Physical Factors: Current, Substrate, Temperature, and Oxygen - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Physical Factors: Current, Substrate, Temperature, and Oxygen

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Title: Physical Factors: Current, Substrate, Temperature, and Oxygen


1
Physical Factors Current, Substrate,
Temperature, and Oxygen
  • Unit 1 Module 4, Lecture 3

2
Objectives
  • Students will be able to
  • explain how current influences and effects the
    type of organisms in a stream.
  • predict and describe longitudinal sediment
    distribution in a stream.
  • classify sediment particles by size.
  • describe how particle size influences aquatic
    organisms.
  • describe how temperature and oxygen levels affect
    aquatic organisms in a stream.

3
Physical factors Current, substrate,
temperature, and oxygen
  • Module 4 Lecture 3 consists of three parts which
    you can do in whatever order suits your class
  • Physical factors
  • Organic Matter
  • Stream Chemistry.

4
Current
  • Current influences
  • Ecological distribution
  • Morphological adaptations
  • An organisms behavior

5
Current and body shape
  • Sunfish and bullheads with broad body forms are
    adapted to slow current.
  • Stonecats and trout with streamlined body forms
    are adapted to fast current.

6
Current
  • The distribution of diatoms, algae, and rooted
    macrophytes are influenced by current.
  • Diatoms species can by sorted into taxa that are
    adapted to slow and fast moving water.
  • Attached algae appear to increase in abundance in
    conditions with fast current and hard substrates.
  • Rooted macrophytes thrive in slow water with soft
    sediments.

7
The effect of substrate on organisms
  • The diversity of materials making up the
    substrate of a stream make it complex and
    dynamic.
  • The composition of the substrate plays an
    important role in shaping what organisms inhabit
    a particular stream reach.
  • Due to other factors such as current,
    temperature, and oxygen levels it is important
    not to attribute the presence or absence of a
    specific species solely to the substrate type
    encountered at particular site.

8
Longitudinal sediment distribution
  • The predominant substrate size decreases as you
    move downstream.

9
Chattahoochee River tributaries
  • Percent of bottom covered by various substrates

10
Particle size
Category Category Dia (mm) Wentworth scale
Boulder Cobble Boulder Cobble gt 256 lt -8
Large Small 128 - 256 64 - 128 -7 -6
Pebble Large Small 32 - 64 16 - 32 -5 -4
Gravel Coarse Medium Small 8 - 16 4 - 8 2 - 4 -3 -2 -1
Sand Very Coarse Coarse Medium Fine Very Fine 1 - 2 0.5 - 1 0.25 - 0.5 0.125 - 0.25 0.063 - 0.125 0 1 2 3 4
Silt lt 0.063 gt 5
11
Organic matter as a substrate component
  • Organic materials ranging from plants stems to
    logs tend to function as substrates for
    organisms, while particles less than 1 mm in size
    may serve as food for macro invertebrates.
  • Diversity and density of invertebrates often
    increases with the presence of organic matter as
    part of the substrate.
  • As organic matter increases in stream substrates,
    macro invertebrate diversity tends to increase

12
Faunal selection of substrates
Group Preferred Substrate
Lithophilous Gravel, Cobbles, Boulders
Psammophilous Sand
Xylophilous Wood
Phytophilous Plants
13
Fish spawning habitat
  • Most stream dwelling fish select a hard
    substrate, ranging from large stones to mixed
    gravel on which to spawn.
  • The availability and distribution of a particular
    substrate type necessary for spawning is often
    critical in creating suitable habitat for a
    particular species.

14
The effect of temperature on organisms
  • This figure illustrates seasonal differences in
    the emergence of mayfly species that would in
    part be cued by temperature.

15
Maximum daily temperature range in relation to
stream order in temperate streams
16
Oxygen
  • In most unpolluted streams dissolved oxygen is
    near saturation and is, therefore, of minor
    biological concern.
  • Current serves to deliver oxygen rich water to
    respiratory structures.
  • Fish can actively move water over gills, however,
    most invertebrates cannot and are dependent on
    current to deliver oxygen.
  • These organisms are referred to as respiratory
    conformers their respiratory rate closely
    follows the ambient oxygen concentration.

17
Oxygen related adaptations
  • Fish actively swim and draw water over their
    gills
  • Macroinvertebrate larvae with conspicuous gills
    are respiratory conformers
  • Midge larvae with hemoglobin are adapted to live
    in poorly oxygenated stream sediments
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