Term
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Definition
soft bottom, intertidal
low-energy habitat
sandy substrate that is unstable and shifting (no solid place for attachment)
occur where sediments accumulate
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Term
sediment and water motion |
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Definition
- large particles sink
- small particles are suspended
- finer sediments in calm, sheltered areas
- coarser sands in wave action
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Term
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Definition
- coarse sediments drain quickly because they are more oxygenated
- fine sediments drain slowly
- well sorted drain quickly
- poorly sorted drain slowly
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Term
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Definition
little primary production, meaning that minimal oxygen is produced. oxygen is quickly depleted by respiration and decomposition |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
inhabit film of water around sand grains |
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Term
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Definition
water between the sand grains. only source of oxygen for infauna. meiofauna live here. |
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Term
more oxygen in coarse or fine sediments? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
fine sediments accumilate organic matter. more decomposition, less porous. only top few centimeters are oxygenated. sediments below are anoxic. |
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Term
visible black band around mudflats |
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Definition
anaerobic bacteria decompose organic matter without oxygen, and give out hydrogen sulfide as a byproduct. |
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Term
adaptations to low oxygen levels |
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Definition
- pump water through burrow
- use siphons to reach water abovve
- respiratory pigments (hemoglobin)
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Term
feeding in the sand or mud |
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Definition
most animals feed on detritus, which are particles of dead organisms. deposit feeders pick up sediments, suspension feeders catch particles. |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
moon snail, shore birds, fishes |
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Term
moon snail (polinices spp) |
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Definition
burrow through top layer, use radula to drill hole in burried clam, slurp up clam's soft body |
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Term
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Definition
prey on infauna at low tide |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
locomotion in the sediment |
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Definition
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Term
physical characteristics of estuaries |
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Definition
- semi-enclosed area where seawater and freshwater meet
- lower species diversity, but species are very abundant
- heavily affected by human activity
- high produtivity
- warm termperature (shallow)
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Term
high productivity in estuaries |
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Definition
- salinity ranges because of salt/freshwater mix
- nutrient imput from land
- shallow water - more sunlight, lots of photosynthesis
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Term
human impacts on estuaries |
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Definition
fishing, agriculture, development |
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Term
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Definition
extreme salinities possible. intermediate salinity is brackish water. seawater sinks, freshwater floats |
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Term
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Definition
animals permanently attached to substrate. subject to varying salinity |
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Term
high tide versus low tide |
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Definition
more freshwater at low tide because salt wedge moves down. more saltwater at high tide because salt wedge moves up. |
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Term
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Definition
soft, sticky mud. rich in organics due to decomp. particles settled by size, coarser in upper areas and finer carried towards sea. |
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Term
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Definition
cells lose water in seawater, cells gain water in freshwater. |
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Term
euryhaline orgamisms
IMPORTANT |
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Definition
tolerate wide salinity range |
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Term
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Definition
cannot tolerate varying salinity range |
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Term
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Definition
- live on/in mud
- access to water (siphons, burrows)
- locomotion through mud difficult, easier to locomote on surface
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Term
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Definition
fresh or saltwater estuary. open to sea or seperated from it. |
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Term
elkhorn slough - "seasonal estuary" |
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Definition
freshwater input mostly in winter. salinity varies throughout year, low in winter but high in summer. |
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Term
elkhorn slough flushed by tides |
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Definition
twice daily, demidiurnal. |
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Term
elkhorn slough diversity of life |
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Definition
phytoplankton, plants, infauna, crawler inverts, birds. |
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Term
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Definition
goes through elkhorn slough, crucial resting/feeding stop on migration route |
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Term
threats to elkhorn slough |
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Definition
invasive species, pollutants (runoff, ddt), development |
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Term
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Definition
exponential growth, no predators or pathogens. compete with native species. |
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