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Topic 20 Ocean Environments. GEOL 2503 Introduction to Oceanography. Major zones of life in a marine ecosystem. Some ocean environment facts. Largest biomass on the planet Most major groups of organisms represented Life originated in oceans Earliest fossils – marine algae
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Topic 20Ocean Environments GEOL 2503 Introduction to Oceanography
Some ocean environment facts • Largest biomass on the planet • Most major groups of organisms represented • Life originated in oceans • Earliest fossils – marine algae • All animals have saline body fluids
Ocean Physical Conditions • Temperature • Continents 136° to ˗127°F (58° to ˗88°C) • Oceans 81° to 28°F (27° to ˗2° C) little seasonal variation especially in deep waters • Pressure • Increases with depth but only minor problem • Salinity • A limiting factor in some coastal environments
Energy needed to build organic molecules • Sunlight for photosynthesis available only in photic zone (<100 -200 m depth). Primary producers - plants. • Mineral-rich hot springs available in aphotic zone (> 200 m). Primary producers - bacteria (extremophiles). An exciting new ecosystem.
Ocean Life • What are some characteristics that enable organisms to live in the sea? • How is ocean life different from land life?
Land structural strength needed to support bodies against gravity trees--trunks animals--skeletons, muscle Ocean salt water density similar to tissue of organisms structural strength not important except for breaking wave zones many delicate and fragile organisms Land versus Ocean
Buoyancy • controlled by density • weight of water displaced • helps keep floating organisms near surface • supports bodies of bottom dwellers • lessens energy expended by swimmers
Examples of some floating organisms • Portuguese Man-of-war jellyfish • secrete gases into a float • Sargassum seaweed • gas-filled floats • Chambered nautilus • lives in last chamber • other chambers filled with gas
Swim Bladders in Fish • help fish remain neutrally buoyant • some fish gulp air at surface • others release gas directly into swim bladder • to change depth fish change the amount of gas in the swim bladder
Not all fish have swim bladders • Active, continually swimming predators lack a swim bladder • mackerel, tuna, sharks • Bottom fish lack a swim bladder
Body Shape and Flotation • Appendages, spines, ruffles, feathers, perforated shells help organisms float Perforations Spines
Osmosis • Water molecules move across a semipermeable membrane from region of high concentration of water (lower salinity, fresher) to region of low concentration of water (higher salinity, saltier) • A gradient-driven process • Skin of living organisms is a semipermeable membrane • So, if the salt content of organism’s tissues differs from salinity of sea water, then osmosis will occur
Fish and Osmosis • In fish, the salt concentration in body fluids is between fresh and salt • Fresh water is tissues moves out of body into the sea (from high water concentration to low) • Thus, fish must work to prevent dehydration • drink sea water, excrete salt across gills and in urine
Sharks, Rays, and Osmosis • Body fluids have about the same salt content as ocean • Sharks and rays (primitive fish) do not have the osmosis problem of other fish • The same is true of many bottom dwellers • sea cucumbers, sponges
Salinity may limit distribution • Many species can regulate salt-fluid balance over only limited salinity ranges • In deep water, salinity is fairly constant • In surface waters, salinity may be a barrier to migration • coastal waters (estuaries, bays) may have highly variable salinities • Crabs are successful estuarine animals, can tolerate variable salinity
Salinity and Marine Life • Salmon • spawn in fresh water, adults live in salt water, finally return to fresh water to reproduce • Atlantic common eel • spawn in Sargasso sea, matures at sea, live as adults in fresh water • Estuaries, coastal bays • breeding grounds for many fish and crustaceans that live as adults at sea
Temperature and Marine Life • Deep ocean • low and constant • Surface and close to shore • varies by latitude • Affects density and viscosity • in cold water, organisms float more easily • in tropics, more appendages, larger surface area, more gas bubble production, for buoyancy
Pressure • Pressure increases 1 atmosphere every 10 meters water depth • Air-breathing marine mammals and seabirds can dive deeper and for longer than humans because • Streamlined shape (less effort needed) • Store oxygen in muscle tissue • Some have collapsible lungs
Bioluminescence • Living organisms producing light • Photophore—light-producing organ common in mid-depth and deep-water fish
Bioluminescence—see the Bioluminescence Web Page at http://www.lifesci.ucsb.edu/~biolum/
Siphonophore—related to jellyfish • Said to be one of the longest animals on earth and can stretch for more than 40 meters. • This photo shows only about 10 cm.
Comb Jellies—relatives of jellyfish • Found near the surface around the world. • Approximate length 5 cm.
Dinoflagellates • Much of the bioluminescence in the sea comes from single-celled algae such as this tropical dinoflagellate. • Length 1 mm
Dinoflagellates glow when disturbed. Bioluminescent bays exist where conditions are just right and are major tourist attractions. Anything that disturbs the water may cause dinoflagellates to bioluminesce.
Uses of Color • Transparent—blend in with water (jellyfish and many other plankton) • Bright colors—match coral • Decoration—camouflage, deception • Color may be used as warning or to attract mates • In turbid water fish often darker colored
The coloration of oceanic animals, shown as a function of depth. From NOAA’s Ocean Explorer: http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/explorations.html
Colors versus depth • This diagram on the next slide offers a basic illustration of the depth at which different colors of light penetrate ocean waters. • Water absorbs warm colors like reds and oranges (known as long wavelength light) and scatters the cooler colors (known as short wavelength light). • Image courtesy of Kyle Carothers, NOAA-OE • http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/explorations/04deepscope/background/deeplight/media/diagram3.html
Countershading • Many fish are colored on the top side but white on bottom • This is for camouflage • When seen from above they blend in with sea (or river, lake) bottom • When seen from below during day they blend in with sun light
Bottom Types • Referred to as substrate • Type of ocean bottom • Rock • Mud • Sand • Gravel • Different organisms preferred different substrates
Environmental Zones • Zone classification of Joel Hedgpeth • Benthic zone—sea bottom • Pelagic zone—water column
Benthic Environment Zones • The benthic environment is divided by depthinto the following zones: • Littoral (<1%) intertidal- between the tides • Sublittoral (8%) low tide to edge of cont. shelf, 0-200m • Bathyal (16%) 200 – 2000 m • Abyssal (75%) 2000 – 6000 m • Hadal (1%) > 6000 m
Pelagic Environment Zones • Neritic—Shallow water overlying continental shelves. • Oceanic—Deep water beyond shelf edge. • Epipelagic (3%)0-200 m (surface, illuminated) • Mesopelagic (28%) 200-1000 m • Bathypelagic (15%) 1000-2000 m • Abyssalpelagic(54%) 2000-6000 m • Hadalpelagic (<1%) >6000 m (trenches)
Marine organisms classified by lifestyle. • Plankton –float passively, can swim vertically, but not against currents. • They can be divided into phytoplankton (plants) and zooplankton (animals) • Nekton • active swimmers (marine fish, reptiles, mammals, birds and others) • Benthos • live on the bottom (epifauna) • within the bottom sediments (infauna) • Some organisms cross from one lifestyle to another during their life, for example being planktonic early in life and benthic later (seaweeds, barnacles, clams, many others)
Feeding Strategies • Primary Producers (photosynthesis or chemosynthesis) • Primary Consumers - herbivores • Secondary Consumers – carnivores • Decomposers – break down organic debris Autotrophs Heterotrophs
Scientific Classification of Organisms • Kingdom • -Phylum • -Class • -Order • -Family • -Genus • -Species
KINGDOM MONERA • Simple organisms without a nucleus • Unicellular and colonial • Include the true bacteria (eubacteria) and cyanobacteria (blue-green algae). • Thus, both decomposers and primary producers
KINGDOM PROTISTA • Mainly single celled organisms; complex cells with a nucleus • Photosynthetic Plankton (Phytoplankton) - primary producers • Nonphotosynthetic Plankton (Zooplankton) – primary consumers
KINGDOM PLANTAE • Multicellular organisms with complex nucleated cells. Photosynthetic primary producers. • Includes all higher plants. Excludes single celled algae • Very important on land but unimportant in oceans