Natures Talk Show

Mangroves of Australia - Biotopes

11.25.2015 - By archivePlay

Download our free app to listen on your phone

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Mangroves of Australia - Biotopes on Natures Talk Shows Biotopes Series will be the topic of discussion.

Mangroves are vascular plants, that is they have a well-developed system of conducting tissue to transport water, mineral salts and sugars. They are found in the intertidal zone where they are flooded by tides. Mangroves are plants that live between the sea and the land, where they are flooded by tides. This is called the intertidal zone. The word 'mangrove' is given to either an individual species or to a group of unrelated plants, living in areas that are flooded by tides.

They grow as trees up to medium height and shrubs in saline (pure seawater (3% to 4%), to water concentrated by evaporation to over twice the salinity of ocean seawater (up to 9%). They grow in the tropics and subtropics – mainly between latitudes 25°N and 25°S in sheltered areas like estuaries, river banks and marine shorelines. They may also grow in protected temperate coastal areas.

Australia has around 980,000 hectares of mangrove forests, which is less than 1% of Australia’s total forest cover.

They grow in the soft mud between the half tide and the high tide mark. Part of the root system (pneumatophores) are always above the ground level and are able to take in oxygen during low tide as the soil they grow in does not contain any dissolved oxygen.

They use salt water as a source of water for transpiration and exclude most of the salt from that water and excrete or store excess salt..

On Tuesday November 24th at 9pm est,8pm cst and 6pm pst. We look forward to you joining us. If you would like to join the conversation visit our chat room on our web page or call in to our studio number 

1 -949-534-0637.

Thank You,

http://www.naturestalkshow.com/

More episodes from Natures Talk Show