Intertidal Zone
Transcription
Intertidal Zone
Intertidal Zone Intertidal Zone • The area between high and low tides • Areas of the intertidal may be above the waterline or reach depths of 10m • Includes most other coastal ecosystems – Estuaries, beaches Shore Types: 1. Rocky • • • Erosion Sediments are removed quickly Organisms must be adapted to hold onto rocks 2. Soft/Sandy • • • Sediments are deposited Helps prevent further land erosion Unstable living envirionment • Sand is continuously shifting Tidal Zones • Upper Intertidal – supralittoral • Middle Intertidal – littoral • Lower intertidal – sublittoral • Subtidal – Outer sublittoral The Supralittoral Zone • Only submerged at highest tides • “Splash zone” = only gets water splashed on rocks • Organisms must be adapted to being exposed to air – Adaptations to retain moisture – Get oxygen from air or store enough to survive until covered again – Resistant to high salt levels • Examples: Lichens, algae, limpets Littoral Zone • Between high & low tide – Submerged at high tide – Exposed at low tide • Tide pools • Challenges = heat stress, drying out, & water motion • High Productivity leads to competition • Examples: Barnacles, sea stars, mussels, sea urchins, brittle stars, anemones, fish, crabs, seaweeds, etc The Sublittoral Zone • Lower Intertidal • Submerged most of the time – Only exposed at the lowest tides • Highly productive area – Water, nutrients, sunlight • Challenges = competition & crashing waves • Examples: Fish, urchins, seaweed, seagrass, sea palms, worms, sea cucumbers, sea stars Outer Sublittoral Zone • Subtidal Zone • Area between low tide & continental shelf • Shallow waters up to 10 m depth – Kelp forests Kelp Forests • Grow in nutrient-rich, cold water with a rocky bottom – Areas with coastal upwellings – Primary production exceeds terrestrial forests • Dominated by kelp species – Giant kelp can grow up to 60 meters • Other organisms include: sea urchins, sea stars, clams, sea otters, sea lions Maintaining Ecological Balance • Organisms in a Kelp forest are interdependent – Sea urchins eat kelp holdfasts – Sea otters eat sea urchins and need the kelp to keep from drifting away while sleeping – Hunting of sea otters resulted in damage to kelp forests because sea urchins ate the kelp faster than it could grow. Video: Coastal Biomes 1. Seashore Environments (1) 2. Characteristics of seashore biomes (5) 3. Mangroves (1) 4. Sandy Beach Zones (4) 5. Rocky Shore Zones (4) 6. Salt Marshes (1) 7. Human Impact on Coastal Biomes (5)