Importance of Aquatic Communities

Importance of Aquatic Communities
From: https://teachers.wrdsb.ca/mrstocco/121-2/science-ecosystems/food-chainfood-web-and-ecological-pyramids-17-638/

Importance of Aquatic Communities

Importance of Aquatic Communities evolved to be self-sufficient in equilibrium with their water environment. Within each community are found a number of smaller communities that respond to water changes which can effect the entire aquatic community.

Whether freshwater or saltwater, aquatic environments are highly influenced by levels of sunlight, temperature, water depth, and the chemical composition of the water.

For example, Aquatic Communities recycle nutrients, purify water, attenuate floods, recharge ground water and provide habitats for wildlife.

The Ecological Resiliency of a natural aquatic community is how it responds to environmental and water quality changes.

These ranges and responses can be compared to pollutant effects on similar Aquatic Communities.

The pronounced interrelationships of the organisms to one another and to physiochemical features of the water system in which the plants and animals live sets the ecological resiliency. These interrelationships include harmful and beneficial interactions, as well as those involving only organism tolerance.

At equilibrium conditions, population density, the species composition or diversity of individuals can be used to characterize the stability of intricate relationships between food chains, predators and consumers. Further definition of the stability of the community can be expressed by the physiological conditions and metabolic rates of the organisms within the community.

Examples of these are: the benthos where the bottom organisms reside, the aufwuchs which are the organisms that are attached to or move upon a submersed substrate, and the water phase between the surface and the bottom that harbors the nekton and plankton.

Since each of these minor communities is surrounded by a characteristic set of physical-chemical environmental factors, each community will respond to environmental changes in its own way. Most of these responses will show up in the affected community as a reduction of species diversity, a shortening of the food chain and a decrease in community stability.

For a given aquatic habitat, a riffle community of an upland stream or an epilimnion community of a lake is composed of characteristic species populations. Each of these communities has gained individuality through evolutionary adaptation to conditions determined by the aquatic environment.

During evolution, mutual adjustment and harmonious interactions of the organisms have reached an equilibrium with the constraints of the environment. From this, we can see that a community possesses structural unity in so far as the species populations composing it are concerned.

However, this does not mean the community is static or fixed in times and space. Quite the contrary is the case. Community composition and organization change in response to annual, seasonal, and daily environmental cycles. Superimposed on these cycles are spatial and temporal variations in density of populations and the distribution of the individuals of a population.

Biological responses to changes in water quality are important because the aquatic community has the ability to:
(1) Immediately change if lethal levels are exceeded
(2) Integrate or accumulate the effects of sublethal pollutants
(3) Provide mechanisms for self-purification of the water system through biochemical and biological stabilization.

End of Importance of Aquatic Communities

More about Biological Water Quality…
Stream River Ecology
Flowing Water (Lotic)
Still Water (Lentic)
Bacteria
Algae
Fungi
Liverworts and Mosses
Vascular Plants

Go Back to:
Physical Water Quality
Chemical Water Quality
Biological Water Quality
Water Basics 101

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