1.34k likes | 3.01k Views
Ecology of Estuaries. Definition of an estuary. An estuary can be defined as a “semi-enclosed coastal body of water which has a free connection with the open sea and within which sea water is measurably diluted with fresh water from a river, stream, or from groundwater”.
E N D
Definition of an estuary • An estuary can be defined as a “semi-enclosed coastal body of water which has a free connection with the open sea and within which sea water is measurably diluted with fresh water from a river, stream, or from groundwater”
Importance of estuaries • Physical conditions • Habitats • Biological characteristics • Threats to estuaries
Why estuaries are important • Productivity • Nursery areas • Filtration • Spawning sites • Migration routes • Resting and feeding areas
productivity • High levels of nutrients • Shallow and tidal- lots of solar radiation for primary production • Warmer than surrounding ocean during the summer
Nursery Areas • High productivity - lots of food; high growth • Reduced predation – low mortality • Gag Grouper will only spend about a year in the estuary before moving offshore to spawn • Redfish stay in the estuary for several years but spawn offshore • Snook go offshore to spawn but then come back to the estuary • Spotted sea trout live their entire life in the estuary
Filter for nutrients and toxicants • Outflowing groundwater and rivers pass through estuaries on the way to the ocean • Plants, animals, and sediments take up nutrients and toxicants • Keeps these chemicals out of the ocean (good) but concentrates them in estuaries (bad)
Shrimp reproducton • Other species such as the shrimp spawn offshore • The larvae then move toward inshore waters, changing form by molting as they progress through various stages of development • As young shrimp, they burrow into the sea floor at the mouth of the estuary as the tide goes out • They then ride into the estuary on the incoming tide where they then develop into adults. • When mature, the shrimp migrate offshore and the cycle begins all over again
Migration routes • Many species migrate through estuaries to reach spawning/feeding grounds
Resting and feeding areas • Long distance migratory species (birds) • Atlantic flyway
The American OysterCrassostreavirginica • Oysters are the most widely studied and best known of all the marine and estuarine invertebrates • While the oyster is greatly appreciated when showing up on the dining room table, few realize the ecological importance of this mollusc • An estuary can be defined as a “semi-enclosed coastal body of water which has a free connection with the open sea and within which sea water is measurably diluted with fresh water from land drainage”
The ecological position of the oysterwithin the estuarine community • Because the American oyster extends over a wide latitude from 20 degree’s N to 54 degree’s N, the ecological conditions under which it lives are not uniform • The present description applies primarily to populations of oysters and associated organisms in the intertidal zone of the Southeastern United States
The Oyster – a reef builder • In many parts of the southeast, the oyster builds massive, discrete reefs in the intertidal zone • They are especially prominent in northeastern Florida, especially the Appalachicola region • Oysters are considered the “keystone” species (i.e., indispensable) when reefs are present.
The Oyster is the quintessential estuarine animal • It can tolerate a wide range of salinity, temperature, turbidity, and low oxygen conditions • Under high salinity, for example, the oyster simply closes • Therefore, the oyster is well adapted to the wide range of water quality that occur normally within estuaries and are therefore euryhaline • Salinity’s tolerated by the oyster range from 5 to 32 0/00; i.e., from almost freshwater to full strength sea water
Who (or what) eats or kills oysters(besides humans) • The oyster drill (Urosalpinxcinerea_ • The oyster “Leech” – a flatworm (Stylochusellipticus) • The moon snail (Polinices) • Two diseases – MSX and “Dermo”
Physical Conditions • Physical configuration • Mixing of fresh and seawater • Tidal fluctuations • Resulting abiotic variation • Adaptations to abioticconditons
Physical configuration • Partially enclosed body of water where rivers meet oceans • Type of estuary based on geology • Coastal plain – flooded river valley; Chesapeake Bay, Delaware Bay • Delta – sediments deposited at mouth by river; Mississippi River Delta • Fjords – dug out by advancing glaciers, form when glacier retreats • Bar-built estuary – created by sandbars at the mouth of the river - Charlotte Harbor, FL • Salt-marsh estuary – no river thus high salinity. Atlantic coast of Florida from Cape Canaveral North
Mixing of Fresh and Seawater • Freshwater mixes with seawater to create brackish water • Creates salinity gradients from ocean to mouth of river • Salinity gradients change depending on rainfall and tidal flushing • Tides: high tide pushes saltwater in
Mixing of Fresh and Seawater • Variable salinity requires animals to be euryhaline (tolerant to high and low salinities); contrast with coral reefs which are stenohaline • Limits diversity of organisms in estuaries • Sets pattern of distribution within estuaries
Mixing of Fresh and Seawater • Estuaries can also be classified by how thoroughly the fresh and salt water mixes vertically • Salt-wedge: freshwater rides over dense saltwater wedge at the mouth of the river; requires a high freshwater input (Delaware River, Mississippi River) • Slightly stratified – like salt-wedge but with more mixing • Vertically mixed – no vertical stratification (Florida?)
Resulting abiotic variation • Salinity • Oxygen • Submergence • temperature