Title: How%20realistic%20can%20we%20be?
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2Boundary Habitats
3Interactions among physical parameters
Seasonality
4Characteristics of biological communities Marsh
habitats
- Generally, high density but low diversity
- Physiological stresses
- Low topographic substrate variability
- But very high potential for productivity due to
nutrient input
5Components
- Macrophytes (seagrasses, sedges, rushes,
cordgrasses) - Epiphytic algae (macro- and micro-)
- Benthic macroalgae and microalgae
- Phytoplankton
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7Estuary edge zonation in marshes
8High primary productivity
- E.g., may have gt4000 plants per meter square
- Second only to tropical rainforests in
productivity, among natural ecosystems
9High secondary productivity
- Benthic macrofauna dense
- Clams, annelids, crustaceans
- Critical for coastal fisheries
- Used as nursery areas for many pelagic spp
- Approx 2/3 of fishery derived from nursery areas
in estuaries - What factors influence this productivity?
10Questions
- Why are estuaries so productive?
- How are offshore fisheries impacted by estuary
quality? - What limits productivity?
- How are estuaries sensitive to anthropogenic
stress?
11Why are estuaries productive?
- Nutrient trap
- Tides provide an energy subsidy for the resident
aquatic species - Autotrophs are present all year
- Combination of freshwater and saltwater creates
many different habitats
12Variety of habitats
13Physical complexity of an estuary basin
Shallow Water
Open Water
Deep Water
Deep Channel
A. Cross Section of Chesapeake Bay or Tidal
Tributary
Migratory Finfish Spawning and Nursery Habitat
B. Oblique View of the Chesapeake Bay and its
Tidal Tributaries
Shallow Water Habitat
Open Water Habitat
Deep Water
Deep Channel
14Freshwater links with estuaries
15Sediment trapping in tributaries
16What happens to stream input?
- Nutrient (sediment) trap effects due to physical
factors - Settling with dispersion of water flow
- Nutrients adsorbed on clays
- Flocculation
- pH salinity change
- alter electrostatic charges
- water small particles attract
- increasing particle size and
- tendency to settle
17Biotic sediment trapping plants
Spartina - cordgrass
18Plant effects in estuarine productivity
- Sediment trap effect due to reduction of flow
velocity - Nutrient pump effect
- Nutrients taken by roots from sediments
- Transferred to water column (for phytoplankton)
- Nutrient modulation effect
- Uptake when nutrients are abundant
- Net release back to water when nutrients are
scarce (through decomposition)
19Biotic sediment trapping animals
- Biodeposition
- Filter feeders collect suspended matter, compact
it - Clearance rates can be very high 10s of
liters per day per clam or oyster
20Factors enhancing productivity Tidal mixing
- Ebb flow of tides enhances settling of
sediments/nutrients - Resuspension of materials can enhance
phytoplankton productivity
21Factors affecting light productivity
22Links between estuaries and fisheries
- Fisheries classifications
- Economic
- Commercial
- Recreational
- Subsistence
- What is being harvested
- Arthropods (crabs, shrimp)
- Molluscs (clams, oysters)
- Fish
23Offshore fisheries depend on estuaries
- 70 90 of commercial catch from east coast of
USA is estuarine dependent - Fishery productivity is correlated with area of
marsh and vegetated habitat
24Example of fisheries in North Carolina estuaries
- Arthropods
- Blue crabs (40 million)
- Shrimp (20 million)
- Mollusks
- Oysters 1988 peak of 3 million, now lt1 million)
- Clams also declining, from 1980 8 million
- Fish
- Menhaden, flounder, croaker, weakfish gt 24
million - Recreations catch can exceed commercial
25Estuaries and fisheries, an example
26Estuaries are especially sensitive to human
impacts
- Sediment trapping can be problematic
- Tradeoff between adding nutrients and increasing
turbidity - High sediment loads clog filtering systems of
animals - Sediments carry pollutants (dredge spoils of Cape
Cod harbors are toxic wastes) - Filter feeders tend to concentrate toxins
- Estuaries are the First stop for poor
agriculture and waste management
27Other reasons for estuarine sensitivity
- Vulnerability of estuarine organisms
- Many already at the limit of physiological
tolerances - Added stress of chemicals, hypoxia may reduce
reproduction below critical limits - Food web structure is based on few species
- Low diversity is high risk
28SedimentSources to the Bay and Tribs
- Watershed Inputs (1,2 and 3)
- Shoreline erosion (4)
- Ocean (5)
- Biogenic production
- Relative contribution varies in proportion
different areas of the Bay and tribs
29Sediment transport in Cheasapeake Bay
30Sediment Budget Choptank Estuary 1979-80
(Yarbro et. al, 1983)
12 Upland
8 From estuary
80 Shoreline
81 Deposited
19 Transfer down estuary
Total Sediment input 0.43 x 106 metric tonnes
31Why They Are Being Destroyed
- Level of habitat loss is 80 to 95
- Many factors contribute to this destruction
- Storm sewers are difficult to regulate due to old
infastructure
(EPA study)
32Information about Stormwater
- More oil than was released in the Exxon Valdez
spill flows into Galveston Bay per yr - One quart of spilled motor oil covers three
football fields - Takes 20 years for an aquatic system to recover
from oil contamination - In the Chesapeake Bay, 15 P, 14 N, and 9 of
sediment loads come from storm water
33Stormwater Pollutants
- Suspended soilds from steet dust and eroded
sediments - Heavy metals from motor vehicleswear of plating,
bearings and brake linings - Chlorides from salt application
- Oils, grease and other hydrocarbons from vehicle
exhaust and lubricants
34Potential PoliciesVegetated Shoreline Buffer
Zones
- Improve water quality, create new habitat
- Difficulties waterfront land values are
expensive, need to remove existing buildings,
political opposition, reluctant governments
35Potential PoliciesBest management practices
(BMPs)
- Advanced
- Detention ponds
- Vegetated filter strips
- Catch basin filters
- Baseline
- Preventive maintenance
- Education.
Detention pond