Welcome to Ecosystem Guide
Salt Water Ecosystem Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
The Grassland Ecosystem
from:The grassland ecosystem covers the flora, fauna and ground conditions with in the parameters of a grassland. From the climatic conditions to the members and relationships in the food chain, the grassland ecosystem is dependant on the major resources available. In the grassland ecosystem the proportion of flora, including the varieties of trees, grasses, fungi and flowers will effect the way in which fauna exist.
The fauna in a grassland ecosystem will include the minute and the massive. The grassland ecosystem offers shelter and living conditions to insects, birds, arachnids and mammals, from the tiny bush mouse to the largest mammal, lizard or predator.
In the grassland ecosystem the smallest creatures and plants are still important to the structure of the environment. From the smallest gnat to the largest predator, the relationship between the food chain is vital to the balance of the ecosystem. In the way that grass feeds cattle so too do smaller creatures become food for larger. Even the plants of the grassland will become fodder for larger herbivores or small creatures. The grassland ecosystem is balanced by the resources available. The number of trees, fungi, grass or flowers will be, maintained by the number of animals or insects using them for their lifestyle or food sources. If the number of predators in the grassland ecosystem should alter, then the food chain would be unbalanced right down to the fundamental level. Even a slight alteration in the grassland ecosystem, due to floods or drought or human intervention, can lead to the destruction of the grassland ecosystem itself.
The grassland ecosystem is reliant on the balance being maintained, between growth and decay. While rotting grass, carcasses and mulch can offer sustenance to some creatures, the death of a plant is still part of the grassland ecosystem. The mulch provides the ideal place for germination of other seeds. All this is part of the balance of the grassland ecosystem.
The grassland ecosystem includes the life cycle of the larger animals too. Their living, reproducing, hunting and dying all effect the way the grassland ecosystem achieves balance. Any variation to the numbers of creatures within the grassland ecosystem could change the fragile balance drastically. To few predators could mean an over production of smaller herbivores. This would lead to a loss of plant life within the grassland ecosystem. Once the balance is lost, it can be impossible to regain.
The delicate balance of the grassland ecosystem is vital to the health and vitality of the grassland itself. From climate conditions, water quality and quantity, to human intervention, or exploitation, the grassland ecosystem is prone to influences that can alter it forever.
Salt Water Ecosystem Specific links
Salt Water Ecosystem News
Regulators’ challenge: saving, understanding Great Salt Lake
Regulators’ challenge: saving, understanding Great Salt Lake By JUDY FAHYS The Salt Lake Tribune Published May 25, 2012 07:55AM MDT They gathered in airboats off the northeastern corner of the Great Salt Lake shoreline. Above, clouds jostled in the vast Utah sky. Around them, marsh grass teemed with life — White-faced Ibis, white pelicans, Snowy Egrets, Marbled Godwits and innumerable bird ...
Read more...Glen Canyon to see more ‘grand flushes’
Glen Canyon to see more ‘grand flushes’ By brandon loomis The Salt Lake Tribune Published May 23, 2012 10:40PM MDT The Grand Canyon will get more seasonal floods to churn up sediment and build Colorado River beaches and sandbars under a Glen Canyon Dam flow protocol announced Wednesday by U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar. The move amounts to a small victory for environmentalists, fish ...
Read more...More ‘grand flushes’ planned from Glen Canyon
More ‘grand flushes’ planned from Glen Canyon By brandon loomis The Salt Lake Tribune Published May 23, 2012 04:16PM MDT U.S. Interior Secretary Ken Salazar announced Wednesday that the government will routinely crank up flows out of Glen Canyon Dam whenever spring or fall rains create conditions likely to maximize sediment flows into the Grand Canyon. The dam’s completion in 1966 choked off ...
Read more...Mercury heats up forum on Great Salt Lake
SALT LAKE CITY — Every state has so much mercury in its water that it’s dangerous to eat many of the fish caught in its lakes and streams — and Utah’s Great Salt Lake is no exception. There are no fish in the lake, but mercury contamination travels through sediment and microscopic organisms into brine flies and brine shrimp. Ducks that live on the lake and eat those shrimp and flies end up being ...
Read more...Delta plan draft released
A plan aiming to achieve a better balance between the demand for water to serve farms and cities while maintaining the ecosystem of the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta was released Monday.
Read more...






