Tidepool #2 at Race Rocks

This file has been started to present some of the information we have accumulated on the pool in order to stimulate students to raise further questions and devise problems that can be investigated at the pool. It is also intended to be part of a cumulative digital legacy that those examining the pool can pass on to future students. A characteristic of the pool that is significant is that it is deeper than most of the other pools and it provides good variations in stratification of temperature and salinity.

Some ideas to consider:
The stratification of Salinity and Temperature in this pool is quite distinct. More work could be done in gathering seasonal records of this. Also, the main organisms, harpacticoids are abundant in the late spring and summer. It may be interesting to identify their source of food, probably diatoms that form a thin layer on the walls. Since the pool only receives new salt water occasionally, temperatures can fluctuate. The pool is however usually shaded by the rock cliff to the South.

Tidepool # 1 – Near Peg 6

This file has been started to present some of the information we have accumulated on the pool in order to stimulate students to raise further questions and devise problems that can be investigated at the pool. It is also intended to be part of a cumulative digital legacy that those examining the pool can pass on to future students.

This pool is located beside Peg #6 and is one of the highest elevated tidepools of the set.

Tidepool Index

USE THIS INDEX INSTEAD

These pools are located 0n the West side of Great Race Rocks. They are located at slightly different elevations resulting in different abiotic factors in the pools and different life forms in the pools as well. Our students brave the elements to get some measurements in this video

Tidepool 1
Tidepool 2
Tidepool 3
Tidepool 4
Tidepool 5
Tidepool 6
Tidepool 7
Tidepool 8
Tidepool 9
not available
Tidepool 10
Tidepool 11  not available
Tidepool 12
Peg 5:
Tidepool 13
artificial

Ecological Equivalents Galapagos Islands vs. Race Rocks

BACKGROUND: As you encounter different ecosystems representing a wide range of ecological niches in different parts of the world, you will begin to notice that there are many examples of organisms which may not even be related which play the same role in the ecosystems of widely separated geographic areas. I came across several examples which may be considered “ecological equivalents” while spending a week aboard the vessel “Samba” in the Galapagos Islands in June 2003. Although separated by 47 degrees of latitude and thousands of miles, surprisingly there are several examples of ecological equivalents on the island archipelagos of Race Rocks and the Galapagos. Islands.

DEFINITION.…Ecological equivalents : species that use similar niches in different habitats or locations are called ecological equivalents .The evolution of life has resulted in general types of habitats and certain successful ways of exploiting the resources in those habitats. Parallel evolution has resulted in unrelated species that have similar niches in different environments.

ECOLOGICAL EQUIVALENTS : GALAPAGOS ISLANDS VS. RACE ROCKS