1 / 35

EVPP 550 Waterscape Ecology and Management

EVPP 550 Waterscape Ecology and Management. Professor R. Christian Jones Fall 2007. Adaptation to Flowing Water. Life Cycles are often adaptive Many aquatic insects are aerial as adults to facilitate dispersal and crossbreeding

iago
Download Presentation

EVPP 550 Waterscape Ecology and Management

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EVPP 550Waterscape Ecology and Management Professor R. Christian Jones Fall 2007

  2. Adaptation to Flowing Water • Life Cycles are often adaptive • Many aquatic insects are aerial as adults to facilitate dispersal and crossbreeding • Some species concentrate their growth phases in periods of favorable conditions (moderate temp, plenty of water and food) and revert to dormant stages (eggs, pupae) during other stages

  3. Adaptation to Flowing Water • Feeding mechanisms: • Scrapers: radula in snails, mayfly nymphs use bristles • Filtering mechanisms: • Fringes of hairs on mouthparts and legs • Caddisfly Nets • Blackfly

  4. Adaptation to Flowing Water • Anchoring • Flattening of bodies to stay in boundary layer • Suckers, hooks, silky secretions • Ballast

  5. Adaptation to Flowing Water • Modes of existence (habits) • Skaters (water striders) • Divers (water boatmen and diving beetles) • Swimmers (streamlined mayfly nymphs) • Clingers (net-spinning caddisflies, blackflies) • Sprawlers (some mayflies and dragonflies) • Climbers (damselflies, mayflies, chironomids) • Burrowers (chironomids, oligochaetes, bivalves)

  6. Comparative Energy Flow in Streams • Bear Brook • Wooded second order stream in New England • Dominated by allochthonous inputs from forest canopy directly and from upstream

  7. Comparative Energy Flow in Streams • New Hope Creek, NC • Third order stream with more open canopy, but still allochthonous material is more important

  8. Comparative Energy Flow in Streams • Thames River • Larger stream with more varied sources of primary production

  9. Comparative Energy Flow in Streams • Silver Spring • Large underground source of clear water • Almost all production is autochthonous

  10. Stream Energy Flow • Importance of insects to stream food web is shown by experiments that substantially removed insects from the stream food web

  11. Stream Energy Flow • Importance of autochthonous production in small to medium streams? • Minshall (1978) argues that it has been underestimated

  12. Stream Energy Flow • Streams in some areas have little or no canopy, eg prairie, desert, urban, farm Example: Deep Creek, Idaho Small stream (1-6 m wide, 10-60 cm deep) In Great Basin

  13. Stream Energy Flow • In streams with deciduous canopy, during periods with no leaves, light reaching stream is substantial • Periphyton production tends to be highest in spring and fall when consumers are most active

  14. Stream Energy Flow • Even in streams with relatively closed canopy and apparent low algal density, periphyton may be important • High rates of production may occur under low light (shade-adapted) • High rates of production may be masked by high rates of production (grazing rate ≈ production) • Periphyton are a high quality food source and important food supplement

  15. Large Rivers • In large rivers, interactions between main river channel and floodplain become increasingly important • Length>2000 km, Order>7

  16. Large Rivers • Channel is deep and turbid • Substrate is fine and in constant motion • Upstream food supplies are of poor quality, best compounds have already been utilized • Many backwaters and side channels with slower flow • Flood plain inundation is relatively predictable so aquatic communities can adapt to this as a resource

  17. Large Rivers • Many large rivers show a single strong annual discharge peak which inudates the floodplain • “Flood-pulse” concept

  18. Large Rivers • Flood pulse concept emphasizes lateral or latitudinal gradients whereas RCC emphasizes longitudinal processes

  19. Large Rivers • Single large pulse inundates the entire flood plain • Land-water interface (littoral) is pushed to the edge of the floodplain • As year proceeds, the moving littoral (ATTZ) slowly edges back toward the channel margin • ATTZ-aquatic-terrestrial transition zone

  20. Large Rivers • The flood plain has high productivity due to: • High nutrient concentration • Shallow water depth • Low current velocity & resulting increase in transparency • Lots of edges

  21. Large Rivers • Habitats within the floodplain: • Backwaters • Lakes • Wetlands

  22. River brings Plant nutrients (N&P), organic particulates, inorganic particles from upstream N&P  fuel high production Particulates  build up flood plain, carry P Flood plain contributes Fresher CPOM, FPOM, DOM than upstream sources Nursery ground for many invertebrate prey organisms Many larger predator animals enter flood plain to feed Large Rivers – Exchanges of Materials

  23. Large Rivers - Biota • Plants • Respond to water levels • Amazon plants grow fastest at rising water levels • At this time water and nutrient levels are high and no low DO stress that occurs later • Seed production coincides with peak O2 levels

  24. Large Rivers - Biota • Animals enter the flood plain to feed • On rising tide much of food consists of pollen, fruits, seeds, terrestrial insects dropping from the canopy • Spawning occurs near the beginning of the rising water • Larvae and juveniles feed in the flood plain, adults move back into the main channels

  25. Large Rivers - Animals • Timing of flood waters affects usefulness to differing groups of biota in temperate areas

  26. Origins of Lakes • Glacial • Tectonic • Volcanic • Solution • Fluviatile • Impoundments

  27. Origins of Lakes • Glacial phenomena are responsible for the greatest number natural lakes esp the immense number of small lake basins

  28. Origins of Lakes • Glacial action in currently restricted to Antarctic, Greenland and high mountains, but during the Pleistocene glaciation, vast ice sheets covered much of the Northern hemisphere

  29. Origins of Lakes • Definitions: • Drift: accumulation of material directly or indirectly resulting from glacial action • Moraine: drift deposited directly by glacier either at its end (terminal) or underneath (ground) • Outwash: drift washed away from a glacier and deposited

  30. Origins of Lakes • Glacial Rock Basins • Lakes formed by direct glacial scour of rocky basins • Includes small lakes such as cirques formed at the head of glacial valleys • Also includes larger fjord lakes like Loch Ness and Lake Windermere

  31. Origin of Lakes • Moraine or outwash dams • Back up water into an existing valley • Finger Lakes, NY

  32. Origin of Lakes • Drift Basins • Irregularities in the ground moraine such as ice blocks left behind which then melt • Kettle lakes • Northern Wisconsin, Walden Pond • Vast number in flat glaciated areas

  33. Origin of Lakes • Tectonic Activity (crustal instability and movement) • Graben = fault-trough = rift lake • Formed between two faults

  34. Origin of Lakes • Some are symmetrical such as Lake Tahoe • Some are assymetrical such as Lake Tanganyika

  35. Origin of Lakes • The World’s oldest and deepest lake – Lake Baikal is a graben complex

More Related