Aquatic Ecosystems – Organisms, Photic Aphotic Zones, Limiting Factors – UPSC Notes

Aquatic Ecosystems – Organisms, Photic Aphotic Zones, Limiting Factors | UPSC Notes | Legacy IAS

📗 UPSC CSE 2026 · GS Paper III · Environment & Ecology · Legacy IAS, Bangalore

Legacy IAS · Bangalore

Aquatic Ecosystems

Complete UPSC notes on aquatic life forms, photic & aphotic zones, freshwater vs marine ecosystems, limiting factors, Winter Kill and more — with Indian examples, zone visualiser, PYQs and MCQs.

UPSC PrelimsGS Paper III 5 Organism TypesPhotic / Aphotic Freshwater vs MarineWinter Kill Indian Examples
Foundation
What Are Aquatic Ecosystems?

Covering 71% of Earth’s surface — the largest biome, yet often under-studied.

An aquatic ecosystem is any ecosystem where water is the primary medium — including rivers, lakes, ponds, wetlands, estuaries, and the vast ocean. Aquatic ecosystems support roughly 50% of all known species despite covering a range of very different habitats.

The key difference from terrestrial ecosystems: in water, organisms exist in a three-dimensional space — from the surface film down to the deep sediment floor. Position in the water column determines what an organism eats, how it moves, and what it faces. This is why aquatic organisms are classified by where they live, not just what they are.

★ UPSC Anchor Facts — Aquatic Ecosystems
  • Classified by salinity: Freshwater (<5 ppt) · Marine (≥35 ppt) · Brackish (5–35 ppt — estuaries, mangroves)
  • 5 organism types: Neuston · Periphyton · Plankton · Nekton · Benthos — classified by POSITION in water ★
  • Two main zones by light: Photic zone (photosynthesis possible) · Aphotic zone (only respiration) ★
  • Key limiting factors: Sunlight + Oxygen (aquatic) vs Moisture + Temperature (terrestrial) ★
  • Phytoplankton = primary producer of the ocean — fixes ~50% of Earth’s total CO₂ via photosynthesis
  • Winter Kill — ice cover stops photosynthesis but respiration continues → oxygen depletion → fish die ★
Classification by Position
The 5 Types of Aquatic Organisms

Every aquatic organism belongs to one of these five groups — defined by WHERE it lives and HOW it moves (or doesn’t).

💡 Memory Hook — N.P.P.N.B.

Neuston (surface) → Periphyton (attached) → Plankton (floating, no swimming) → Nekton (active swimmers) → Benthos (bottom). Remember: Never Push Plastic in Nice Bays” — from top of water to bottom.

🫧
Neuston
Lives AT the air-water interface (surface)

Neuston (coined by Naumann, 1917) — organisms living right at the water surface, at the boundary between air and water. Some live on the top of the surface film (epineumston); some cling to the underside (hyponeuston).

These organisms exploit the surface tension of water as their habitat. They are often the first food source for seabirds skimming the ocean surface and for insects that hunt on water.

Examples: Water striders (walk on water using surface tension) · Duckweed (Lemna) — tiny floating plants · Water ferns (Azolla) · Oil films from some bacteria · Floating mats of cyanobacteria · Pond skaters

Indian examples: Duckweed covering eutrophic ponds in rural India; water hyacinth (invasive, floats at surface) smothering Dal Lake, Chilika Lake; Azolla floating on paddy fields.

★ Surface interface Floating plants Water striders Duckweed, Azolla
🔬
Periphyton
Attached to submerged surfaces

Periphyton — a community of algae, cyanobacteria, microorganisms, and associated detritus that grows attached to stems and leaves of submerged rooted plants, rocks, or any hard surface below the waterline.

Think of periphyton as the green/brown “slime” on river rocks or aquarium glass. It forms the base of the food web in many shallow freshwater systems — grazed by snails, insect larvae, and small fish.

Ecological importance: Periphyton plays a significant role in water purification — it absorbs excess nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus), traps sediments, and produces oxygen. Used in bioremediation of polluted water bodies.

Indian examples: The “slime” on submerged stones in the Ganga’s riffles; biofilms on mangrove prop roots in Sundarbans; algal mats in rice paddies.

★ Attached to surfaces Sessile algae Cyanobacteria biofilms River rock slime
🔵
Plankton
Floating — cannot swim against currents ★

Plankton — microscopic (and some macroscopic) organisms that float or drift in the water, unable to swim against currents. Their distribution is controlled by water currents and wind. The word comes from Greek planktos = wandering.

Two sub-types:

Phytoplankton (plant plankton) — microscopic photosynthetic organisms: algae, diatoms, cyanobacteria. Primary producers of aquatic food chains. Fix ~50% of Earth’s oxygen. Size: 0.2 μm to 2 mm. Found only in the photic zone. ★

Zooplankton (animal plankton) — tiny animals: copepods, krill, rotifers, jellyfish, larval fish, protozoans. Feed on phytoplankton or each other. Some migrate vertically — up at night to feed, down in daytime to avoid predators. ★

Indian examples: Phytoplankton blooms in Chilika Lake and the Arabian Sea; Gangetic zooplankton that feed Gangetic dolphins; HABs (Harmful Algal Blooms) in Arabian Sea from Noctiluca scintillans (sea sparkle).

★ Cannot swim against currents ★ Phytoplankton = primary producer Diatoms, algae, krill, jellyfish Found in photic zone only
🐟
Nekton
Active swimmers — overcome currents ★

Nekton (term coined by Ernst Haeckel, German biologist) — organisms that can actively swim and move independent of water currents. They are distinguished from plankton by their ability to propel themselves directionally.

Nekton range in size from small swimming insects (2mm) to the blue whale — largest animal ever to live on Earth. They inhabit both the photic and aphotic zones — actively seeking food across depth layers.

Nekton play a crucial role in food webs — linking primary consumers (zooplankton eaters) to apex predators. They also carry energy between zones as they move vertically and horizontally.

Indian examples: Gangetic river dolphin (Platanista gangetica — national aquatic animal ★) · Gharial in Chambal · Mahseer fish in Himalayan rivers · Whale shark in Gujarat coast · Olive Ridley turtles (nekton during ocean phase)

★ Active swimmers — against currents ★ Range: 2mm insects to blue whale Fish, dolphins, turtles, whales India: Gangetic dolphin ★
🐚
Benthos
Bottom-dwellers — sediment and floor ★

Benthos (from Greek benthos = depth of the sea) — organisms living on, in, or just above the bottom substrate of a water body — whether that floor is sand, mud, rock, or coral. Practically every aquatic ecosystem has well-developed benthos.

Three sub-types: Epifauna (live ON the sediment surface — crabs, starfish, oysters) · Infauna (live IN the sediment — clams, worms, burrowing shrimp) · Meiofauna (microscopic organisms living between sediment particles — nematodes, copepods).

Benthos are critical for nutrient cycling — they break down and process the organic matter (marine snow) that sinks from upper layers. Filter feeders like oysters and mussels are “ecosystem engineers” — they filter and clarify enormous volumes of water.

Indian examples: Crab and bivalve communities in Chilika Lake bed; benthic invertebrates on rocky Ganga riverbed; coral-associated benthos in Lakshadweep; pearl oysters in Gulf of Mannar.

★ Every aquatic ecosystem has benthos Crabs, clams, oysters, worms Epifauna, Infauna, Meiofauna India: Chilika Lake bed, Gulf of Mannar
Organism TypePositionMovementKey Feature for UPSCIndian Example
NeustonAir-water surface interfaceFloats, walks on surfaceLives AT the surface, not IN the water ★Duckweed, water striders, Azolla
PeriphytonAttached to submerged surfacesSESSILE — does not moveAttached to plants/rocks — not free-floating ★Algae on submerged river rocks, biofilms
PlanktonThroughout water column (mainly photic)Floats — CANNOT swim against currents ★Phytoplankton = primary producer; Zooplankton = herbivore ★Algal blooms in Chilika, Arabian Sea
NektonThroughout water columnACTIVELY SWIMS against currents ★Key difference from plankton — they CAN control their movement ★Gangetic dolphin, gharial, mahseer
BenthosBottom (sediment / floor)Crawls, burrows, or is sessileEvery aquatic ecosystem has benthos; nutrient cycling role ★Crabs, clams in Chilika; oysters in Gulf of Mannar
⚠ Most Confused Pair — Plankton vs Nekton
  • Plankton: Cannot swim against currents — they drift wherever the water takes them. Even jellyfish (which can pulse their bodies) are plankton because they cannot overcome strong currents.
  • Nekton: Can actively swim and change direction against currents. A salmon swimming upstream against a river current = nekton. A jellyfish drifting in the same direction as the current = plankton.
  • UPSC trap: “Nekton are unattached organisms living at the air-water interface” — WRONG. That is NEUSTON. Nekton are active swimmers. This exact confusion was tested in mock tests based on UPSC patterns.
  • Periphyton is NOT plankton: Periphyton is attached/sessile. Plankton is free-floating. A sessile alga on a rock = periphyton. The same alga broken free and drifting = plankton.
Interactive Zone Explorer
Aquatic Depth Zones

Click each zone on the left to explore what happens there. Light penetration controls everything.

Click a Zone to Explore — Key Differences are UPSC-Tested
Surface / Littoral
0 m — shore margins
Photic Zone
0 – ~200 m depth
Aphotic Zone
>200 m depth
Benthic Zone
Ocean / lake floor
Abyssal / Hadal
>4000 m · trenches

🌊 Surface / Littoral Zone

The shallow, nearshore zone where sunlight reaches the bottom. Found along the margins of lakes, ponds, and the coast. The most biologically diverse zone — plants are rooted, sunlight is plentiful, nutrients are abundant from runoff.

  • Light: Full sunlight penetrates to the bottom — both photosynthesis AND respiration occur here
  • Organisms: Rooted aquatic plants (emergent, submerged, floating), periphyton, neuston, nekton, benthos — ALL organism types present
  • Indian examples: Chilika Lake margins (rooted aquatic grasses), Wular Lake shores (lotus beds), paddy field edges (aquatic weeds)
Highest diversity zone All organism types present Both photosynthesis + respiration ★

☀️ Photic Zone (Euphotic Zone) ★

The upper, sunlit layer of any water body — where light penetrates enough for photosynthesis. Extends from the surface down to the depth where light intensity falls to 1% of surface light. Depth varies enormously: 200m in clear open ocean; as little as 1–2m in turbid (muddy) water.

  • Activities: BOTH photosynthesis AND respiration occur ★
  • Primary production: All phytoplankton live here. The base of the entire aquatic food web.
  • Transparency matters: Turbid (muddy) water = shallow photic zone → less photosynthesis → lower productivity. The Ganga near Varanasi has a very shallow photic zone due to pollution and suspended sediment.
  • Organisms: Phytoplankton, zooplankton, most nekton (fish), periphyton (in shallow parts)
★ 1% surface light = photic zone limit ★ Photosynthesis + Respiration both occur Primary production happens here only India: Arabian Sea photic zone = major fishery zone

🌑 Aphotic Zone (Profundal Zone) ★

The permanently dark lower layer — below the depth where 1% of surface light penetrates. Photosynthesis is impossible here. Life depends entirely on organic matter sinking from the photic zone above (“marine snow”) or on chemosynthesis.

  • Activities: ONLY respiration occurs — no photosynthesis ★
  • Oxygen: Progressively depleted downward — respiration consumes O₂ constantly but no photosynthesis to replenish it. The aphotic zone is a region of net oxygen consumption ★
  • In lakes: Also called the profundal zone. This is where sediment accumulates and where anaerobic decomposition occurs.
  • Bioluminescence: Many deep-ocean organisms generate their own light for communication, hunting, and camouflage — anglerfish, firefly squid, Vampyroteuthis (vampire squid)
  • Chemosynthesis: At hydrothermal vents in the aphotic zone, bacteria use chemical energy (hydrogen sulfide) instead of sunlight. These vents support entire food webs without any solar energy.
★ Only RESPIRATION — no photosynthesis ★ Net oxygen CONSUMPTION Marine snow feeds this zone Hydrothermal vents — chemosynthesis

🪸 Benthic Zone (Ocean/Lake Floor)

The ecological region at the bottom of any water body — the interface between the water column and the sediment. Home to all benthos organisms. In shallow water, the benthic zone overlaps with the photic zone (= rich reef/littoral ecosystem). In deep water, it’s in complete darkness.

  • Shallow benthic: Coral reefs, seagrass meadows, rocky shores — highly productive. India’s Gulf of Mannar benthic zone = extraordinary biodiversity (coral, pearl oysters, sea cucumbers)
  • Deep benthic: Soft sediment, cold, dark. “Marine snow” (sinking organic particles) is the food source. Dominated by sea cucumbers, polychaete worms, bacteria.
  • Filter feeders: Mussels, oysters, clams — filter particles from the water. Each oyster can filter 50+ litres of water per day — major ecosystem engineers
  • Nutrient cycling: Benthic organisms process dead organic matter → release nutrients back to water column → feeds phytoplankton → supports entire food web
Coral reefs (shallow) ★ Filter feeders = ecosystem engineers India: Gulf of Mannar (pearl oysters) Major nutrient cycling role

⚫ Abyssal / Hadal Zone — The Deep Abyss

The abyssal zone covers depths below 4,000m — comprising ~83% of all ocean floor area. The hadal zone refers specifically to ocean trenches (below 6,000m). The deepest point on Earth, Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench, reaches ~11,000m.

  • Conditions: Pitch black, near-freezing temperatures (1–4°C), extreme pressure (up to 1,100 times atmospheric pressure at Challenger Deep), scarce food
  • Life: Surprisingly rich in certain groups — sea cucumbers (often dominant), polychaete worms, amphipod crustaceans, bacteria. Adapted to extreme pressure.
  • Hadal troughs: Andaman Trench (near India) reaches ~4,500m — India’s deepest point in its EEZ
  • UPSC relevance: Methane hydrates, deep-sea mining controversy, rare earth elements on abyssal plains — all UPSC current affairs topics connected to this zone
>4000m depth Extreme pressure, near freezing Challenger Deep = 11,000m India: Andaman Trench (~4500m)
Major Types
Freshwater vs Marine vs Brackish

Three ecosystems — defined by salinity. Know the sub-types, Indian examples, and ecological roles.

💧
Freshwater Ecosystem Salinity < 5 ppt (parts per thousand)
  • Lotic (flowing): Rivers, streams, springs. Well-oxygenated, unidirectional flow. India: Ganga, Brahmaputra, Godavari, Krishna, Mahanadi, Narmada.
  • Lentic (standing): Lakes, ponds, swamps. Thermally stratified in summer. India: Wular Lake (J&K — largest freshwater lake in India ★), Loktak Lake (Manipur — only floating NP in India ★), Dal Lake
  • Cover less than 1% of Earth’s surface but support ~10% of known species
  • Nitrogen and Phosphorus are key limiting nutrients — their excess causes eutrophication
  • Key threats in India: Ganga pollution (coliform bacteria 10,000× safe limit in Varanasi), sand mining destroying riverbeds, dam construction fragmenting rivers
🌊
Marine Ecosystem Salinity ≥ 35 ppt
  • Largest ecosystem on Earth — covers 71% of Earth’s surface
  • Intertidal zone: Between high and low tide marks — exposed to air periodically. Most stressful habitat. Rocky shores, sandy beaches.
  • Neritic zone: Low tide to continental shelf edge (~200m). Sunlit, productive — most fisheries.
  • Open ocean (pelagic): Beyond continental shelf. Nutrient-poor despite vast size — “desert of the sea”
  • India’s EEZ: 2.02 million sq km. Coral reefs at Lakshadweep, Gulf of Mannar, Andamans. India’s fisheries provide livelihood to 14+ million people.
  • Lowest productivity per unit area: Open ocean ★ (but total production large due to area)
📌 Brackish Water — India’s Critical In-Between

Brackish water (5–35 ppt salinity) occurs where freshwater meets saltwater — estuaries, mangroves, coastal lagoons. India has extraordinary brackish ecosystems:

  • Chilika Lake, Odisha: Asia’s largest coastal lagoon — brackish, tidal. 160+ fish species, Irrawaddy dolphins, 150+ bird species including flamingos. First Indian Ramsar site (1981) ★
  • Sundarbans, West Bengal: World’s largest mangrove forest — tidal creeks with brackish water. Royal Bengal tiger swims in salt water. ★
  • Pulicat Lake, AP/Tamil Nadu: Second largest brackish lagoon in India. Flamingo sanctuary.
  • Vembanad Lake, Kerala: Longest lake in India. Brackish. Kuttanad — paddy cultivation below sea level (“the rice bowl of Kerala”).
Productivity Controls
Factors Limiting Productivity of Aquatic Habitats

The most important UPSC comparison: limiting factors in aquatic vs terrestrial ecosystems.

★ The Single Most Important Comparison
  • Aquatic ecosystems — primary limiting factors: Sunlight + Dissolved Oxygen
  • Terrestrial ecosystems — primary limiting factors: Moisture (Water) + Temperature
  • This distinction is directly tested in UPSC. Know it without hesitation.
☀️
Sunlight — The Most Critical
Light penetration determines the entire structure of an aquatic ecosystem. Light decreases exponentially with depth. Controls where photosynthesis can occur (photic zone). Turbidity (suspended particles) severely reduces light penetration — highly turbid rivers like Ganga have very shallow photic zones near cities.
🫧
Dissolved Oxygen (DO)
Oxygen dissolves in water but at much lower concentrations than in air. Cold water holds more DO than warm water. Sources: photosynthesis (photic zone), diffusion from atmosphere (surface). Consumers: respiration by all organisms, decomposition of organic matter. Below 4 mg/L → fish stress. Below 2 mg/L → dead zone.
🌡️
Temperature
Water temperature changes slowly (high specific heat). Aquatic organisms have NARROW temperature tolerance (unlike terrestrial organisms). Thermal stratification in summer — warm surface layer doesn’t mix with cold bottom → oxygen depleted at depth. Thermal pollution (hot water from power plants) disrupts this balance.
⚗️
Nutrients (N & P)
Nitrogen and Phosphorus are most critical limiting nutrients — especially in freshwater (Phosphorus often most limiting in lakes). Agricultural runoff adds excess N and P → eutrophication → algal blooms → oxygen depletion → dead zones. India: Punjab/UP agricultural runoff into Ganga and its tributaries is a major problem.
🌊
Turbidity & Suspended Matter
Suspended clay, silt, algae, and organic matter reduce light penetration, lowering the photic zone depth. Also affects fish — clog gills, reduce visibility for hunters. High turbidity (like Ganga in monsoon, or near mining/construction sites) severely reduces aquatic productivity and biodiversity.
Special Phenomenon ★
Winter Kill — What Kills Fish Under Ice

Directly tested in UPSC-pattern questions. Understand the mechanism — don’t just memorize the name.

Winter Kill is the phenomenon where fish die in shallow, ice-covered lakes during winter — not from the cold directly, but from oxygen starvation.

Step-by-Step: How Winter Kill Happens
  1. Ice/snow cover forms on the lake surface — blocking sunlight from reaching the water below
  2. Photosynthesis stops completely — phytoplankton and aquatic plants cannot photosynthesize without light. No new oxygen is being produced inside the lake water.
  3. Respiration continues at all depths — all organisms (fish, bacteria, invertebrates) still consume oxygen for their metabolic processes. The ice also prevents atmospheric oxygen from dissolving into the water.
  4. Dissolved oxygen crashes — especially in shallow lakes (more organisms per unit of water, less total oxygen reserve). The lake becomes hypoxic (low oxygen) or anoxic (no oxygen).
  5. Fish suffocate and die — but their bodies are hidden under the ice. The death goes unnoticed until spring comes.
  6. Ice melts in spring → floating fish are discovered — appearing as if they suddenly died, when actually they died gradually during winter beneath the ice.
★ Winter Kill — UPSC Key Points
  • Winter Kill affects shallow lakes more than deep ones — shallower water has less total oxygen reserves
  • The trigger is light blockage by ice/snow, not the cold temperature itself ★
  • Imbalance: Respiration continues at all depths (always consumes O₂) but photosynthesis stops (was replenishing O₂) → net consumption only → O₂ depleted
  • Winter kill is a natural phenomenon in temperate and subarctic lakes — not human-caused
  • India relevance: Dal Lake (Kashmir) and Wular Lake can experience winter kill during severe winters when snow cover is heavy — additional concern for fish populations
⚠ Photic Zone ≠ Sunlit Water All Year Winter Kill is the proof: even in the photic zone, if light is blocked (by ice, heavy turbidity, algal blooms), photosynthesis stops and oxygen crashes. The photic zone is defined by CURRENT conditions of light penetration — it can temporarily disappear. This is why algal blooms can also cause fish kills — dense surface algae blocks light to submerged plants → photosynthesis below stops → oxygen drops → same mechanism as winter kill.
Master Comparison
Key Differences — All UPSC-Tested
FeaturePhotic ZoneAphotic Zone
LightLight penetrates (>1% of surface light)Permanent darkness (< 1% of surface light)
ProcessesBoth Photosynthesis AND Respiration ★Only Respiration — NO photosynthesis ★
OxygenNet oxygen production (photosynthesis > respiration)Net oxygen consumption (only respiration) ★
Primary productionYES — phytoplankton, aquatic plantsNO (except chemosynthesis at hydrothermal vents)
OrganismsPhytoplankton, zooplankton, fish, neustonDeep-sea fish, bioluminescent organisms, benthos
Typical depth0 to ~200m (varies with turbidity)Below ~200m to seafloor
Also calledEuphotic zoneProfundal zone (in lakes) / Mesopelagic + below (in ocean)
FeatureFreshwater EcosystemMarine Ecosystem
SalinityLess than 5 ppt35 ppt or above
AreaLess than 1% of Earth’s surface71% of Earth’s surface ★
Species supported~10% of known species ★~50% of known species (incl. ocean)
ProductivityHigher per unit area (nutrient-rich)Open ocean = lowest per unit area ★
Limiting factorsN and P (nutrients) most oftenN most often in open ocean; Fe in some regions
Dominant producersPhytoplankton, aquatic plantsMarine phytoplankton (~50% of Earth’s O₂ production)
Indian examplesGanga, Brahmaputra, Wular Lake, Loktak LakeArabian Sea, Bay of Bengal, Lakshadweep reefs
Practice Questions
MCQ Practice Set
MCQ 01 · Easy — Organism Classification
Consider the following statements about aquatic organisms:
1. Neuston are organisms that live at the air-water interface
2. Nekton are organisms that remain attached to stems and leaves of rooted plants
3. Benthos are those found living at the bottom of the water mass
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
a) 1 and 2 only
b) 1 and 3 only
c) 2 and 3 only
d) 1, 2 and 3
Answer: (b) 1 and 3 only

Statement 1: CORRECT — Neuston are unattached organisms living AT the air-water interface (surface). Statement 2: WRONG — This describes Periphyton, not Nekton. Periphyton = organisms attached to stems/leaves of rooted plants and submerged surfaces. Nekton = active swimmers that overcome water currents. Statement 3: CORRECT — Benthos are organisms found living at the bottom (substrate) of a water body — on, in, or just above the sediment. This exact question pattern (with Nekton misidentified as periphyton) appears in UPSC-style mock tests directly testing this confusion.
MCQ 02 · Medium — Photic vs Aphotic ★
Which of the following statements about the Photic and Aphotic zones are correct?
1. Only respiration takes place in the Photic zone
2. The Aphotic zone is also known as the Profundal zone in lakes
3. Sunlight penetration determines the depth of the Photic zone
4. Both photosynthesis and respiration take place in the Photic zone
Select the correct answer:
a) 1 and 2 only
b) 2 and 3 only
c) 1, 2 and 3 only
d) 2, 3 and 4 only
Answer: (d) 2, 3 and 4 only

Statement 1: WRONG — Only respiration occurs in the APHOTIC zone, not the photic zone. In the photic zone, BOTH photosynthesis AND respiration occur. Statement 2: CORRECT ★ — In lakes, the aphotic zone is called the profundal zone — the deep, dark zone below light penetration. Statement 3: CORRECT ★ — The depth of the photic zone depends entirely on how far light can penetrate — affected by water transparency, turbidity, and the angle of sunlight. In clear open ocean = ~200m. In turbid river = 0.5–2m. Statement 4: CORRECT ★ — In the photic zone, both photosynthesis (by phytoplankton and aquatic plants in the light) AND respiration (by all organisms) occur simultaneously.
MCQ 03 · Medium — Winter Kill
The phenomenon of ‘Winter Kill’ in shallow lakes occurs because:
a) Fish freeze to death in sub-zero temperatures
b) Predators are more active in winter and overhunt fish
c) Ice/snow cover blocks sunlight → photosynthesis stops → oxygen depleted while respiration continues
d) Winter floods increase turbidity, suffocating fish with sediment
Answer: (c)

Winter Kill is NOT about cold temperature. It is an oxygen depletion event caused by light blockage. The mechanism: Ice/snow cover forms on lake surface → blocks sunlight → photosynthesis by aquatic plants and phytoplankton stops → no new oxygen is produced inside the lake → but respiration by all organisms (fish, bacteria, invertebrates) continues consuming oxygen → ice also prevents atmospheric oxygen from dissolving in → dissolved oxygen crashes → fish suffocate and die. The bodies are hidden under the ice until spring melts it, making it appear like fish “suddenly” died. This is why the phenomenon is particularly severe in SHALLOW lakes — they have less total oxygen reserve relative to the number of organisms.
MCQ 04 · Medium — Limiting Factors ★
Which of the following is the correct pairing of limiting factors for each ecosystem type?
a) Aquatic: moisture + temperature; Terrestrial: sunlight + oxygen
b) Aquatic: sunlight + oxygen; Terrestrial: moisture + temperature
c) Aquatic: nutrients + temperature; Terrestrial: sunlight + moisture
d) Aquatic: oxygen + nutrients; Terrestrial: temperature + sunlight
Answer: (b) Aquatic: Sunlight + Oxygen; Terrestrial: Moisture + Temperature

This is a direct, classic UPSC comparison. In aquatic ecosystems, moisture is never a limiting factor (organisms live in water). Temperature in water changes slowly and rarely limits productivity the way it does on land. Instead, sunlight (which decreases rapidly with depth — controls photosynthesis) and dissolved oxygen (which must dissolve from the air or be produced by photosynthesis — limited in water) are the primary constraints. In terrestrial ecosystems, sunlight and oxygen in the air are generally available everywhere — what varies and limits productivity is the availability of moisture (water) and suitable temperature for growth.
MCQ 05 · Hard — Plankton
Consider the following statements about Plankton:
1. Phytoplankton are primary producers that perform photosynthesis
2. Zooplankton are small animals that feed on phytoplankton
3. Plankton can swim against water currents
4. The distribution of plankton is largely controlled by water currents
Which of the statements are correct?
a) 1 and 3 only
b) 2 and 4 only
c) 1, 2 and 4 only
d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Answer: (c) 1, 2 and 4 only

Statement 1: CORRECT — Phytoplankton (algae, diatoms, cyanobacteria) are primary producers — they perform photosynthesis using sunlight to produce organic matter. They are the base of almost all aquatic food webs and produce approximately 50% of Earth’s total oxygen. Statement 2: CORRECT — Zooplankton are small animals (copepods, krill, rotifers, larval fish) that feed on phytoplankton. They form the critical link between primary producers and larger fish/mammals. Statement 3: WRONG ★ — Plankton CANNOT swim against water currents. This is the defining characteristic of plankton. Organisms that can swim against currents are NEKTON. Plankton drift with currents and are distributed by them. Even jellyfish (which can pulse) are classified as plankton because they cannot overcome strong currents. Statement 4: CORRECT ★ — The distribution of plankton is controlled largely by currents in aquatic ecosystems — a direct textbook fact for UPSC.
MCQ 06 · Easy — India Connection
Which of the following statements about Chilika Lake is/are correct?
1. It is Asia’s largest coastal lagoon
2. It is a freshwater lake
3. It is India’s first Ramsar site
4. It supports Irrawaddy dolphins
a) 1 and 3 only
b) 1, 2 and 3
c) 1, 3 and 4 only
d) 1, 2, 3 and 4
Answer: (c) 1, 3 and 4 only

Statement 1: CORRECT — Chilika Lake is Asia’s largest coastal lagoon, covering ~1,165 sq km in Odisha. Statement 2: WRONG ★ — Chilika Lake is NOT a freshwater lake. It is a brackish water lake (salinity 5–35 ppt) — a coastal lagoon where freshwater from rivers (Daya, Bhargavi) meets marine water from the Bay of Bengal through a narrow channel. This is a classic UPSC trap — the lake LOOKS like a lake but is actually a brackish coastal lagoon. Statement 3: CORRECT ★ — Chilika was designated as India’s first Ramsar site in 1981 (along with Keoladeo Ghana NP in Rajasthan, also in 1981). Statement 4: CORRECT — Chilika Lake supports Irrawaddy dolphins (Orcaella brevirostris) — a species of great conservation concern. It also supports 160+ fish species and 150+ bird species.
UPSC Previous Year Questions
PYQ Analysis — Aquatic Ecosystems
UPSC Prelims Pattern — Direct
PYQ 01 · Wetlands as Kidneys
“If rainforests and tropical forests are the lungs of the Earth, then surely wetlands function as its kidneys.” Which one of the following functions of wetlands best reflects the above statement? [UPSC Prelims 2022]
(a) The water cycle in wetlands involves surface runoff, subsoil percolation and evaporation. (b) Algae form the nutrient base upon which fish, crustaceans, mollusks, birds, reptiles and mammals thrive. (c) Wetlands play a vital role in maintaining sedimentation balance and soil stabilization. (d) Aquatic plants absorb heavy metals and excess nutrients.
Official Answer: (d) Aquatic plants absorb heavy metals and excess nutrients

The kidneys filter blood — removing toxins, excess minerals, and waste products, purifying what flows through them. The analogy maps to wetlands FILTERING water of pollutants and excess nutrients. Aquatic plants (emergent macrophytes like reeds and cattails, submerged plants, algae) absorb excess nitrogen, phosphorus, heavy metals, and other pollutants from the water passing through wetlands — functionally analogous to the kidney’s filtration role. Options (a), (b), (c) describe other wetland functions (hydrology, biodiversity support, sedimentation) — but none specifically matches the “filter/purify” function of a kidney. This question tests understanding of ecosystem services of aquatic ecosystems.
UPSC Prelims — PYQ Pattern
PYQ 02 · Aquatic Organisms Classification
Consider the following statements regarding life forms in aquatic ecosystems:
1. Neuston are unattached organisms which live at the air-water interface
2. Nekton are organisms which remain attached to stems and leaves of rooted plants
3. Benthos are organisms found living at the bottom of the water mass
Which of the statements given above is/are correct?
(a) 1 and 3 only (b) 1 and 2 only (c) 2 and 3 only (d) 1, 2 and 3
Official Answer: (a) 1 and 3 only

Statement 1: CORRECT — Neuston live at the air-water interface. Statement 2: WRONG — This describes PERIPHYTON. Nekton are active swimmers (fish, dolphins, turtles) — organisms that can swim against water currents. Statement 3: CORRECT — Benthos live at the bottom of the water mass. The deliberate substitution of “Nekton” for “Periphyton” in Statement 2 is a classic UPSC exam trap — testing whether students know the precise definition of each organism type, particularly the easily confused Nekton (swimmers) vs Periphyton (attached to surfaces).
UPSC Prelims — Water Bodies
PYQ 03 · Loktak Lake
Which one of the following is a protected area in Manipur known for its floating national park on phumdis?
(a) Keibul Lamjao National Park (b) Sirohi National Park (c) Intanki National Park (d) Murlen National Park
Official Answer: (a) Keibul Lamjao National Park

Loktak Lake in Manipur is the largest freshwater lake in Northeast India and the only lake in the world with a floating national park — Keibul Lamjao NP. The “floating” aspect comes from phumdis — heterogeneous masses of soil, vegetation, and organic matter that float on the lake surface. These phumdis are the habitat of the Sangai deer (Brow-antlered deer / Cervus eldi eldi) — one of the world’s rarest deer species and State Animal of Manipur. Loktak Lake is also a Ramsar site. This question tests knowledge of India’s unique aquatic ecosystems and their biodiversity significance.
Frequently Asked Questions
FAQs — Aquatic Ecosystems
What is the difference between Plankton and Nekton? Why is this confused so often?
The confusion arises because both are organisms floating or moving through the water column — but the distinction is crucial and directly tested in UPSC.

Plankton = Cannot swim against water currents. They drift wherever the water takes them. This includes everything from microscopic bacteria and algae to jellyfish (which can pulse their bodies but cannot overcome strong currents). Two sub-types: Phytoplankton (photosynthetic — primary producers) and Zooplankton (animals — primary consumers).

Nekton = Can actively swim against currents. They have muscular power to control their direction and speed. This includes fish, dolphins, turtles, whales, squid, and even large swimming insects. They range from 2mm swimming insects to the 30m blue whale.

The test: Can the organism choose where to go, even against a strong current? YES = Nekton. NO = Plankton.

Tricky case: Krill (small crustaceans in the ocean) — they can swim, but are still classified as plankton because they cannot overcome ocean currents on a large scale. Jellyfish — can pulse, but drift with currents, so = plankton.
Why is the ocean the world’s largest ecosystem yet has the lowest productivity per unit area?
The open ocean is often described as the “desert of the sea” — and for good reason. Despite covering 71% of Earth’s surface, the open ocean (excluding coastal zones) has very low net primary productivity per unit area.

The reason: Nutrients. In the open ocean, the sunlit photic zone (top 200m) receives plenty of light but is chronically nutrient-poor. Nutrients (nitrogen, phosphorus, iron) sink out of the photic zone as dead organisms settle to the seafloor — a process called the “biological pump.” Unlike a lake, there is no simple mechanism to bring these nutrients back up to the surface in most ocean areas.

Without nutrients, phytoplankton cannot grow even though they have sunlight — this is why the tropical open ocean (clear, blue, warm, sunlit) supports very little life. It’s nutrient-starved.

Contrast — coastal areas: Upwelling zones (where deep, nutrient-rich water rises to the surface — e.g., off Peru/Chile, off Somalia coast) are extraordinarily productive. India’s west coast experiences monsoon-driven coastal upwelling — this is why the Arabian Sea fishery is highly productive during certain seasons.

Also contrast — freshwater lakes: Even though lakes are much smaller, their total biomass and productivity per unit area is much higher than the open ocean because nutrients cycle more efficiently in a smaller, enclosed system.
What is eutrophication and how does it relate to limiting nutrients in aquatic ecosystems?
Eutrophication = the process of excess nutrient enrichment of a water body, leading to algal blooms, oxygen depletion, and ecological degradation.

Connection to limiting nutrients: In most freshwater lakes, Phosphorus is the primary limiting nutrient (the one in shortest supply that controls how much phytoplankton can grow). In the open ocean, Nitrogen is often most limiting. In parts of the Southern Ocean, even Iron is limiting (despite abundant N and P).

When humans add excess nitrogen and phosphorus through agricultural runoff (fertilizers), sewage discharge, or industrial effluents, they remove the limiting factor. Phytoplankton and algae grow explosively → algal bloom forms on the surface → algae blocks sunlight from reaching submerged plants → plants die → their decomposition consumes oxygen → dissolved oxygen crashes → fish and invertebrates suffocate → dead zone forms.

Indian examples: Dal Lake (Kashmir) — severe eutrophication from untreated sewage + tourism runoff + houseboat waste. Water hyacinth (invasive floating plant) chokes the lake. Chilika Lake periodically experiences eutrophication from agricultural runoff from its catchment area. Several water bodies in UP, Bihar, and West Bengal are heavily eutrophied from fertilizer-heavy agriculture in their catchments.
What is the “biological pump” in the ocean and why does it matter for climate change?
The biological pump is the process by which the ocean transfers carbon from the surface (atmosphere-ocean exchange zone) to the deep ocean — removing it from the atmosphere for thousands of years.

How it works: Surface phytoplankton fix CO₂ via photosynthesis → incorporate carbon into their bodies → phytoplankton are eaten by zooplankton → zooplankton excrete carbon-rich fecal pellets that sink → phytoplankton die and sink as “marine snow” → carbon reaches the deep ocean → decomposed there by bacteria (releasing nutrients) → carbon stored in sediment or dissolved in deep water for centuries.

Why it matters for climate: The biological pump transfers ~11 gigatonnes of carbon per year from the atmosphere to the deep ocean — a crucial climate regulation service. Without it, atmospheric CO₂ would be roughly 50% higher than it is today. Climate change disrupting phytoplankton populations → weakens the biological pump → more CO₂ stays in atmosphere → more warming → feedback loop.

India angle: Arabian Sea’s phytoplankton productivity (driven by monsoon upwelling) contributes significantly to the biological pump in the Indian Ocean. Warming of the Arabian Sea (observed trend) is reducing phytoplankton populations in some areas — a concern for both the carbon cycle and India’s fisheries.
What is thermal stratification in lakes and how does it affect oxygen levels?
Thermal stratification = the separation of a lake into distinct temperature layers that don’t mix in summer.

In summer: The sun heats the surface water → warm water (less dense) floats on top → cold water (more dense) stays below → these don’t mix → the lake separates into layers.

Three layers:
  • Epilimnion: Warm, well-mixed upper layer. In contact with atmosphere. Well-oxygenated from photosynthesis and air contact.
  • Thermocline: Middle layer with rapid temperature decrease. Acts as a barrier preventing mixing between epilimnion and hypolimnion.
  • Hypolimnion: Cold, dense, deep layer. No photosynthesis (aphotic). Only respiration consumes oxygen here. Becomes oxygen-poor (anoxic) in productive lakes.
Impact: In summer, the thermocline acts like a wall — oxygen cannot reach the hypolimnion, and nutrients from the hypolimnion cannot reach the surface (where phytoplankton need them). Fish cannot live in the anoxic hypolimnion. This is one reason deep lakes have less biodiversity at depth in summer.

Autumn overturn: As air cools, epilimnion cools, becomes denser, sinks → layers mix → oxygen and nutrients redistribute → temporary burst of productivity (“autumn bloom”). In spring, similar mixing occurs.

Winter Kill connection: In frozen winter, even the epilimnion can become anoxic if ice blocks photosynthesis — the most extreme version of this oxygen depletion process.

Book a Free Demo Class

April 2026
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
Categories

Get free Counselling and ₹25,000 Discount

Fill the form – Our experts will call you within 30 mins.