Aquatic Ecosystems Key Terms
marshes
contain non-woody plants such as cattails
mangrove swamps
dense growth of mangrove trees in swampy areas
swamps
dominated by woody plants such as trees
zooplankton
drifting animals (microscopic or large like jellyfish)
Phytoplankton
drifting microscopic plants that account for most of the food for most aquatic ecosystems
bogs
filled with sphagnum or peat moss
fens
ideal habitat for amphibians because of the continuous moisture
coral reefs
limestone ridges built by tiny coral animals called coral polyps and the alga that lives inside them
dissolved oxygen
microscopic bubbles of gaseous oxygen that are mixed in water and avabilable to organisms for respiration
Plankton
microscopic organisms that float or drift freely in the water
benthos
organisms that live at the bottom of oceans or bodies of fresh water
chemosynthetic organisms
organisms that obtain carbon through chemosynthesis
runoff
precipitation that can carry pollutants from land into bodies of water
brackish water
slightly salty water
Salinity
the amount of dissolved salts the water contain
benthic zone
the bottom region of oceans and bodies of fresh water
coral polyps
tiny, soft bodied organisms related to sea anemones and jellyfish
salt marshes
wetland full of river deposits which support low-lying plant such as salt tolerant grasses
coral bleching
when a coral becomes stressed and expels most of its colorful algae, leaving an underlying ghostly white color
coastal wetlands
coastal land areas covered by salt water for all or part of the time
eutrophic lakes
a lake that has a large amount of algae and plant growth due to nutrients
barrier islands
a long ridge of sand or narrow island that lies parallel to the shore
littoral zone
a shallow zone in a freshwater habitat where light reaches the bottom and nurtures plants
rhizoids
a thin, rootlike structure that anchors a moss and absorbs water and nutrients for the plan
nekton
all organisms that swim actively in open water, independent of currents
Wetland
an area of land that is periodically underwater water or whose soil contains a great deal of moisture
eutrophication
an increase in the amount of nutrients such as nitrates in a marine or aquatic ecosystem
limnetic zone
area farther from shore and no rooted plants
estuary
area in which fresh water from a river mixes with salt water from the ocean
freshwater wetlands
areas of land with special soils and plants that are covered with fresh water for part of the year