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Estuaries. Semi-enclosed areas where fresh water from rivers mixes with salt water from the ocean. Figure 10.22. Figure 12.01. Bar built Estuary off Of Cape Hatteras. Estuaries. Dramatic fluctuations in salinity Salinity increases with depth Salinity decreases upstream
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Estuaries • Semi-enclosed areas where fresh water from rivers mixes with salt water from the ocean
Figure 12.01 Bar built Estuary off Of Cape Hatteras
Estuaries • Dramatic fluctuations in salinity • Salinity increases with depth • Salinity decreases upstream • Salinity varies with tides
Organisms Must Cope with Salinity Changes • Most are euryhaline • Can tolerate a wide range of salinity • Or have restricted ranges
Organisms Must Cope with Salinity Changes • Osmoconformers • Salt concentration varies with salinity • Osmoregulators • Maintain constant salt concentration in their bodies
estuarine “communities” • Open Water • Mud (or Salt) Flats • Salt Marsh • Mangroves
Open Water Community • Marine plankton comes in and out with tides • Many fish use estuaries as nurseries
Mud Flats • Where the bottom of estuary becomes exposed at low tide • Many infaunal deposit feeders
What lives In the Bottom? • Benthic Community! • Infaunal Organisms • Sediment Matters! • Can be “muddy” (like the mud flat) or “sandy” (like the sand flat)
(Bottom) “Intertidal” • “Intertidal” zones, between high and low tide, are predominantly related to ROCKY bottoms on the NORTH SHORE (LIS)…but are made of either SAND or MUD (i.e. “soft bottom” habitats) in bays/ponds etc.
Soft Bottom Intertidal Communities • Soft=organisms can burrow • Sandy beaches, mud flats
Soft Bottom Intertidal Communities • Unstable, sediments move due to currents, waves and tides • Can’t hold on • Not many seaweeds • Animals must burrow = infauna • Clams use foot • Crustaceans dig • Sea cucumbers eat
Soft Bottom Intertidal Communities • Grain size of sediment is important
Diff. grain size = diff. organismal sizes! Fig. 13-23, p.321
What else lives there? • SMALL invertebrates • Clams • Sand Crabs • Meiofauna: Tardigrades
Grain Size of sediment • indicates water movement • Calm areas = muddy bottoms • Wave and currents = coarser sediment
Grain Size of sediment • Determines ability to stay wet • Coarse sediments drain fast • Fine sediments drain slower • Mixture – blocks water drainage
Problems of living in sediment • Dessication is NOT as much of a problem • But it is in coarse sediments
Problems of living in sediment • Food availability • Most infauna are deposit feeders or suspension feeders • More organic matter (detritus) in fine sediments
Problems of living in sediment • Oxygen availability • Used up by animals and bacteria • Replenished by water flowing though sediment • Problem in muddy bottoms
Problems of living in sediment • Oxygen availability • Anoxic = no oxygen • Animals may pump water from the sediment surface or adapt to low oxygen