1 / 39

Aquatic & Fisheries Ecology

Aquatic & Fisheries Ecology. Aquatic & Fisheries Ecology. Aquatic = taking place in or on water Fishery = the occupation, industry, or season of taking fish or other aquatic animals (Focus = human use.)

ganesa
Télécharger la présentation

Aquatic & Fisheries Ecology

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. Aquatic & Fisheries Ecology

  2. Aquatic & Fisheries Ecology • Aquatic = taking place in or on water • Fishery = the occupation, industry, or season of taking fish or other aquatic animals (Focus = human use.) • Ecology = the study of interactions of organisms with other organisms and with the abiotic environment

  3. Earth’s Surface • 71% water; 29% land • Water Volume • 96.5% = ocean • 1.8% = glacial ice • 1.7% = groundwater • 0.014% = lakes/streams • 0.001% = atmosphere

  4. Water (H20) Characteristics • Polar = (+ & -) ends. • H-bonds connect molecules; so liquid at “room” temp. & has high specific heat. (more energy to change temp.) • Polar & ionic molecules dissolve well in water. • Boils at 100°C; freezes at 0°C Most dense at 4°C • Solid H2O less dense than liquid H2O

  5. pH – Acidity & Alkalinity H2O ↔ H+ + OH- H2O + CO2 ↔ H2CO3 ↔ H+ + HCO3- • ↑H+ = acid (pH<7); ↓H+ = base (pH>7) • pH of rain ≈ 5.6 – because of CO2 in air H2O + CO2 → H2CO3 → H+ + HCO3- • Alkalinity = the ability of a solution to neutralize (buffer) acids (≠ high pH) -usually accounted for by HCO3-conc. H2O + CO2 ← H2CO3 ← H+ + HCO3- • freshwater pH = 5.5-8.5 • seawater pH ≈ 8.0 (high HCO3- /alkalinity)

  6. Salinity • Salinity = the total amount of dissolved material in water (Na+, K+, Mg2+, Ca2+, & Cl-, Br-, HCO3-, CO32-) Difficult to measure accurately – milligrams per liter (mg/l), parts per thousand (‰), or conductivity in Siemens per centimeter. Practical Salinity Scale = salinity measured electronically without units • Chlorinity = grams per kilogram Cl- Salinity ‰ = 1.806 x Chlorinity ‰

  7. Salinity Marine salinity ≈ 35 (32-37) (≈ 35‰) Brackish salinity = 0.5-32 Freshwater salinity ≈ 0.12 (<0.5) Hypersaline waters >37 Source of salts – rock weathering (most ions); volcanic activity (source of most Cl-) Salts concentrated in the world ocean (or isolated terrestrial basins)

  8. Hardness • Hardness = mg per liter of Ca2+ & Mg2+ soft water = <17.1 mg/l hard water = ≥17.1 mg/l Primarily concerned with CaCO3 (“limestone”). Hard water = greater buffering capacity.

  9. Chemical Processes light energy 6O2+ C6H12O6 ATP energy photo- synthesis glycolysis + cell. respiration OH- + H+ inside a cell H2O + CO2 H2CO3 H++ HCO3- 6H2O+ 6CO2 2H+ + CO32- Ca2+ CaCO3 solid (limestone)

  10. Gas Solubility • N2 = 48% of gases in seawater. (78% of atmos.) • CO2 = 15% of gases in seawater AS CO2. (0.03% of atmosphere) Most CO2 enters carbonate buffer system, because of this CO2 is incredibly soluble. • O2 = 36% of the dissolved gases in seawater. (21% of gases in atmosphere; 100x more in atmos.) O2 & CO2 solubility decreases as temp. & salinity increase, AND increases as pressure increases.

  11. Dissolved Gas Concentration • ABIOTIC determinants Temperature Salinity Pressure • BIOTIC determinants Photosynthesis – Can increase O2 and decrease CO2 greatly (sometimes to O2 supersatuation… forming bubbles). Glycolysis & Cellular Respiration – Can increase CO2 and decrease O2 greatly (sometimes to the point of anoxia).

  12. Relationships Increasing salinity… • decreases gas solubility • decreases heat capacity • lowers freezing point • increases energy for evaporation Increasing temperature… • decreases gas solubility • increases ion solubility

  13. Light Penetration • Light important for photosynthesis. • Light does not penetrate water as well as air. (Reds are first “filtered out” by water, blues last.) • Turbidity= amount of suspended material in the water (“cloudiness”) More turbid = lower penetration of light. • Higher turbidity and greater depth = less light over all Greater depth = less red wavelength light

  14. Stratification • Thermocline= rapid change in temperature at a specific narrow range of depth • Halocline= rapid change in salinity at a specific narrow range of depth • Pycnocline= rapid change in density at a specific narrow range of depth (If present, it corresponds to thermocline & halocline.)

  15. crest wavelength wave height trough Waves • Waves occur when energy is transferred to the water from above or below. wind (surface); earthquake (bottom) • Energy is transferred efficiently among H2O molecules. http://www.classzone.com/books/earth_science/terc/content/visualizations/es1604/es1604page01.cfm?chapter_no=visualization wind

  16. Waves • Swell = “mature”, regular, rounded waves.

  17. crest trough Waves • Waves dampened by... H2O molecule cohesion – small waves Gravity – large waves • Wave formation from vigorous energy input often causes peaked crests. Top moves faster than bottom. wind

  18. Breaking Waves • Breaking Wave= “top” of wave falls over bottom of wave. • Wave “feels” the bottom at ½ wavelength.

  19. Breaking Waves http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5iN_Cs0Mdfg&feature=related

  20. Internal Waves • If the thermo/pycnocline is very narrow, internal waves can develop between the the two layers. • Internal waves in the deep, dense layer move much more slowly than surface waves in air. • Internal waves can form regular slicks of downwelling water above the wave troughs. • Slicks can concentrate plankton.

  21. Internal Waves slick LESS DENSE MORE DENSE

  22. Internal Waves

  23. Internal Waves

  24. Regions of a Body of Water • Benthic = on, at, or associated with the bottom • Pelagic = in or associated with “open water” away from the bottom.

  25. Substrate/Sediment • Substrate = the “bottom” of a body of water • Sediment = particles that accumulate to form a loose substrate. Boulders =>25.6 cm Cobbles Pebbles/Gravel Sand Silt Clay =<0.004 mm • Detritus =fragments of dead photosynthesizers

  26. Hydrologic Cycle

  27. Ocean Interface

  28. Groundwater • Groundwater = water under the surface of the soil (Surface Waters = above the surface) • Water Table =The vertical extent of water saturated soil and/or rock • Aquifer =Water contained within porous rock (Contained Aquifer = below water impermeable rock) • Groundwater “Recharge” =entry of surface water into groundwater http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uQRvN6MUajE

  29. Freshwater System

  30. Ogallala Aquifer

  31. Ocean Profile continental shelf continental slope abyssal plain

  32. World Ocean Basin

  33. Surface Ocean Currents • Gyre = a large system of rotating currents (5 large global gyres); mostly from winds • N. hemis. = clockwise; S. hemis. = counter http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hu_Ga0JYFNg

  34. Ocean Conveyor Belt • Conveyor Belt = a large scale global water circulation driven by density

  35. Upwelling & Downwelling • Upwelling = colder denser water comes near surface. -coastal upwelling -equatorial upwelling -“deep current” upwelling

  36. Upwelling & Downwelling

More Related