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JI-Yoon K

Pond & Lake Ecosystem - Biome Wiki - 0 views

  • The scientific name is Lemna minor.
  • By justinbaeder on flickr Duckweed is the smallest flowering plant. It is found all around the world except for the coldest areas. It grows in slow moving fresh-water.
  • Cattails are very common in ponds and lakes. The scientific name for a cattail is Typha latifolia. There leaves are flat, 8-15 tapering. There colors are usually brown, or light brown.
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  • Water lilies are also called lily pads.Water lilies have thick, sturdy stems.They are custom built to float on top of the water.
  • Water lilies are becoming endangered because the wetlands are becoming endangered. The scientific name for a water lily is Nymphaea ororata.
  • There are 7,000 different types of Green Algae in many different types of habitats.It can be unicellular or multicellular. Algae intertwines within eachother to look bigger and be stronger.Some organisms depend on Green algae to conduct photosynthesis for them. The scientific name for Green Algae is Pediastrum boryanum.
  • Plant plankton or Phytoplankton is a single celled organism that changes carbon dioxide into oxygen that humans can breath. Most plankton can only be seen with a microscope, although some aquatic animals are considered plankton to. Because of the way theyfloat through the water. The scientific name for Phytoplankton isCylindrospermopsis raciborskii.
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    Information about plants in the pond and lake
danielle k

Biomesfirst - Marine Food Web - 0 views

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    biome info
JI-Yoon K

Difference Between Stream and River | Difference Between - 0 views

  • A vast majority of rivers originate in hills and mountains or are formed as a result of melting glaciers
  • . Rain water and melting snow fall down the mountains in the form of multiple streams that meet at a confluence where the water body becomes large and gets transformed into a river.
  • Streams are small water bodies existing by themselves but add up when they meet to form a large river.
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  • Streams are shallower than rivers and some of the streams are such that one can easily walk through or pick up if he drops and object accidentally into it.
  • Despite carrying smaller amount of water, streams are very turbulent because of falling from great heights.
  • They have great erosion powers and erode sediments that they carry along with them into river. River carries this sediment into larger water bodies such as ocean or a lake.
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    It explains the difference between stream and river
Christopher R

The grassland biome - 0 views

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    Scroll down to the bottom and find your biome.
Angela W

Destruction of Desert - 0 views

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    This website gives lots of info on the desert and how it is being impacted.
Katie S

The Aquatic Biome - 2 views

    • Katie S
       
      Open Ocean is another name for pelagic zone
  • pelagic zone is generally cold
  • The flora in the pelagic zone include surface seaweeds. The fauna include many species of fish and some mammals, such as whales and dolphins. Many feed on the abundant plankton.
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  • benthic zone is the area below the pelagic zone, but does not include the very deepest parts of the ocean (see abyssal zone below)
  • The bottom of the zone consists of sand, slit, and/or dead organisms. Here temperature decreases as depth increases toward the abyssal zone, since light cannot penetrate through the deeper water. Flora are represented primarily by seaweed while the fauna, since it is very nutrient-rich, include all sorts of bacteria, fungi, sponges, sea anemones, worms, sea stars, and fishes.
  • deep ocean is the abyssal zone
  • water in this region is very cold (around 3° C), highly pressured, high in oxygen content, but low in nutritional content. The abyssal zone supports many species of invertebrates and fishes. Mid-ocean ridges (spreading zones between tectonic plates), often with hydrothermal vents, are found in the abyssal zones along the ocean floors. Chemosynthetic bacteria thrive near these vents because of the large amounts of hydrogen sulfide and other minerals they emit. These bacteria are thus the start of the food web as they are eaten by invertebrates and fishes.
  • Coral Reefs Coral reefs are widely distributed in warm shallow waters. They can be found as barriers along continents (e.g., the Great Barrier Reef off Australia), fringing islands, and atolls. Naturally, the dominant organisms in coral reefs are corals.
  • Since reef waters tend to be nutritionally poor, corals obtain nutrients through the algae via photosynthesis and also by extending tentacles to obtain plankton from the water. Besides corals, the fauna include several species of microorganisms, invertebrates, fishes, sea urchins, octopuses, and sea stars.
  • Estuaries Estuaries are areas where freshwater streams or rivers merge with the ocean. This mixing of waters with such different salt concentrations creates a very interesting and unique ecosystem.
  • algae
  • seaweeds, marsh grasses, and mangrove trees (only in the tropics), can be found here. Estuaries support a diverse fauna, including a variety of worms, oysters, crabs, and waterfowl.
  • The near-surface open water surrounded by the littoral zone is the limnetic zone. The limnetic zone is well-lighted (like the littoral zone) and is dominated by plankton, both phytoplankton and zooplankton. Plankton are small organisms that play a crucial role in the food chain. Without aquatic plankton, there would be few living organisms in the world, and certainly no humans. A variety of freshwater fish also occupy this zone.
  • Freshwater is defined as having a low salt concentration—usually less than 1%. Plants and animals in freshwater regions are adjusted to the low salt content and would not be able to survive in areas of high salt concentration (i.e, ocean). There are different types of freshwater regions: ponds and lakes, streams and rivers, and wetlands. The following sections describe the characteristics of these three freshwater zones.
  • The topmost zone near the shore of a lake or pond is the littoral zone. This zone is the warmest since it is shallow and can absorb more of the Sun’s heat. It sustains a fairly diverse community, which can include several species of algae (like diatoms), rooted and floating aquatic plants, grazing snails, clams, insects, crustaceans, fishes, and amphibians. In the case of the insects, such as dragonflies and midges, only the egg and larvae stages are found in this zone. The vegetation and animals living in the littoral zone are food for other creatures such as turtles, snakes, and ducks.
  • Ponds and Lakes These regions range in size from just a few square meters to thousands of square kilometers. Scattered throughout the earth, several are remnants from the Pleistocene glaciation. Many ponds are seasonal, lasting just a couple of months (such as sessile pools) while lakes may exist for hundreds of years or more. Ponds and lakes may have limited species diversity since they are often isolated from one another and from other water sources like rivers and oceans. Lakes and ponds are divided into three different “zones” which are usually determined by depth and distance from the shoreline.
  • Temperature varies in ponds and lakes seasonally.
  • Plankton have short life spans—when they die, they fall into the deep-water part of the lake/pond, the profundal zone. This zone is much colder and denser than the other two. Little light penetrates all the way through the limnetic zone into the profundal zone. The fauna are heterotrophs, meaning that they eat dead organisms and use oxygen
  • ater temperature of around 4° C. This mixing also circulates oxygen throughout the lak
  • Of course there are many lakes and ponds that do not freeze during the winter, thus the top layer would be a little warmer.
  • Streams and Rivers
  • These are bodies of flowing water moving in one direction. Streams and rivers can be found everywhere—they get their starts at headwaters, which may be springs, snowmelt or even lakes, and then travel all the way to their mouths, usually another water channel or the ocean.
  • characteristics of a river or stream change during the journey from the source to the mouth. The temperature is cooler at the source than it is at the mouth. The water is also clearer, has higher oxygen levels, and freshwater fish such as trout and heterotrophs can be found there. Towards the middle part of the stream/river, the width increases, as does species diversity—numerous aquatic green plants and algae can be found. Toward the mouth of the river/stream, the water becomes murky from all the sediments that it has picked up upstream, decreasing the amount of light that can penetrate through the water. Since there is less light, there is less diversity of flora, and because of the lower oxygen levels, fish that require less oxygen, such as catfish and carp, can be found.
  • Wetlands
  • Wetlands are areas of standing water that support aquatic plants. Marshes, swamps, and bogs are all considered wetlands. Plant species adapted to the very moist and humid conditions are called hydrophytes. These include pond lilies, cattails, sedges, tamarack, and black spruce. Marsh flora also include such species as cypress and gum. Wetlands have the highest species diversity of all ecosystems. Many species of amphibians, reptiles, birds (such as ducks and waders), and furbearers can be found in the wetlands. Wetlands are not considered freshwater ecosystems as there are some, such as salt marshes, that have high salt concentrations—these support different species of animals, such as shrimp, shellfish, and various grasses.
  • Marine Regions Marine regions cover about three-fourths of the Earth’s surface and include oceans, coral reefs, and estuaries. Marine algae supply much of the world’s oxygen supply and take in a huge amount of atmospheric carbon dioxide. The evaporation of the seawater provides rainwater for the land.
  • Oceans The largest of all the ecosystems, oceans are very large bodies of water that dominate the Earth’s surface.
  • separate zones: intertidal, pelagic, abyssal, and benthic. All four zones have a great diversity of species. Some say that the ocean contains the richest diversity of species even though it contains fewer species than there are on land.
  • sometimes it is submerged and at other times exposed, as waves and tides come in and out. Because of this, the communities are constantly changing
  • intertidal zone is where the ocean meets the land
  • algae and mollusks
  • herbivorous snails, crabs, sea stars, and small fishes
  • invertebrates, fishes, and seaweed
  • Waves keep mud and sand constantly moving, thus very few algae and plants can establish themselves—the fauna include worms, clams, predatory crustaceans, crabs, and shorebirds
  • pelagic zone includes those waters further from the land, basically the open ocean.
David B

Taiga Biomes - 3 views

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    taiga biome info
Katie S

World Climates - 8 views

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    This website will help you find the latitude lines for your biome.
Katie S

World Climate: Weather rainfall and temperature data - 12 views

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    Use this website to find the average monthly temperature and average monthly rainfall for a city in your biome.
Katie S

MBGnet - 6 views

shared by Katie S on 12 Nov 12 - Cached
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