Seagrass Systems Flashcards

1
Q

Sea-Otter Social Justice

A

Demographic component to what is important
First Nations values small intertidal invertebrates
Non-first nations value large commercial fish

The value that otters have, and kelp forest health have a cultural perspective

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2
Q

Why are the coastal edge ecosystems (mangroves, salt marshes and seagrass) grouped together?

A

They are formed by terrestrial plants that have adapted to living in and near the ocean (angiosperms)

“Recent” fully terrestrial ancestor
Convergent evolutionary history
They have similar adaptations for dealing with life in saltwater

Rooted in soft sediment, more connected with soft shore ecosystems

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3
Q

Necessary adaptions for life in water (6)

A

Gas exchange is more difficult
Light attenuation
Osmotic issues with getting rid of salt and retaining water
(Life in water requires more energy)

Stable while rooted in soft sediments
Dealing with anoxic waterlogged sediments
Periodic wholesale tissue and organism loss

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4
Q

What is a seagrass

A

Vascular, flowering plants
Angiosperms, monocots, not true grasses

From large meadows

Exposed to air only during the very low tides

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5
Q

Distribution of seagrass

A

They are widely distributed in temperate and tropical systems
They do not extend as far to the poles as kelp does

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6
Q

Productivity of seagrass

A

They are significant primary producers
550-1100
Less than kelp systems but more steady

They do not rely on upwelling (high nutrient flux of nitrogen)

They have steady nutrient levels so they have relative steady-state productivity

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7
Q

Flux

A

movement with measured parameter and a spatial scale

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8
Q

Seascape connectivity

A

The movements of those measurable parameters across ecosystem boundaries.
Can be biotic or abiotic

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9
Q

Allochthonous

A

Refers to materials that are found remotely from their place of origin
This normally refers to dissolved nutrients

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10
Q

Zoster marina

A

Northern hemisphere seagrass
Favours cooler water
North Atlantic and North Pacific
In the warmer southern range, dies off during warmer seasons

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11
Q

Sebastes ssp

A

Genus of marine fish (rockfish)
>100 species on the west coast (very diverse)
Long-lived and culturally important food source

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12
Q

Nearshore seascape connectivity enhances seagrass meadow nursery function - QMM

A

Question: do adjacent habitats alter the status of the fauna of seagrass systems

Metric: YOY rockfish abundance and condition

Method: Visual abundance surveys and diet/body condition

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13
Q

Nearshore seascape connectivity enhances seagrass meadow nursery function - Central Figure `

A

Figure 4 Reporting Body condition and its relative food source
More abundant and healthier fish at sites with more Calanoid copepod (full of fat)

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14
Q

Diversity and species composition

A

~60 species worldwide
more species diversity in tropics
distribution depends largely on species tolerance and requirements

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15
Q

What determines the distribution of seagrass?

A

Substrate: soft substrates, too much sediment can suffocate plant, too loose sediment can cause biomass loss

Light Availability: very high light requirement (photosynthesis inefficient in seawater), the lower limit set by light availability, turbidity can limit seagrass distribution in shallow environments

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16
Q

Basic seagrass morphology

A

Above ground: strap-like laminate leaves that grow from the sheath as the base of the root

Below Ground: extensive rhizome systems which connect members of the clone

17
Q

Nutrient level effects in seagrass phase shifts

A

At nitrogen levels above a certain level, seagrass growth saturates.
Algae continue to grow faster and outcompete seagrass
Causes phase shift and algae dominated alternative stable state

18
Q

Reproduction in seagrass

A

Sexual reproduction is rare and inefficient, allows for the formation of new beds

Vegetative (asexual) growth is more common but still slow (through rhizomes)

19
Q

The seagrass food web

A

Primary producers: seagrass and epiphytes and other macrophytes

Epiphytes: fouling plants/animals (epifauna) which are animals that attach to the seagrass

Grazers: Mesograzers (small invertebrates such as marine snails) and Macrograzers (sea cows, turtles taking the stalks)

Suspension feeders: taking advantage of the phytoplankton and zooplankton in the water

Detritivores: shredder and deposit feeders

Predators
Mesopredators: medium carnivorous fish feed on mesograzers
Macropredators: shark feed on smaller sharks

20
Q

Mesograzers (small invertebrates

A

consume algal epiphytes, not the seagrass itself

Unless left unchecked by their predators

21
Q

Macrograzers: Green sea turtle

A

Young turtles are omnivores
But older turtles become increasingly herbivorous

Long guts and special enzymes to digest seagrass
Selective feeders: choose younger plants more nutritious and easier to digest. Stimulate the growth of new plants
Can be considered gardeners

22
Q

Manatees/Sea cows/Dugongs

A

Order Sirenia
Only herbivorous marine mammals

Dugong
Feed-in large herds leave feeding trail
massive guts (>30m)
Also cultivation feeders gardeners, prefer Halophila (high nitrogen), dugong grazing stimulates the growth of preferred food

23
Q

Queen Conch

A

Graze on seagrasses, algae

Predators: eagle ray, loggerhead turtle, southern stingray, hermit crab, spiny lobster, octopus

24
Q

Seagrass in peril

A

Losing habitat: 15% cover lost 1993-2003

Losing animals: 74 species of concern, fish most affected, seahorses, water quality, overfishing