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Oceanside Meadows
Innstitute for the Arts and Sciences presents:
Life of Ponds and Streams

Pond and stream formation
The
study of inland waters – ponds, lakes and streams – is called limnology. Ponds
form as a result of potholes in glacial debris. These holes fill by seepage and
runoff water from the surrounding land. Meadow-stream ponds also develop where a
stream widens and the speed of its current drops sharply, or as cutoffs from old
stream channels. Streams originate in lakes, springs or in surface runoff,
draining the land and taking up elements as they flow along. Constant
adjustments and changes in flow or in erosion rates allow the stream to maintain
balance and equilibrium. Streams are thus very dynamic, ranging from tumbling
brooks in spring to sluggish, meandering waters come late summer and autumn.
Whether temporary or
permanent, a pond is a quiet body of water so shallow that plants grow all
across it and all along the shore. Lakes, on the other hand, are deep enough
that at least some part does not receive sunlight on the bottom, not
allowing any plant growth. The water temperature of ponds is fairly uniform
from top to bottom, and the water temperature tends to vary along with the
air temperature. The amount of dissolved oxygen in a pond may vary greatly
in a twenty-four hour period, building up during the day and dropping at
night.
The area that a stream drains is
called its drainage basin, or catchment area. The stream bottom extends down
beneath the ground, and its sides stretch out into its floodplains. Gases from
the air like oxygen, carbon dioxide, and nitrogen, as well as other chemicals,
dissolve into the water. These gases are most soluble in cold water and in water
that is churned as it flows downhill. The stream also carries particles of dirt,
sediment, and organic matter including tiny bits of leaves, bacteria, and
insects. As it flows towards the ocean, the stream deposits silt and sediment on
its floodplain, creating rich agricultural lands and allowing many organisms to
thrive.
Diverse
habitats
Four different microhabitats
coexist within a relatively small area formed by a pond or stream: the
surface film, the open water, the bottom and the littoral
habitat.
The surface film
is a habitat for air-breathing, floating animals, and those animals that have
special devices for walking on the surface without breaking through, such as
water striders. Some beetles, water bugs and free-floating plants are adapted to
living only on the upper side of the film. The larvae of some beetles, as well
as stonefly and mayfly larvae, spend much time hanging on the underside of the
film.
The open water
contains large, free-swimming animals, such as turtles, birds and fishes, and
small microscopic plants and animals – plankton – that drift suspended in the
water. Phytoplankton is mostly algae. Zooplankton consists of tiny crustaceans,
rotifers, some insect larvae, and other invertebrates.
The
sandy bottom is home to sponges, snails, earthworms and insects. Muddy
bottoms house crayfish, the nymphs of mayflies, dragonflies and damselflies, as
well as leeches and snails.
The littoral habitat
can be divided into three zones. The emergent plant zone is closest to the
shore, where grasses, sedges and rushes provide shelter for frogs, birds,
mammals, algae, protozoans, worms, insects, snails and small fishes. The
floating-leaf zone, as its name suggests, contains broad, flat-leaved water
lilies, water ferns and duckweeds, where snails, bugs, mayflies, algae and
sunfish live. Finally, the submersed plant zone consists of pondweeds, hornworts
and waterweeds. The leaves of these plants are either long and sinuous or bushy
and very branched. Their flowers are pollinated above the surface, while the
seeds germinate and the young plants develop only under water.
Plant
life
Algae form pond scums and the
green hairy growths on submerged objects. Green algae are the most abundant pond
algae. They occur as single cells, as round and flattened colonies, and as
filaments. Algae is the base of the pond food pyramid. During photosynthesis,
algae release oxygen, increasing the amount of oxygen dissolved in the water.
However, the overabundance of decaying algae may deplete the oxygen, causing "summerkill"
of aquatic plants and animals.
Many species of pondweeds grow
in the submersed plant zone. Pondweeds are the largest family of truly aquatic
seed plants. Several kinds of ducks feed almost wholly on pondweeds. In the
floating-leaf zone, look for the Fragrant Water-Lily, which has large, notched,
rounded leaves that are dark green on the upper surface and reddish-purple
below. Both the leaves and the white or pink flowers float on water, giving off
a rich, sweet scent. Soft, spongy, underwater stalks support the leaves and
flowers. Among the grasses you may see in the emergent plant zone is the
Short-awn Foxtail. This grass grows from six inches to two feet tall, topped by
spikelets in a slim, dense cluster.
On the shore surrounding the
pond, you may find dense thickets of Speckled Alder, a member of the birch
family, common in eastern wetlands. The three-inch leaves are elliptical and
irregularly toothed, with sunken veins above. The name of this small tree is
derived from its bark, which is smooth, gray and speckled with white. The Black
Willow grows up to seventy-five feet tall. Its bark is dark brown or blackish
and furrowed into scaly ridges. The four-inch leaves are narrowly lance-shaped,
finely toothed and shiny. Male and female flowers, called catkins, grow on
separate trees. Deer and rodents nibble on the shoots, and sapsuckers feed on
the sap in wells they excavate from the inner bark.
Freshwater Fish
Ponds and streams provide nesting and feeding grounds for many different fish
species. Lampreys are jawless fish that look similar to eels. These primitive
fish have a skeleton of cartilage, unlike most other fish, which have a skeleton
of bone.
Brown Bullheads, like other catfish, have a smooth,
scaleless skin, and chin whiskers, or barbels, that aid them in finding food.
They feed mostly at night or in opaque waters. Black Crappies are large,
carnivorous sunfish that sometimes grow to four pounds, although they are
usually one to two pounds. Another member of the sunfish family, the Bluegill,
grows up to eight inches, feeding on insects, crustaceans and other small
animals. A similar fish is the Pumpkinseed, which has a bright red spot on each
gill cover.
Other
Animal life
Amphibians, such as brook salamanders, newts and frogs,
live in the vegetation surrounding ponds and streams. The moist skin of an
amphibian can absorb both water and oxygen. Frogs have lungs in addition to
their breathable skin. Like most amphibians, frogs begin their life cycle in the
water, with their long-tailed larvae known as tadpoles or pollywogs.
A few reptile species live near ponds and streams. The
Painted Turtle is common and conspicuous, often basking in groups. It has a
smooth, flattened carapace fringed with fine red lines. The Northern Water Snake
is a heavy-bodied, harmless, but quick-tempered snake that basks on branches or
rocks.
Dragonflies are graceful insects that hunt for smaller bugs such as black
flies as they fly around the pond. Immature dragonflies, or naiads, are
waterbound and do not resemble adults. They are dull green or brown, which helps
conceal them among pond plants or beneath a film of mud. The naiads undergo a
series of molts, getting larger, until the familiar dragonfly form appears at
the final molt. Damselflies are much thinner than dragonflies and fold their
wings over their backs when not flying, unlike dragonflies, who keep their wings
extended horizontally at rest.
Many
bird species nest along ponds or streams and feed on aquatic plants or on fish
and other animals. Common Loons spend the summer on inland waters, feeding
mainly on fish. You can hear their distinctive song on summer nights. The Great
Blue Heron is a long-legged wader with sharp bills for feeding on aquatic
animals. Ospreys have a conspicuous bend in their wings in flight, as they dive
for fish. Surface-feeding ducks, such as American Black Ducks, Green-winged
Teals, Northern Pintails and Mallards feed mainly on aquatic plants and may "tip
up" in deep water. Yellow Warblers nest in willow thickets, coming to the pond
to drink and to hunt for insects.
Finally, a few mammals live in burrows that they dig in banks along the
margins of ponds and streams. American Beavers cut down trees by gnawing on the
trunk, and construct dams using sticks, reeds and saplings caulked with mud.
They eat the bark and twigs of broadleaf trees. Common Muskrats look like
overgrown field mice that have adapted to life in the water. They build
mound-shaped lodges on platforms of mud piled with cattails, sedges, small
sticks and leaves. They feed primarily on duckweed, although they also eat
water-lilies and other pond plants. Northern River Otters love to exercise and
play in the water. At night, weasels, such as minks and ermines, prowl the night
in search of prey. These agile hunters will attack animals larger than
themselves! Often these animals are hunted for their rich coats. Most weasels
are lustrous brown or black, but the ermine turns white in winter.
Not a fish can leap or an insect fall on the
pond but it is thus reported in circling dimples, in lines of beauty, as it were
the constant welling up of its fountain, the gentle pulsing of its life, the
heaving of its breast.
- Henry David Thoreau, Walden
The
Duck
by Ogden Nash
Behold the duck.
It does not cluck.
A cluck it lacks.
It quacks.
It is specially fond
Of a puddle or pond.
When it dines or sups,
It bottoms ups.
To a Little Brook
by Eugene Field
All up and down this reedy place
Where lives the brook,
We angled for the furtive dace;
The redwing-blackbird did his best
To make us think he ‘d built his nest
Hard by the stream, when, like as not,
He'd hung it in a secret spot
Far from the brook, the telltale brook!
    
Come hear the sound of the surf...

... at
Oceanside Meadows Inn, the historic bed
and breakfast situated amidst the 200-acre preserve that inspired the guides
above. Visit our information
source page for more information about the inn and its incredible location
on the Schoodic Peninsula.
Oceanside Meadows Inn P.O. Box 90, Prospect Harbor, Maine
04669
Map and Directions to our
Inn
Tel: (207) 963 5557 Fax: (207) 963 5928 Email:
oceaninn@oceaninn.com
All information copyright 2001-02 Oceanside Meadows Innstitute
for the Arts and Sciences.
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Introductory:
Exploring the Seashore
The Salamander Trail
The Heron Trail
Intermediate:
The Rugged Rocky Shore
Realms of Sand
Discover the Salt Marsh
Life of Ponds and Streams
Wonders of the Sea:
Echinoderms
Crustaceans
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