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Bio 106 Chapter 12 Notes

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This is a comprehensive and detailed note on Chapter 12;Fresh Water, Oceans, and Coasts for Bio 106. *Essential!!

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Chapter Twelve: Fresh Water, Oceans, and Coasts



Freshwater Systems

 About 97.5% of Earth’s water resides in the oceans and is too salty to drink or to use to

water crops.

 About 2.5% is considered fresh water, water that is relatively pure with few dissolved

salts

o Because most fresh water is tied up in glaciers, icecaps, and underground aquifers,

just over 1 part in 10,000 of Earth’s water is easily accessible for human use.

 Water is renewed and recycled as it moves through the water cycle

o The movement of water in the water cycle creates a web of interconnected aquatic

systems that exchange water, organisms, sediments, pollutants, and other

dissolved substances.

 Underground aquifers exchange water with rivers, ponds, and lakes through the

sediments on the bottoms of these water bodies.



Groundwater Plays Key Roles in the Water Cycle

 Liquid water occurs either as surface water or groundwater.

 Surface water is water located atop Earth’s surface and groundwater is water beneath the

surface held within pores in soil or rock

o Groundwater flows slowly beneath the surface from areas of high pressure to

areas of low pressure and can remain underground for long periods in some cases

for thousands of years.

, o Groundwater makes up one-fifth of Earth’s fresh water supply and plays a key

role in meeting human water needs

 Groundwater is contained within aquifers: porous formations of rock, sand, or gravel that

hold water

o An aquifer’s upper layer, or zone of aeration, contains pore spaces partly filled

with water

o In the lower layer or zone of saturation, the spaces are completely filled with

water

 The boundary between these two zones is the water table.

 The largest known aquifer is the Ogallala Aquifer, which underlines the Great Plains of

the United States



Surface Water Converges in River and Stream Ecosystems

 Surface water accounts for just 1% of fresh water, but it is vital for our survival and for

the planet’s ecological systems

 Each day in the United States, 1.9 trillion L of groundwater are released into surface

waters- nearly as much as the daily flow of the Mississippi River

 Water that falls from the sky as rain, emerges from springs, or melts from snow or a

glacier and then flows over the land surface is called runoff.

 A smaller river flowing into a larger one is called a tributary

o The area of land drained by a river and all its tributaries is the river’s watershed

 Landscapes determine where rivers flow, but rivers shape the landscapes through which

they run

, o Over thousands or millions of years, a meandering river may shift from one

source to another, back and forth over a large area, carving out a flat valley and

picking up sediment that is later deposited in coastal wetlands

 Areas nearest a river’s course that are flooded periodically are said to be within the

river’s floodplain

 Frequent deposition of silt from flooding makes floodplain soils especially fertile

o As a result, agriculture thrives in floodplains, and riparian forests are productive

and species-rich



Lakes and Ponds are Ecologically Diverse Systems

 The largest lakes, such as North America’s Great Lakes, are sometimes known as inland

seas

 Around the nutrient-rich edges of a water body, the water is shallow enough that aquatic

plants grow from the mud and reach above the water’s surface.

o This region, names the littoral zone, abounds in invertebrates- such as insect

larvae, snails, and crayfish- that fish, birds, turtles, and amphibians feed on.

 The benthic zone extends along the bottom of the lake or pong, from shore to the deepest

point.

 Many invertebrates live in the mud, feeing on detritus or on one another.

 In the open portion of a lake or pong, far from shore, sunlight penetrates shallow waters

of the limnetic zone.

 Below the limnetic zone lies the profundal zone, the volume of open water that sunlight

does not reach

, o This zone lacks photosynthetic life and it lower in dissolved oxygen than upper

waters

 Oligotrophic lakes and ponds, which are low in nutrients and high in oxygen, may slowly

transition to the high-nutrients, low-oxygen conditions of eutrophic water bodies.



Freshwater Wetlands Include Marshes, Swamps, bogs, and Vernal Pools.

 Wetlands are systems in which the soil is saturated with water and which generally

feature shallow standing water with ample vegetation.

 In freshwater marshes, shallow water allows plants such as cattails and bulrushes to grow

above the water surface

 Swamps also consist of shallow water rich in vegetation, but they occur in forested areas

 Bogs are ponds covered with thick floating mats of vegetation and can represent a stage

in aquatic succession.

 Vernal pools are seasonal wetlands that form in early spring from rain and snowmelt and

dry up once the weather becomes warmer.

 Wetlands also provide important ecosystem services by slowing runoff, reducing

flooding, recharging aquifers, and filtering pollutants.




The Oceans

 The vast majority of rivers empty into oceans, so the oceans receive most of the inputs of

water, sediments, pollutants, and organisms carried by freshwater systems.

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