Estuary Biome Nathalie Ferrer Heather Nastasi Carolyn Grimes.

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Estuary Biome •Nathalie Ferrer •Heather Nastasi •Carolyn Grimes

Transcript of Estuary Biome Nathalie Ferrer Heather Nastasi Carolyn Grimes.

Estuary Biome

• Nathalie Ferrer

• Heather Nastasi

• Carolyn Grimes

Average Rainfall of an Estuary

• The average rainfall in the estuary in the Hudson River is 42 inches per year or about 3.5 inches a month.

Average Temperature of an Estuary

• The average temperature within the estuary of the Hudson River generally follow mean air temperature.

• Temperatures range from 32 degrees F in January, to 80.6 degrees F in July.

•Estuaries and coastal waters provide essential habitat for over 75%

of the commercial fish catch and 80-90% of the recreational catch of fish.

• Fish living in estuarine areas are especially interesting because they have to adapt to the different changes.

• Such as the daily rise and fall of tides that creates water flow which distributes different amounts of food at different times of day.

• Fishing, tourism, and recreational boating which depend on healthy and productive estuaries, provide more than 28 million jobs for our nation.

• Estuaries are among the most productive natural systems on Earth due to the mixing of nutrients from land and sea.

• Estuaries do a lot of cleansing. Mangrove leaves start to decay before they fall off the tree.

• Estuaries are becoming more and more polluted. Now there is a project going on trying to save our estuaries to keep them cleaner and healthier.

Salt Marsh Cord Grass

• The tall, thick blades of grass growing in four to five foot stands at the water’s edge of a tidal marsh are Salt Marsh Cord Grass.

• They are able to handle saltwater and submersion at high tide twice daily.

• In the early summer Sea Lavender looks like a bouquet of branches rising up a foot or more above a clump of leathery, spoon shaped basal leaves.

• It grows in lower and middle intertidal zones alone or in groups.

Sea Lavender

• The thick, jointed branches of the Common Glasswort maintains a supply of freshwater within storage cells.

Common Glasswort

• Eelgrass is a flowering perennial that grows in sunlit sub tidal or intertidal beds.

Eelgrass

• The Sea Blite salt marsh prefers flooded grounds.

• It has highly branched stems with alternating green leaves that grow smaller toward the end of the stems.

Sea Blite

• The Salt marsh Hay is unable to cope with prolonged submersion in the tides.

• It dominates low to mid high marsh areas that rarely flood.

Salt Marsh Hay

• Spike Grass is a smaller, narrow stemmed grass with alternating green leaves found interspersed with salt hay.

Spike Grass

• During the summertime, the Black Grass is a high marsh grass that is often speckled with dark brown.

• They are food to the waterfowl, marsh birds and song birds.

Black Grass

• From August to October, the Perennial Salt marsh Aster adds a splash of color to the greens and browns of the high marsh with its light purple, blue, or white, daisy like flowers.

Perennial Salt Marsh Aster

American Coot

• American Coot is all black with a white bill.

• They are omnivores and mainly eat fish and other aquatic animals.

• The Harbor Seal has a diet that consists of mainly types of fish like Flounder or Perch.

Harbor Seal

• The Lesser Yellowlegs is a medium sized shore bird with long bright yellow legs, white rump and tail.

• It eats mainly fish.

Lesser Yellowlegs

• The Western Gull mainly eats invertebrates and fish.

• It has white legs a black bill and grey and white feathers.

Western Gull

• The Black Brant eats plants and eelgrass.

• It is black with a long snout.

Black Brant

• The River Otter is a semi aquatic mammal found in the North American Continent.

• They hunt at night, and eat fish, amphibians, and turtles.

• They have webbed feet, water repellent fur, and their ears close when they go into the water.

River Otter

• The Lugworm has a small head with no eyes.

• It digs u shaped borrows ranging from 7.8-15.7 inches.

• These worms will eat sand particles.

Lugworm

• Adult sun stars have 10-24 arms, while the baby sun stars have only 5.

• Sun Stars are one of the largest and heaviest sea stars.

Sun star

• The American Wigeon lives across North America from Alaska southward to Costa Rico.

• It feeds on aquatic plants, such as wild celery.

American Wigeon

• The Shiner Perch is one of the most common fishes in an estuary.

• They feed on Zoo Plankton.

• Shiner Perch are deep bodied with a dusky greenish back.

Shiner Perch