Lecture 24- Estuarine habitats Flashcards
What types of habitat are there in estuaries?
1.intertidal= sometime covered sometime not 2.can be in sediment or on surface 3. subtidal= lower= similar arrangement some buried some on surface, some active 4. others swimming in water column, dinoflagellates etc.
How is he fauna of soft sediments separated? (3)
- Macrofauna >500 micrometers, eg: polychaete worms, crabs, amphipods, molluscs 2. Meiofauna 62-500 micrometers; eg: nematodes, copepods, gastrotrichs 3. Microfauna and microflora <62 micrometers; eg: bacteria, diatoms, flagellates
What are the ways of moving within the soft sediment? (2)
- Burrowing through sediment 2. Moving between grains
What are the two ways of burrowing through sediment?
- digging (e.g. some crustaceans), have some appendages or something to push through
- using hydrostatic pressure (e.g. worms):
- soft bodied organisms like worms= expand or contract part of their body -gives it anchoring points and moves like that
- if soft bodied with hard shell= can use the hard part to work as an anchor point =bivalve molluscs
What sort of organisms can utilize moving in between grain in soft sediment?
– very small organisms, often wormlike – no displacement of sediment -depends on your size -if small can wiggle in the spaces -the well sorting is important
What are the three types of feeding in soft sediment habitat?
- Deposit feeding 2. Suspension feeding 3. Scavenging
What is deposit feeding like?
-Ingesting sediment to extract bacteria, micro algae & organic particulates -ingest sediments and extract the detritus in the gut then get it out -e.g.- polychaete worm with feeding tentacles, feels around grabs sediment, extract the micro algae etc, passes the sediment out -bivalve mollusc= syphon that protrudes get the sediment - polychaete worm in a tube, also deposit feeder on the surface as well
What type of feeder is a sand babbler (crab)?
-in between feeding type -not clearly deposit feeders but more than the suspension -manipulates sediment (deposit) but doesn’t digest it, just manipulates it and extract the organics and throws away the clean sand -hunts miofauna -sand babblers, has a burrow as well -can only sift when the sand is damp= so when tide coming out
What are the two types of suspension feeding in the soft sediment habitat?
- passive 2. active
What is active suspension feeding like?
- Feeding on organic particulates suspended in water - active (filter feeding) • pumping of water -also called filter feeders -current of water generated so the water and the material to pass through the feeding organ -often the current set up by cillia -polychate= generates a current that brings food to the mouth
What is passive suspension feeding like?
- cilia or mucous to move particles -they do not generate currents, they wave sth in the water and wait for something to stick on it and bring to mouth -e.g.: a brittle star, puts up the two spines to get food particles that get stuck there -then bring the food to mouth -brittlestarss can be deposit as well
What is scavenging like?
-Feeding on dead organic matter – e.g. crabs, shrimps, some gastropods -can pick up a scent trail of something dead in the water -can rasp food of a carcass= with the radula -follow the scent trail and get the body -useful as they clean up
What is the soft sediment habitat food web like?
deposit feeders pick up organic matter from zooplankkton and phytoplankton
- then get eaten by bigger stuff
- then crustaceans
- then bird
- complex and at a scale we do not see
What are the estuarine habitats we discuss? (4)
- soft sediment 2. seagrass beds 3. mangrove forests 4. water column
What are seagrass beds?
-seagrasses are true flowering plants (– shoots & leaves – rhizomes & roots – flowers, pollen & seeds) -habitat of soft sediment in which seagrasses grow -seagrasses are unusual as they grow on soft sediment -