Lecture 9 - Estuaries and Sandy Shores Flashcards
What is an estuary?
An inlet of the sea that reaches into a river (where freshwater meets saltwater).
What are the three sectors of an estuary?
1) Lower; free connection with open sea.
2) Middle; subject to salt water and freshwater mixing.
3) Upper; freshwater input from the river, but subject to daily tidal action.
Name and describe the three different types of estuary.
1) Ria; a drowned valley. Water comes in due to sea level rise.
2) Fjord; steep sided, glacial-cut estuary.
3) Bar-built estuary; estuary with a lot of sediment coming down, created by offshore deposits. Intermittently open to the sea.
What is the salinity of an estuary at the
a) Head?
b) Upper reaches?
c) Middle?
d) Lower reaches?
e) Mouth of the sea?
a) Head = less than 5ppt
b) Upper reaches = 5-18ppt
c) Middle = 18-25ppt
d) Lower reaches = 25-34ppt
e) Mouth of the sea = 34ppt.
What is the current focus of estuaries?
Give an example.
Using the tide to generate renewable energy.
In the Severn Estuary, could produce 4.4% of UK energy needs, but at a loss of 75% intertidal habitats.
What is a salt wedge estuary?
High river flow. Freshwater flows at high volume, floats over the top of the sea salt.
What is a partially-mixed estuary?
Between wedge and well-mixed.
More stable flows from both river and seawater.
At depth, constantly salinity.
Salinity increases from top to bottom.
What is a well-mixed estuary?
Low river flow.
Strong tides.
What is a fjord type salinity?
Freshwater sits on the top.
Seawater spills in and fills the deep bottom channels.
Describe how species diversity changes with the salinity gradient.
- Freshwater; high species diversity.
- 5ppt; much lower species diversity.
- Middle reaches (5-18ppt); begins to slowly increase.
- Diversity increases greatly as you enter salty water.
True or false:
Saltwater species have better abilities to cope with increased salinity than marine species have to cope with reduced salinity.
FALSE.
Marine species have better abilities to cope with reduced salinity than freshwater species have to cope with increase salinity.
What are brackish animals?
Freshwater species at the edge of their salinity tolerances.
What did Attril (2002) argue?
That salinity is the primary factor determining distribution and species diversity.
Proposed a two-ecocline model for estuaries (where an ecocline is a gradual ecological gradient).
Where do mudflats form in estuaries?
In the middle reaches
How much mud is accumulated each year in estuaries?
2mm
Explain why fine mud is found in the middle of the estuary.
The faster the water moves, the bigger the particles it can carry.
As it slows down, large particles begin to drop first.
When it moves very slowly, it no longer carries fine silty mud.
When river meets tide, water hardly moves, and fine silty mud drops out at the centre of the estuary.
Why do you get a Dissolved Oxygen (DO) sag in the middle of an estuary?
- High organic load of estuaries leads to high levels of bacterial salinity
- When mud sinks out, brings organic matter with it.
- A lot of respiratory processes happen in the top layer of mud
- The middle of the estuary has the largest amount of mud.
Where in the estuary has the highest oxygen content?
The top of the estuary.