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Lecture 18, 03 Nov 2003 Chapter 9 (Aquatic Ecosystems) Student Presentations Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R University of Arizona Fall 2003 Kevin Bonine. Aquatic Ecosystems (CH9) 2. Thank you cards 3. Syllabus Shuffle (Bob Steidl back one class). Readings for Wed (SDCP):.
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Lecture 18, 03 Nov 2003 Chapter 9 (Aquatic Ecosystems) Student Presentations Conservation Biology ECOL 406R/506R University of Arizona Fall 2003 Kevin Bonine
Aquatic Ecosystems (CH9) • 2. Thank you cards • 3. Syllabus Shuffle (Bob Steidl back one class) Readings for Wed (SDCP): Overview of Reserve Design http://www.co.pima.az.us/cmo/sdcp/reports/d20/096OVE.PDF Listed Species Reserve http://www.co.pima.az.us/cmo/sdcp/reports/d10/021LIS.PDF
Chapter 9 group presentations Monday: 8 minute highlights presentation, + 2 min QnA (board, or overhead, or powerpoint [late Sunday]) Pages: 230-234 Amy Tendick, Galia Bobman, Aurora Fabry-Wood, Leonides Corral 234-238 Ben Joslin, Andrea Vasquez, Bridget Barker, Louise Misztal 239-243 Christopher Deegan, Michael Gilliland, JD Friedrichs 243-248 Dana Backer, Cori Carveth, Sarah Hartwell, Jenna Ramsey 248-255 Erica Sontz, Meghan Jarvie, Ginny Newsome, Linh Nguyen 255-264 Maeveen Behan, Justin Dodds, Lauren Merin
230-234 Tendick Bobman Fabry-Wood Corral
234-238 Joslin Vasquez Barker Misztal
Conservation Challenges in Freshwater Habitats • Eutrophication • Acidification • Habitat Alteration • Invasive plant species • Invasive invertebrates • Invasive vertebrates
The Issues • Eutrophication • Acidification • Habitat Alteration by NIS’s • Plant • Animal
Eutrophication • Natural process of the aging of a lake • In a young lake, the water is cold and clear, and supports little life • Streams drain into the lake, introducing nutrients such as nitrogen and phosphorus, which encourage the growth of aquatic organisms • The lake's fertility increases, and organic remains begin to be deposited on the lake bottom
Eutrophication • Silt and organic debris increase on lake bottom, lake becomes shallower and warmer, less oxygen • Warm-water organisms supplant those that thrive in a cold environment • Marsh plants take root in the shallows and begin to fill in the original lake basin and the lake gives way to a bog, and finally into land • Depending on climate, size of the lake, and other factors, the natural aging of a lake may span thousands of years
Eutrophication • Pollutants from man's activities can radically accelerate the natural aging process • Lakes have been severely eutrophied by sewage, agricultural and industrial wastes
Eutrophication • Primarily from increased nitrates and phosphates, which act as plant nutrients • Stimulate the growth of algae • Cause unsightly scum and unpleasant odors • Reduction of dissolved oxygen, which is vital to other aquatic life • Other pollutants flowing into a lake may poison whole populations of fish • Decomposing remains further deplete the water's dissolved oxygen content
Pollutants • In 1996, the EPA reported to Congress in the National Water Quality Inventory • Approximately 40% of the nation's surveyed lakes, rivers, and estuaries were too polluted for such basic uses as drinking supply, fishing, and swimming • The pollutants include grit, asbestos, phosphates and nitrates, mercury, lead, caustic soda and other sodium compounds, sulfur and sulfuric acid, oils, and petrochemicals
Pollutants • Manufacturing plants pour off undiluted corrosives, poisons, and noxious byproducts • The construction industry discharges slurries of gypsum, cement, abrasives, metals, and poisonous solvents • A pervasive group of contaminants is polychlorinated biphenyl (PCB): components of lubricants, plastic wrappers, and adhesives • Hot water discharged by factories and power plants causes thermal pollution, lower oxygen
Acidification • Hydrogen sulfide, NOx and SO2 from coal burning for electricity • Nitrous oxide from car exhaust • Combine with water to form sulfuric and nitric acid
Acidification • Rain is slightly acidic • Buffering by carbonates, some freshwater systems are more susceptible to acidification • High acidity affects reproduction of fish, amphibians and invertebrates • Direct mortality • Change in chemical reactions, metallic ions may precipitate out of solution • Acidification can happen rapidly: pH from 7 to 4 in 24 hour period in Scotland during heavy rain, massive fish kill
Habitat Alteration By Nonindigenous Species • Aquatic Enviroments Vulnerability • Recent disturbance • Predators absent • Effective Competitors absent • Invasion by Aquatic Plants • 1. IntroductionUsually by humans • 2. Dispersal occurs after survival and reproduction • 3. Adaptation via selection and establishment • 4. Colonization
Eurasian Water Milfoil • Reproduces vegetatively • Often transported by Human activity • Reproduces Rapidly
Other Aquatic Invaders 1. Purple Loosestrife • Chokes out natural vegetation in shallow water 2. Water hyacinth • forms dense mats in deep water
Animal NIS’s in Freshwater • Properties: • High reproductive rates • Wide environmental tolerances • Large dispersal distances 3 Examples:
Take Home Lesson? • “Managers must consider that if (there are chemical alterations to a system or a) nonindigenous (species) enters a system, habitat management and conservation strategies may have to be fundamentally altered to preserve biodiversity.” Van Dyke 2003 (pg 238)
239-243 Deegan Gilliland Friedrichs
Conserving Aquatic Habitats Managing Sedimentation & Eutrophication
The Culprits • Us! (surprise)
Primary Cause: Erosion • modern agricultural runoff • urban sewage & waste disposal • land development -- “impermeability”
Sociopolitical causes need sociopolitical remedies: • We must enact laws & policies to: • Reduce chemical fertilizer use • Remove compounds from urban discharge • Reduce agricultural & landscaping erosion
Restoration • Dredging • Chemistry • Biomanipulation
Dredging • Remove & Purify Contaminated Sediments
Chemistry -- Riplox method • Oxidize sediment surface to precipitate out phosphorus. • Additional reactions raise O2 levels, stabilize pH, & encourage denitrifying bacteria in the sediment to release excess nitrate as gas into the atmosphere.
Alternative Stable States • Nutrient inputs • Fish populations • Macrophyte & Periphytic algal populations Turbidity is balanced by:
243-248 Backer Carveth Hartwell Ramsey
Legislation and Management for Freshwater Environments Sarah, Jenna, Cori and Dana Monday November 3, 2003
The Wild and Scenic Rivers Act • Most significant legislation protecting streams and rivers • Introduced in 1968 Verde River, Arizona
What is it?? • Under this act, a stream or section of a stream is designated as wild and scenic • Protected from any action by any federal agency that would adversely affect its water quality
Problems… • 1990- Less than 2% of U.S. streams were deemed sufficient to merit protection under this act • This means that less than 100,000km out of 5.2 million km’s are protected San Pedro River, Arizona