Lecture 31- Inland Aquatic Systems Flashcards
What are the types of inland water bodies?
- lentic or lotic
- permanents or temporary
- coastal, mountain or inland
- natural or man made
How many algae are found in freshwater?
- 13 divisions
- some are micro and some macroscopic
- some live both in marine and freshwater
- there are 400 genera and 3000 species of freshwater algae in Australia
What are the most common macroscopic freshwater algae?
-most common macroscopic forms are filamentous greens
Is the Australian freshwater flora very endemic?
-“The tentative conclusions . . . are that the freshwater algal flora of Australia contains a considerable number of endemic species and genera, many of great novelty . . . some
of phylogentic significance”
What are the most common algae in freshwater?
- chlorophyta: majority freshwater
- single cells, filaments, colonies
- several macroscopic marine species
- includes stonewarts
What are the most abundant microscopic forms in both marine and freshwater?
- dinoflagellates and diatoms
- important primary producers
What are the blue-greens algae like and what do they include?
-cyanobacteria= small, some of the earliest organisms to photosynthesize on Earth
-prokaryotic
photosynthetic
-can tolerate environmental extremes
-many fix nitrogen= this is important for us
What are the higher plants that you could find in freshwater habitats?
- monocots or dicots
- both in tropical and temperate water
- can draw nutrients from both sediments and water as they have proper root systems
- they can be floating, submerged or emerged
- attached or not
- feathery or leafy
What is an example of flowering plants that live in freshwater?
.duckweeds
-stemless, very small leaves, small trailing roots
What is a ferns example living in freshwater?
- symbiotic with cyanobacteria
- blue green algae associated with trailing roots
- the azolla provide habitat and shelter
- the cyanobacteria provide nutrients
What are some seagrasses living in freshwater?
- paddleweed, genus also marine
- -Zanichellia palustrus: not a seagrass per se but it is threatened in NSW, it has become threatened but no management in place
What are some useful aquatic plants?
- Musk grasses/ Stonewarts
- they are algae but look like higher plants
- can purify water
- early colonizers in water and clean it up, the stonewarts have mucus around the body of the plant and this absorbs nutrients and minerals from the water: purifies water
- help stabilize the sediments when they settle
What are some pest species in freshwater?
- noxious weeds
- salvinia molesta= it shades other plants and results in lack of oxygen and fish can die
- water hyacinth= eichornia crassipes= tolerates wide range temp, salinity and pH
- also import from S. America, grows densely, similar effects to the salvinia
What is the Didymo? (rock snot)
- micrscopic algae referred to as rock snot
- occur in freshwater
- transferred by waders most often
What are the microalgal blooms?
- blue greens, dinoflagellates and diatoms can all bloom
- pose risk to stock and humans
- release toxins that can be harmful
- block waterways