Lecture 32- Seagrasses and Mangroves Flashcards

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1
Q

What do seagrasses and mangroves have in common?

A

-live in sheltered environments

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2
Q

What are the characteristics of seagrasses?

A
  • flowering plants: have shoots and leaves, rhizomes, roots and flowers, pollen and seeds
  • all are monocotyledons
  • all are capable of asexual propagation via rhizomes
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3
Q

What is the main difference between seaweed and seagrass?

A

-seagrasses are flowering plants

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4
Q

How does pollination of seagrasses occur?

A
  • under water by means of water currents
  • have male and female flowers
  • flowers and pollen are underwater
  • largest pollen in the world: the pollen strands get carried in the water (so being long is an advantage)
  • seagrass flowers are inconspicous, male and female flower alternate on the plant (the flower is less than 2mm)
  • the flowers don’t need to attract bees or birds
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5
Q

What are the habitat requirements for seagrasses?

A
  • usually in soft sediments (different to seaweed)
  • sheltered environments (one species lives in rock pools)
  • most species are subtidal
  • shallow waters
  • wide range of salinity, can exist in fully saline water as well as fresh water
  • have higher light requirements than seaweed so occur in shallower water
  • very common in estuaries
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6
Q

What is the distribution of seagrasses?

A
  • about 60 species worldwide
  • occur in tropical and temperate regions
  • about 20 species in southern Australia and NZ, at least 14 species are endemic
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7
Q

What are some local seagrasses?

A
  1. Zostera/Heterozostera: intertidal and subtidal, can be luxurious if subtidal, if intertidal grows less as it is exposed
  2. amphibolis: rockpools as well as soft sediments, very large pollen, doesn’t look that grass like, interesting life history: when fertilisation occurs= female flower retained on the parent then floats, and holds seedling in place until it can
  3. Posidonia: strap weed, high rhizome and root biomass (50-90%) most of the biomass is under the soil, the high biomass allows it to withstand more wave action than other seagrasses asexual propagation more than seed production, not as common
  4. Halophila: paddleweed, leafs are leaflike, temperate and tropical, marine and freshwater, not extensive beds,
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8
Q

What is the ecological importance of seagrasses?

A
  • seagrass grows above sediment and in it, each part has animals associated with it, invertebrates in the sediment also on the leafs, many other animals
  • if you dig up a sample of sediment with seagrasses and compare to bare sediment= the faun would differ a lot
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9
Q

What are the roles of seagrasses in the ecosystem?

A
  1. stabilise sediment and provide habitats
  2. provide substrate (for other species to attach, mostly seaweed)
  3. food for iconic species (dugong, black swans, and only a few fish species= too much cellulose for fish)
  4. nursery areas (provide habitat and shelter for the juveniles we value commercially, king george whiting)
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10
Q

What is the problem with humans and seagrasses?

A
  • need sheltered habitat and people destroy it
  • many seagrass areas lost in the 70s and 80s
  • e.g 85% of seagrass beds in western port
  • the reasons for different places where seagrass beds were lost is often different
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11
Q

How do humans impact seagrass beds?

A
  • catchment runoff
  • small boat anchoring (clearing a patch on the ground)
  • dredging
  • shiping
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12
Q

What is the seagrass watch?

A
  • organization created to facilitate community based monitoring of seagrass beds
  • increase community awareness about the importance of seagrass beds
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13
Q

What are the characteristics of mangroves?

A
  • trees and shrubs: adapated for intertidal
  • 50+ species
  • largely tropical
  • halophytes= salt loving
  • largely estuarine
  • grow in soft sediments
  • live in sheltered environment (need it)
  • provide shelter for coastlines
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14
Q

What is special about Australia’s mangroves?

A
  • mangroves at highest latitude in the world

- odd patch in williamstown= between basalt boulders

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15
Q

What are the two types of mangrove roots?

A
  1. Pneumatophores (type of aerial roots, designed to be submerged and exposed at some times)
  2. Prop roots (aerial roots that help support it in the sediments)
    - have long root (cable root) under sediment
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16
Q

How do mangroves cope with salt?

A
  • reduce salt intake= selectively permeable roots, allow water in but not salt in
  • reduce water loss=thick waxy cuticle, fewer stomata
  • increase salt loss=salt glands, salt transported there and crystalizes out
  • isolate salt=push it into old leaves and these are shed sometimes
17
Q

What is the mangrove food web like?

A
  • high depositional environment
  • lot of nutrition
  • complex substrate
  • fish will move in with the tide
18
Q

What is Avicennia marina the local mangrove species like?

A
  • in tropics: grows bigger, faster and fruits faster
  • seed germinates on tree, drops off, floats about for 3 days, then sinks, adrift for up to 5 months before it finally takes root
19
Q

What are the threats to mangroves?

A
  • poor public image: muddy, smelly and lot of mozzies
  • reclamation and development
  • changed the patterns of water flow
  • now called wetlands
20
Q

What is a salt marsh?

A
  • can only be submerged occassionally, higher up from the sea
  • high intertidal areas of grasses, succulents and small shrubs
  • the definition of saltmarsh recently broadened
  • like mangroves: halophytes, lergely estuarine, soft sediments, sheltered environments
21
Q

What are the sorts of plants in saltmarshes?

A
  • have water in
  • squishy
  • pig face is one
22
Q

What is the pattern in occurrence of seagrasses, mangroves and saltmarshes?

A
  • seagrass in sheltered and subtidal
  • mid intertidal to high intertidal= mangroves
  • the places that are infrequently indendated= saltmarsh