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Introduction to Aquatic Environments
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Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Dec 22, 2015

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Page 1: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Introduction to Aquatic Environments

Page 2: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Aquatic environments

• Oceans• Coastlines/Estuaries• Streams• Lakes• Wetlands: bogs and fens

Page 3: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Streams

Open systems, constant input of water and nutrients

Precipitation flows into streams via 2 routes:– Overland flow through surface runoff– Infiltrating soil surface, then flowing

underground and into streams as groundwater

Page 4: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Stream Classification

Based on flow– Permanent: constant above-ground flow

year-round

– Intermittent/Ephemeral: flow aboveground for parts of the year, not all (temporal)

– Interrupted: flow aboveground for parts of the stream, not all (spatial)

Page 5: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Stream Classification

Based on order– 1st: no streams

flowing into it

– 2nd: two 1st-order streams joining

– 3rd: two 2nd-order streams joining

Page 6: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Physical features– Channel shape and pattern

• Changes with age

– Pools and riffles• Velocities, microclimate differ

Rivers “age”– Young: little meanders, small floodplain,

fast velocity, “V” cross-sectional profile– Mature: many meanders, slower velocity,

oxbows form, “U” profile

Page 7: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Watershed

The area that a stream drains, a.k.a, drainage basin, or catchment area

UNDERC area is near continental divide between Great Lakes drainage basin and Mississippi River basin

Water flows downhill– Upstream– Downstream

Page 8: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.
Page 9: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

River Continuum Hypothesis

Predictable structure of river (physical features, dominant organisms) from upstream “headwaters” to downstream high-order stream

Page 10: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.
Page 11: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Headwaters/upstream:– Riffles/rapids predominant – Heavily shaded by riparian vegetation– Energy imported—allochthonous material– High diversity of benthic fauna

Downstream– Pools of slow water dominant– Only banks shaded by riparian vegetation– Autochthonous input

Page 12: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Lakes

May be created by a variety of geologic and climatic events:– Movement of tectonic plates– Volcanic eruptions– Landslides– Glaciation

Page 13: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Lake Zonation

Page 14: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Lake Zonation

Littoral zone: shallow (<2 m deep) margin characterized by rooted vegetation

Limnetic zone: characterized by open water

Profundal: beneath limnetic, extends to lake bed

Benthic: actual lake bed

Page 15: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Vegetation Zonation

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Page 16: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Lake Stratification

Different zones or layers due to water temperature and water density– Epilimnion: layer closest to surface of water;

warmed by the sun, least dense

– Metalimnion: “middle” layer with thermocline; transitional layer

– Hypolimnion: deepest layer, generally coldest; sunlight does not penetrate

Page 17: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Lake Stratification

Page 18: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.
Page 19: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Seasonal Changes

Summer:Warm temperatures,

long daysObvious vertical

stratification– Epilimnion saturated

with oxygen– Hypolimnion anoxic

Page 20: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Fall:Air temperatures cool, surface water cools

fastest and sinks to the bottom

Complete lake turnover– Lake no longer stratified

Lake eventually becomes a uniform 4ºC

Page 21: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Winter:Surface water cooler

than rest of lake water

Ice prevents mixing

Winter stratification, 0ºC at surface, 4ºC at bottom

Page 22: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Spring:Ice melts, water surface hits 4ºC and

again begins to sink

Spring turnover, process repeats itself

Page 23: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Roach Lake in March

Page 24: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Roach Lake in August

Page 25: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Nutrients

Temperature not the only stratified element of a lake– Oxygen: highest concentration near

surface (photosynthesis)– Nitrogen: NO3

- at surface, NH4+ at benthos

– Sulfur: SO4 at surface, H2S at benthos– Iron: Fe+3 at surface, Fe+2 at benthos

Page 26: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

TempO2NO3NH4

Depth

Concentration

Oligotrophic

Page 27: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

TempO2NO3NH4

Depth

Concentration

Eutrophic

Page 28: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Marsh (Eutrophic)Bog (Dystrophic)

OligotrophicLake

Mesotrophic to Eutrophic Lake

Terrestrial

Sphagnum

Page 29: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Crampton Lake (oligotrophic)

Page 30: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Brown Lake (mesotrophic - eutrophic)

Page 31: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Northgate Bog (dystrophic)

Page 32: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Ziesnis Jr. Bog (dystrophic)

Page 33: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Wetlands: technical definitionVegetation

– presence of “hydrophytic” (water-loving, flood-tolerant) plants

Soils– presence of “hydric” (flooded, reduced) soils

Hydrology– water table at or near the surface for part of the

growing season

Page 34: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.
Page 35: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Wetland history

Historically, wetlands have been drained to:– Provide land for agricultural purposes– Reduce the incidence of mosquito-borne

diseases, like malaria, yellow fever

Wetlands now recognized as having commercial, aesthetic, and ecological value

Page 36: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Why are wetlands important?

• Storm and floodwater storage

• Improved water quality: filtration

• Rare or endangered plants and animals

• Waterfowl nursery grounds

• Migration stop-overs

Page 37: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Wetland examples

• Marshes• Swamps• Glades• Bogs• Fens

Page 38: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Bogs• Acidic (pH < 4.1)• Nutrient-poor soils• Ombrotrophic:

precipitation-fed system• Dominant vegetation:

Sphagnum moss, Vaccinium (cranberries and blueberries), and other low-lying species

• Slightly less acidic (pH 4.1-6.0)

• Soil more nutrient-rich• Minerotrophic:

groundwater-fed system• Dominant vegetation:

sedges, rushes, and grasses

Fens

Page 39: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Black spruceSwamp alder

Tamarack Leatherleaf

Page 40: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Cotton grassPitcher plant

Sphagnum moss

Cattail

Sundew

Page 41: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Aquatic Projects at UNDERC

Page 42: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Long LakeLong Lake

Peter LakePeter Lake

Paul LakePaul Lake

Nutrients added/Nutrients added/No PiscivoresNo Piscivores

Nutrients added/Nutrients added/PiscivoresPiscivores

No Piscivores

Piscivores

Page 43: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.

Recent Work

Trophic cascade work continues

Invasive species (crayfish)

Nutrient cycling in wetlands

Artificial streams

Plant and animal surveys of wetlands

Pitcher plant microcosms

Comparisons of tropical versus temperate stream function

Page 44: Introduction to Aquatic Environments. Aquatic environments Oceans Coastlines/Estuaries Streams Lakes Wetlands: bogs and fens.