Friday, January 24, 2020
Water Biomes :: Environment Ecology
 Water Biomes    Marshland is covered with grasses, reeds, sedges, and cattails. These  plants all have their roots in soil covered or saturated with water and its  leaves held above water.Marshes may be freshwater or salt. Freshwater marshes  develop along the shallow edges of lakes and slow-moving rivers, forming when  ponds and lakes become filled with sediment. Salt marshes occur on coastal tidal  flats. Inland salt marshes occupy the edges of lakes. They affect the supply of  nutrients, the movement of water, and the type and deposition of sediment.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Salt marshes are best developed on the Atlantic coasts of North America  and Europe. In eastern North America the low marsh is dominated by a single  species, salt-marsh cordgrass. The high marsh consists of a short cordgrass  called hay, spike grass, and glasswort. Glasswort is the dominant plant of  Pacific Coast salt marshes.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Freshwater marshes provide nesting and wintering habitats for waterfowl  and shorebirds, muskrats, frogs, and many aquatic insects. Salt marshes are  wintering grounds for snow geese and ducks, a nesting habitat for herons and  rails, and a source of nutrients for estuarine waters. Marshes are important in  flood control, in sustaining high-water tables, and as settling basins to  reduce pollution downstream. Despite their great environmental value, marshes  are continually being destroyed by drainage and filling.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Marine Life, plants and animals of the sea, from the high-tide mark  along the shore to the depths of the ocean. These organisms fall into three  major groups: the benthos, plants such as kelp and animals such as brittle stars  that live on or depend on the bottom; the nekton, swimming animals such as  fishes and whales that move independently of water currents; and plankton,  various small to microscopic organisms that are carried along by the currents.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Shore Life, the essentially marine organisms that inhabit the region  bounded on one side by the height of the extreme high tide and on the other by  the height of the extreme low tide. Within these boundaries organisms face a  severe environment imposed by the rise and fall of tides. For up to half of a  24-hour period, the environment is marine; the rest of the time it is exposed,  with terrestrial extremes in temperature and the drying effects of wind and sun.    Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Ã  Life on rocky shores, best developed on northern coasts, is separated  into distinct zones that reflect the length of time each zone is exposed. At the  highest position on the rocks is the black zone, marked by blue-green algae.  This transition area between land and the marine environment is flooded only  during the high spring. Below the black zone lies the white zone, where    					    
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