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Biotic Communities of Marsh Systems

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Title: Biotic Communities of Marsh Systems


1
Biotic Communities of Marsh
Systems
2
Fresh/Saltwater Systems
  • Freshwater marsh?0.5-5.0 ppt (between oligohaline
    zone and non-tidal freshwater)
  • Saltwater marsh?5.0-35.0 ppt or greater depending
    upon conditions

3
Comparison
  • Saltwater
  • -lg. Tidal influence
  • -sandy, lower OM
  • -marine and estuarine macrophytes
  • -low species diversity
  • -moderate to high algal production
  • Freshwater
  • -riverine influence
  • -silt and clay, high OM
  • -freshwater macrophytes
  • -high species diversity
  • -very low algal production (lt1pp)

4
Salt Marsh Ecology
  • Complex systems
  • Shaped by water,sediments, and vegetation
  • Found on low energy coastlines and protected back
    barriers

5
United States Salt Marshes
6
Basic Characteristics
  • Found in inter-tidal zones
  • Fewer species present, occupying broader niches
    (recent geologic origin)
  • Stressful environment
  • Large gradients present for temperature,
    salinity, and pH

7
Development
  • Tidal sequence provides major source of sediment
    load
  • Terrestrial runoff provides secondary source
  • Salt tolerant plant species invade and thrive
    following deposition of sediments

8
Atchafalaya Delta Region
  • Recent studies prove importance of riverine input
  • Delta receives 1/3 of Miss. River flow
  • Wetland area actually increasing
  • Surrounding areas are in rapid decline due to
    subsidence and sea level rise

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11
Global Variations
  • North America
  • Gulf Coast
  • West Coast
  • East Coast
  • European
  • Arctic (North and South)

12
European Salt Marshes
  • Found above low neap tide line
  • Periodic inundation
  • Different physiology due to tidal influence
  • Salicornia, Suaeda maritima, Juncus maritimus

13
Primary Production -Classical View
  • Spartina alterniflora responsible for majority of
    production
  • 3300 g/m/yr production
  • Production influenced by tides

14
Primary Production-Modern Approach
  • Isotopic analysis
  • C13/c12 ratio point towards other sources
  • Algae, diatoms
  • Ominvores complicate data

15
Primary Consumers
  • Trophic relationships begin with algae or
    Spartina detritus
  • Rich benthic communities develop
  • Bacteria rich detritus more valuable when
    compared to plant tissue
  • Species of Uca, Callinectes, and Penaeus common
    in systems

16
Primary Consumers cont.
  • Deposit Feeders
  • -take in bottom sediments
  • -filter organic particles
  • -oligochaetes,etc.
  • Suspension Feeders
  • -filter organic material and other nutrients out
    of water column
  • -use siphons, internal filters
  • -American oysters, mussels

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18
Value to Marsh System
  • Macro-consumers provide an essential link in salt
    marsh energetics
  • Take potentially harmful nutrients out of water
    column (phosphorus, etc.)
  • Bioturbation aerates the soil, increasing algal
    productivity
  • Feces provide new food source for microbial
    communities

19
Secondary Consumers
  • Birds, fish, and crabs compose a majority of the
    species for this trophic level
  • Primary consumers provide valuable food source
    for juvenile populations
  • May feed on organisms in sediments and water
    column

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21
Aerobic Zones
  • Occur in top 2-3mm of soil
  • High content of oxidized ions (Fe,Mn4,NO3-,
    SO4--)
  • Vital source of energy for system
  • Metals later reduced in anaerobic environment

22
Anaerobic Zone
  • Nitrate ?2 pathways
  • Assimilatory nitrate reduction (plant uptake)
  • Dissimilatory nitrate reduction (denitrification)
  • Significant loss of N in salt marsh

23
Nitrogen Cycling
  • Complex interactions in both aerobic and
    anaerobic zones
  • Mineralization ?production of ammonium ion from
    organic N
  • Pulled upward (gradient change)?oxidized by
    chemoautotrophs
  • Nitrification (nitrosomonas, nitrobacter)

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Mg and Fe reduction
  • Follows dentrification
  • Cause of grey/green coloration in soil
  • Forms ferrous oxides which can inhibit nutrient
    uptake around plant roots

26
Sulfur reduction
  • Assimilatory S reduction? Desulfovibrio
  • OM produced
  • Combines with Fe to reduce H2S concentrations in
    sediments (limits toxicity)
  • PS bacteria (purple sulfur)?create OM on surface
    of the salt marsh

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Methanogenesis
  • Occurs in extremely reduced conditions
  • After oxygen, nitrate, sulfate are used up
  • Can be recycled by bacteria during droughts

29
Conclusions
  • Complex interactions regarding salt marsh
    energetics
  • Algal growth and diatom formation provide basic
    primary production
  • Nutrient cycling in anaerobic zones, rich
    bacterial communities
  • Low species richness due to emphimeral nature and
    harsh environment

30
Food Web Interactions
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32
Tidal freshwater Marshes
33
Definition
  • Tidal freshwater wetlands are a distinctive type
    of ecosystem located upstream from tidal saline
    wetlands (salt marshes) and downstream from
    non-tidal freshwater wetlands

34
Characteristics
  • Near freshwater conditions 0.5 ppt average annual
    salinity (more concen. during periods of drought
    )
  • Plant and animal communities dominated by
    freshwater species
  • A daily lunar tidal fluctuation

35
Tidal Freshwater Wetlands
  • lies between the oliogohaline zone and non-tidal
    freshwater

36
Tidal Freshwater Marshes
  • Are characterized by a large diverse group of
    broad-leafed plants, grasses, rushes, shrubs and
    herbacious plants.

37
Grasses, rushes, shrubs
38
Simplifying terminology
  • Odum, et al (1984) identifies similar terminology
    in literature such as palustrine emergent
    wetland, freshwater tidal, transition marsh
    combined with arrow-arum and pickerelweed
    marshsimplified to tidal freshwater marsh for
    convenience and term is more widely used.

39
Tidal Freshwater Marshes classified as either
  • System palustrine
  • Class emergent wetland
  • Subclass persistent and non-persistent
  • System riverine
  • Class emergent wetland
  • Subclass non-persistent

40
Water regimes for either classification
  • Permanently flooded tidal
  • Regularly flooded
  • Seasonally flooded tidal

41
The system selected depends on the position of
the marsh with respect to the river channel
  • High back marshes with persistent vegetation
    classified as palustrine
  • Fringing low marshes along river edges
    classified as riverine

42
Along United States East Coast
  • Most extensive development of freshwater tidal
    marshes between Southern New England and Georgia

43
Best developed in locations
  • Major influx of freshwater
  • Daily tidal amplitude of at least 0.5m (1.6ft.)
  • A geomorphological structure which constricts
    magnifies the tidal wave in the upstream portion
    of the estuary

44
In North Carolina estuaries lie behind Outer Banks
  • reduced tidal amplitude
  • Almost all coastal river systems have tidal
    and freshwater systems
  • Slight tidal change
  • Irregular tides and greatly affected by the
    wind

45
North Carolina is unique
  • Tidal plant communities present typically
    restricted in size
  • Tidal swamps present
  • Cape Fear River system, one exception
  • One meter tide
  • Extensive areas of typical tidal freshwater
    marshes

46
Characteristics of freshwater wetlands by region
  • Florida, tidal freshwater marshes are very
    restricted in size or very seasonal
  • Gulf, Louisiana extensive tidal freshwater
    marshes
  • Irregular
  • Low amplitude
  • Wind driven

47
Continued
  • Pacific Coast - relatively rare
  • Alaska extensive
  • California associated with large river systems,
    ex. Sacramento
  • Washington and Oregon associated with Columbia
    River

48
Geological History relatively recent
  • Freshwater coastal marshes expanded rapidly as
    drowned river systems were inundated and filled
    with sediment
  • Northern Gulf of Mexico coast, marshes are
    probably still expanding due to increased runoff
    associated with land clearing and human activities

49
Soil and Water Chemistry
  • Coastal Marsh sediments generally organic
  • Sediments are anaerobic except for a thin
    surface layer
  • Ammonium is present in the winter but reduced to
    lower levels in the summer due to plant uptake
  • Nitrogen present in organic form
  • Phosphorus levels vary
  • High cation exchange capacity (CEC)
  • Soil pH generally close to neutral (6.3 to 7.0)

50
Decomposition 3 Factors
  • Temperature, major factor in decay
  • As temperatures increase, decay increases
  • Oxygen and water availability
  • Plants in anaerobic or dry environments decompose
    slowly
  • Plant tissue
  • broadleaf perennials (high concentrations of
    nitrogen, leaf tissue readily decays)
  • high marsh grasses (low nitrogen concentrations
    and structural tissue resistant to decay)
  • Litter tends to accumulate around persistent
    grasses
  • Low erosion rates ( and low tidal energy)

51
Organic Export
  • Losses of organic carbon from marshes occur
    through respiration
  • Peat forms below root zone
  • Can convert to methane that escapes as a gas
  • Exported in bodies of consumers that feed on the
    marsh
  • In anaerobic freshwater, little sulfur available,
    carbon dioxide can be reduced to methane (which
    is lost to the atmosphere)

52
General Model of N P Cycling
53
Nutrient budgets
  • Appears to be similar to salt water marshes
  • Open systems
  • Long-term sinks, sources or transformers of
    nutrients
  • Most inputs are inorganic transformed chemically
    or biologically to organic forms
  • Recycle most nutrients used within the system
    imports and exports are a small percentage of the
    total material cycled

54
Tidal Wetland Ecosystem
55
Marsh Vegetation Brackish to Fresh
  • Marsh cord grass (Spartina cynosuroides)
  • Narrow leaved cat-tail (Typha angustifolia)
  • Coastal cat-tail (Typha domingensis)
  • Marsh fleabane (Pluchea purpurascens)
  • Arrow-arum (Peltandra virginica)
  • Wild rice (Zizania aquatica
  • Swamp rose (Rosa palustris)
  • Mallows (Hibiscus spp.)

56
Plants indicating Freshwater
  • Wax myrtle (Myrica cerifera)
  • Sedges (Carex spp.)
  • Jewelweed (Impatiens capensis)
  • Blue flag (Iris versicolor)
  • Broadleaf cat-tail (Typha latifolia)
  • Wild celery (Vallisneria spiralis)
  • Red maple (Acer rubrum)
  • Water tupelo (Nyssa aquatica)

57
Algae Microscopic Organisms
  • Algae
  • Green (Chlorophytes)
  • Blue-green (Cyanophytes)
  • Plankton (non to poor swimmers)
  • Protozoans (animal like w/flagella)
  • dinoflagellates
  • Diatoms (type of phytoplankton phyto green)
  • Building block of food chain
  • Forams (animal like, eat diatoms)
  • Bacteria

58
Larger Lower Animals
  • Worms
  • Small snails
  • Jellyfish
  • Shrimp (various spp.)
  • Crab (various spp.)
  • Sponges
  • Mollusks
  • Bivalve (oyster, bent mussel)
  • Barnacles
  • Sea squirt

59
Fish and Shellfish Classification
  • Anadromous (spawns in freshwater, lives in
    saltwater) Semiandromous (spawns in freshwater
    adults remain in lower estuaries) ex. Striped
    bass, Herring. Shad, Sturgeon Catadromous
    (spawns in saltwater, lives in freshwater) ex.
    ex. American eel
  • Estuarine-Marine (a few species move into
    freshwater marshes to spawn) ex. Spot, Croaker,
    Brown Shrimp, Summer Flounder
  • Estuarine (complete entire lifecycle in estuary,
    extend range into freshwater marshes) ex.
    Killifish, Bay Anchovy, Hogchoker
  • Freshwater (spawn and complete lives in
    freshwater areas) ex. Bluegill, Sunfish,
    Largemouth Bass

60
Amphibians and Reptiles
  • Frogs, Toads
  • Diamondback Terrapins
  • American alligator
  • Water snakes ex. Cottonmouth moccasins

61
Birds 280 species reported
  • Waterfowl (44 spp.)
  • Wading birds (15 spp.)
  • Rails and shorebirds (35 spp.)
  • Birds of prey (23 spp.)
  • Gulls, terns, kingfishers and crows (20 spp.)
  • Arboreal birds (90 spp.)
  • Ground and shrub birds (53 spp.)

62
Mammals
  • Muskrat
  • Nutria
  • Meadow mouse, white footed mouse
  • Cottontail
  • Fox
  • Raccoon
  • Otter
  • Opossum
  • Skunk
  • Whitetail deer
  • Manatee
  • Beaver

63
Freshwater Food Web
64
Floating Marshes
  • Usually associated with non-tidal systems
  • Marsh substrate composed of a thick organic mat,
    entwined with living roots that rises and falls
    with the surrounding water levels
  • Coastal Louisiana tidal marshes has the largest
    area of floating marshes in US
  • The flora is diverse but dominated by ferns in
    spring and Panicum hemitomon in summer and fall

65
Resources
  • Alongi,D.M. 1998. Coastal Ecosystem Processes.
    Univ. of Minnesota, Minneapolis. pp. 419.
  • Bertness, Mark D. 1999. The Ecology of Atlantic
    Shorelines, Sinauer Associates, Inc. Pbulishers
    Sunderland, Massachusetts, pp. 417.
  • McLusky, D.S. 1981. The Estuarine Ecosystem.
    John Wiley Sons, New York. pp. 150.
  • Mitsch, William J. and James G. Gosselink. 1993.
    Wetlands, 2d ed., Van Nostrand Reinhold, New
    York, pp. 722.
  • Odum, W. E., T. J. Smith III, J.K. Hoover, C.C.
    McIvor. 1984. The Ecology of Tidal Freshwater
    Marshes of the United States East Coast A
    Community Profile, U.S. Fish and Wildlife
    Service, FWS/OBS-83/17,Washington, D.C., pp. 177.
  • Pomeroy, L.R. and Weigert,R.G. 1981. The
    Ecology of a Salt Marsh. Springer-Verlag, New
    York. pp. 271
  • Roberts, Mervin F. 1979. The Tidemarsh Guide,
    E.P. Dutton, a Division of Sequoia-Elsevier, New
    York, pp. 240.

66
Resources
  • Shabreck,R.H. 1988. Coastal Marsh Ecosystem and
    Wildlife Management. Univ. of Minnesota Press.
    pp.138
  • Statler, Richard. 1993. Barrier Island Botany The
    Southern United States, Wm. C. Brown Dubuque,
    Iowa, pp. 164.
  • Tiner, Ralph W. Jr.. 1987. A Field Guide to
    Coastal Wetland Plants of the Northeastern United
    States,The University of Massachusetts Press, pp.
    285.
  • Wharton, Charles H.. 1978. The Natural
    Environments of Georgia, Geological and Water
    resources Division and Resource Planning Section,
    Office of Planning and Research Georgia
    Department of Natural Resources Atlanta, Georgia,
    pp. 227.
  • www.epa.gov/owow/wetlands
  • www.excite.com (photo gallery)
  • www.uf.edu ( plant photo gallery)
  • www.h20.denr.nc.state.gov

67
Resources
  • http//agen521.www.ecn.purdue.edu/AGEN521/epadir/w
    etlands/freshwtr_marsh.html
  • http//www.mobilebaynep.com/habitats/fresh.htm
  • http//www.uncwil.edu/people/hosier
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