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Shore
Zone between low tide and highest area on land affected by waves
Coast
Extends inland as far as ocean related features are found
Coastline
Boundary between shore + coast
- Relatively shallow waters overlying continental shelf
- Adjoin continents or islands
- Influenced by river runoff, wind, tides
- Open ocean lies beyond
What are some characteristics of coastal waters?
Halocline
Area in water that has a changed salinity (can be strong at coastal waters)
- Freshwater runoff
- Winds
- Tides
Salinity in coastal waters are impacted by...
Isohaline
Same/constant salinity
- Visable
- Well-defined
- Sometimes easily observed at surface or depth
- Can to the other direction(vertical stacking/horizontal siding)
What are haloclines?
- Winds
- Insolation
- Currents
- Atmosphere
Temperatures in coastal waters are impacted by:
- A layer of rapidly changing temperature
- Can sometimes be seen or felt
What are thermoclines?
Partially enclosed body of water in which freshwater runoff dilutes ocean water
What are estuaries?
highly productive marine ecosystems
Estuaries are...
Head of an estuary
End of an estuary where freshwater enters
Mouth of an estuary
Where it opens to saltwater/coastal waters and it enters
mixes
We can classify estuaries by how the saltwater + freshwater ...
Coastal plain estuary (drowned river)
Former river valley now flooded with seawater (bc of the rising sea level)
Fjords
Former glaciated valley now flooded with seawater (bc of rising sea level + global warming)
Bar built estuaries
Lagoon separated from ocean by sand bar or barrier island
Tectonic estuaries
Faulted/folded down dropped area now flooded with ocean. Formed bc of tectonic activity
- Shallow
- Freshwater input low volume
- Net flow head to mouth
- Wind + tidal mixing
What are characteristics of water mixed vertically in estuaries?
- 2-level flow
- Upper layer less salty; lower layer more salty
- Estuarine circulation-mixing by wind + tides
What are characteristics of water mixed slightly stratified in estuaries?
- Deep
- Surface salinity increases
- Bottom salinity uniform
- Relatively strong halocline
- Entrainment at interface
What are characteristics of water mixed highly stratified (fjords/deep) in estuaries?
- High volume river
- Surface fresh from head to mouth
- Salinity gradient at depth (horizontal + vertical)
What are characteristics of water mixed salt wedge in estuaries?
- Low to no river flow
- High evaporation
- Salinity in upper later decreases towards mouth
- Salinity in lower layer increases towards head
- Vertical salinity profiles show gradual increase from the surface to the bottom
What are the characteristics of an negative estuary (rare)?
- Dominated by tidal flushing
- Determined by tides + wind
- Food currents flow on "right side" (east)
- Influenced by Coriolis effect, N hemisphere
- Ebb current flow on "left side" (west)
- Isohalines slosh with tides
What are the daily patterns of change?
Spring freshets or other fluctuations in freshwater input
The seasonal pattern are dominated by...
anoxia and fish kills
Stratification and circulation patterns change with the seasons and it can cause
- Salinity
- Oxygen
- Temperature
- Suspended sediment
- Light
Living organisms must adapt to oscillations in:
Steno
Narrow
Eury
Wide
Brackish water species
Species that evolved to tolerate the in between of fresh + salty water
- Margins of estuaries
- Other coastal areas support wetlands
.... support wetlands
Ecosystems with water table close to surface
What are wetlands?
- Salt marshes (mid-and high latitudes)
- Mangrove forests (low latitudes)
What are the 2 most important types of coastal wetlands?
Salt marsh
Found from the Arctic to Southern Australia
Barrier islands
Salt marshes grow in muds and sands that are sheltered by...
- Water
- Nutrients
- Plankton
- Sediments
Tidal currents transport ..... in and out
high and low
Salt marsh can be divided in .... marsh
The region above high tide
The high region of the salt marsh is..
Flooded daily
The low region of the salt marsh is...
Distinctive vegetation
Each region of the salt region has its only...
- Important habitat
- Nurseries for more than 1/2 of commercially important fish in SE US
- Help preserve water quality, filter pollutants
- Reduce erosion
- Prevent storm damage
- Aesthetics and recreation
What are the different values of marshes?
Mangrove forests
A community dominated by trees and shrubs that grows in salt water
- Individual plants
- Leaves are tough + succulent
- Represent 8 families and 12 general
What are the mangrove forests characteristics?
- Fisheries
- Timber and plant products
- Coastal protection
- Tourism
What are the values of mangrove forests?
Home to a large variety of fish, crab, shrimp, and mollusk species
What are fisheries?
resistant
Mangrove wood is ... to rot and insects, making it extremely valuable
construction material
Many coastal and indigenous communities rely on the wood for ... as well as for fuel
sediments
The dense root systems of the mangrove forests trap ... flowing down rivers down rivers and off the land
erosion
This helps stabilizes the coastaline and prevents ... from waves and storms