Base-richness

Base-richness in ecology is the level in water or soil of chemical bases, such as calcium or magnesium ions. Many organisms are restricted to base-rich environments. Chemical bases are alkalis, and so base-rich environments are neutral or alkaline. Because base-poor environments have few bases, they are dominated by environmental acids (usually organic acids) and so are acidic. However, the relationship between base-richness and acidity is not a rigid one changes in the levels of acids (such as dissolved carbon dioxide) may significantly change acidity without affecting base-richness.

Base-rich terrestrial environments are characteristic of areas where the underlying rocks are limestone. Seawater is also base-rich, so maritime and marine environments are themselves base-rich.

Base-poor environments are characteristic of areas where the underlying rocks are sandstone or granite, or where the water is derived directly from rainfall (ombrotrophic).

Examples of base-rich environments

Examples of base-poor environments

gollark: Or they could just use tools which make it harder to write code with memory leaks/corruption/whatever.
gollark: I *was* considering recompiling nginx with LibreSSL.
gollark: There is, what is it again, rustls, though. Maybe they'll provide some way to replace openssl with that.
gollark: I hope security-critical stuff like OpenSSL gets done in Rust or something.
gollark: (because HTML-escaping is the *default*, not opt-in, when rendering to HTML)

See also


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