with CO2 - Most lakes are net source of carbon to the
atmosphere - Land-water interaction, whereby terrestrially
produced CO2 dissolves in water, flows to lake,
and degases
28Tundra vegetation fixes CO2 from the atmosphere,
some of which is respired to produce CO2 and CH4.
These gases then dissolve in groundwater and are
transported to lakes and streams where they are
subsequently released to the atmosphere to
complete the cycle.
George Kling et al.
29Global significance is small, but not negligible
implications for estimates of local C balance?
30Lakes
- Vertical mixing is critical
- Occurs in spring and fall, when lake is
isothermal - Wind and wave action drive the mixing
- Brings nutrients from deep waters to surface
31Lakes
- Nutrients are strongest limitation to NPP
- Lakes generally P-limited Why?
- Surrounding terrestrial matrix is N-limited
- Two basic explanations
- 1. P retained more effectively than N on land
- 2. Lakes add N through N fixation whenever P is
available
32Lakes
- Lakes are vulnerable to eutrophication
- Runoff from polluted watersheds
- Also atmospheric deposition
33Streams and rivers
- Directional movement of water in streams and
rivers greatly influences their functioning - Phytoplankton unimportant
- Would get swept away
- Periphyton are main producers
34River continuum concept Transition in
structure/function along length of river
system inputs, organisms, energy flow
35Nutrient spiraling
- Nu trients spiral horizontally
- Terrestrial systems vertical N cycling
- Nutrients held surprisingly tightly
- Flow downstream mainly in dissolved form
- Hyporrheic zone
- Flow also occurs within river bed
36Fossil Creek, Arizona
37The worst of times water extraction and exotic
species
Fossil Creek, Dam built 1908
Cuatro Cienegas Diversions built 1960s
38 The best of times?? ? High-priority
conservation sites ? Restoration Options
? Receptive managers
39Approaches
-
- Surveys
- native and exotic species
- Stable Isotopes
- Experiments
- test mechanisms
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41N
Springs
Flume and Road
Dam
Fossil Creek
Irving Power Generator (station and housing)
Dirt Access Road
Strawberry
Verde River
Aerial image of Fossil Creek, Arizona Courtesy of
USDA Forest Service 07/13/98 Modified by C.
Williamson/ Marks lab Northern Arizona University
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43Fossil Creek Springs Area
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46Stable isotopes show shifts in food web structure
d15N
47Fossil Creeks Future
48Hydropower Dams energy with no global warming
costs
?
49Static chamber to measure terrestrial trace gas
flux
Floating chamber to measure aquatic trace gas flux