Examples of Freshwater in the following topics:
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Freshwater Biomes
- Lakes, ponds, rivers, streams, and wetlands are all freshwater biomes, which differ in depth, water movement, and other abiotic factors.
- Freshwater biomes occur throughout the world's terrestrial biomes.
- Freshwater marshes and swamps are characterized by slow and steady water flow.
- Differentiate among the freshwater biomes of lakes and ponds, rivers and streams, and wetlands
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Freshwater Environments
- Scientifically, freshwater habitats are divided into lentic systems, which are the stillwaters including ponds, lakes, swamps and mires; lotic systems, which are running water; and groundwater which flows in rocks and aquifers.
- Some protists accomplish this using contractile vacuoles, while freshwater fish excrete excess water via the kidney.
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Osmoregulators and Osmoconformers
- About 90 percent of bony fish species can live in either freshwater or seawater, but not both.
- Salmon physiology responds to freshwater and seawater to maintain osmotic balance
- Fish are osmoregulators, but must use different mechanisms to survive in (a) freshwater or (b) saltwater environments.
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Abiotic Factors Influencing Aquatic Biomes
- The importance of light in aquatic biomes is central to the communities of organisms found in both freshwater and marine ecosystems.
- In freshwater systems, stratification due to differences in density is perhaps the most critical abiotic factor and is related to the energy aspects of light.
- Marine systems are also influenced by large-scale physical water movements, such as currents; these are less important in most freshwater lakes.
- These realms and zones are relevant to freshwater lakes as well, as they determine the types of organisms that will inhabit each region.
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Bacteroides and Flavobacterium
- The flavbacterium are characterized by their ability to cause disease in freshwater fish such as salmon and rainbow trouts.
- Describe the role of Bacteroides in the normal flora of the human gastrointestinal tract and the role of Flavobacterium in causing disease in freshwater fish
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Energy Sources
- In freshwater systems, the recycling of nutrients occurs in response to air temperature changes.
- The nutrients at the bottom of lakes are recycled twice each year: in the spring and fall turnover, which recycles nutrients and oxygen from the bottom of a freshwater ecosystem to the top of a body of water.
- The spring and fall turnovers are important processes in freshwater lakes that act to move the nutrients and oxygen at the bottom of deep lakes to the top.
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Climate Change and Biodiversity
- Range shifts have also been observed in plants, butterflies, other insects, freshwater fishes, reptiles, and mammals.
- Additionally, the gradual melting and subsequent refreezing of the poles, glaciers, and higher elevation mountains, a cycle that has provided freshwater to environments for centuries, will also be jeopardized.
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Contractile Vacuoles in Microorganisms
- In freshwater environments, the concentration of solutes inside the cell is higher than outside the cell.
- However, not all species that possess a CV are freshwater organisms; some marine and soil microorganisms also have a CV.
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Archaeplastida
- Other red algae exist in terrestrial or freshwater environments.
- Chlorophytes primarily inhabit freshwater and damp soil; they are a common component of plankton.
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Wetland Soils
- The water found in wetlands can be saltwater, freshwater , or brackish .
- Nutrient cycling in lakes and freshwater wetlands depends heavily on redox conditions.