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Delve into the world of marine ecology, studying habitats, populations, interactions, and factors influencing marine organisms. Discover the significance of trophic pyramids, distribution patterns, and the physical environment affecting marine life. Explore terminology, characteristics, and population dynamics within ecosystems, offering a broad perspective on the intricate web of marine ecosystems.
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Who, What, When, Where, Why, and How of Marine Ecology • Who studies marine-life habitat, populations, and interactions among organisms and the surrounding environment including their abiotic and biotic factors? • What factors contribute to the distribution of marine organisms in their environment? • When do temperature changes affect communities? • Where is the benthic zone? • Why are trophic pyramids important to Marine Ecologists? • How are heterotrophs related to autotrophs?
0 Chapter 2 Fundamentals of Ecology Karleskint Turner Small
Marine Ecology • Marine Ecology is the scientific study of marine-life habitat, populations, and interactions among organisms and the surrounding environment including their • abiotic factors - non-living physical and chemical factors that affect the ability of organisms to survive and reproduce and • biotic factors - living things or the materials that directly or indirectly affect an organism in its environment
Study of Ecology 0 • Ecology • from the Greek word oikos meaning “home” • Environment • biotic factors (living) • abiotic factors (non-living) • Habitat: where an organisms lives • Ecosystems • composed of living organisms and their non-living environment
Study of Ecology 0 • The study of organisms interacting with one another and their environment. This entails: • biological (biotic) factors • environmental (abiotic) factors • the organism’s behavior • Niche: an organism’s environmental role • Its “job” in the environment
Homeostasis and Distribution of Marine Organisms 0 • Maintaining homeostasis • changes in external environment • internal adjustments to maintain a stable internal environment • optimal range • For example, we have optimum temperature (98.6), pH, etc. • zones of intolerance
Characteristics of the Physical Environment that Affect Organism Distribution 0 • Organisms might be limited as to where there is sunlight: • For photosynthesis • For vision • Organisms might be limited to location by temperature • ectotherms • endotherms
Characteristics of the Physical Environment that Affect Organism Distribution 0 • Organisms might be limited to where they can live by salinity • Some can withstand higher salinity than others
Characteristics of the Physical Environment that Affect Organism Distribution 0 • Some organisms are limited to location by pressure • 760 mm Hg or 1 atmosphere at sea level • increases 1 atmosphere for every 10 meters below sea level • Deep sea animals are adapted to living at high pressure
Characteristics of the Physical Environment that Affect Organism Distribution 0 • Metabolic requirements • nutrients and limiting nutrients • oxygen as a requirement for cell respiration • Anaerobic organisms – don’t need oxygen • aerobic organisms – do need oxygen • Excess nutrients can result in eutrophication and algal bloom • Metabolic wastes • carbon dioxide is a common byproduct of metabolism
As a review: • Physical characteristics of the environment will effect organism distribution • Temperature • pH • Salinity • Sunlight • Pressure • Nutrient availability (oxygen, nitrates, phosphates, etc)
Individuals • Population – group of individuals of same species • Community – different species living together • Ecosystem – community plus abiotic factors
Populations 0 • A group of the same species that occupies a specified area • Geographic range • For example, the lagoon, open ocean, deep sea, etc. • Population size
Distribution of Organisms in a Population 0 • Population density (abundance) • Dispersion • clumped • uniform • random
Changes in Population Size 0 • Can occur through: • reproduction • immigration • death • emigration • Can be affected by: • survivorship • life history • opportunistic and equilibrium species
Population Growth 0 • Many ways a population can increase in size, depending on the carrying capacity of the environment • exponential/logarithmic growth • logistic growth
Exponential growth Logistic growth
Communities 0 • Composed of populations of different species that occupy one habitat at the same time • Niche: what an organism does in its environment • fundamental niche • What all that species could do in the environment • realized niche • Species are going to be limited by other species in the area that might have similar niches
Communities 0 • Biological environment • competition • may be interspecific or intraspecific • may result in competitive exclusion • resource partitioning allows organisms to share a resource • predator-prey relationships • balance of abundance of prey vs. predators • keystone predators
Communities 0 • Symbiosis: living together • mutualism – both organisms benefit • commensalism – one organism benefits, the other is nether harmed nor benefited • parasitism – one organism benefits, the other is harmed
Ecosystems: Basic Units of the Biosphere • Energy flow through ecosystems • Producers = Autotrophs • auto = self, troph = feed • Convert energy from the sun and harness it into organic molecules that will make their way up the food chain • Photosynthetic producers – some bacteria, algae, plants • Majority of primary producers on the planet • Chemosynthetic producers – some bacteria that live in hydrothermal vents • Do not use energy from sun, instead use energy from inorganic molecules being released from hydrothermal vents at bottom of the ocean
Ecosystems: Basic Units of the Biosphere • Consumers = Heterotrophs • hetero = other, troph = feed • Different levels of consumers: • first-order consumers (herbivores) • second- and third-order consumers (omnivores and carnivores) • detrivores • decomposers • Food chains and food webs
Ecosystems: Basic Units of the Biosphere • Trophic levels • number of levels is limited because only a fraction of the energy at one level passes to the next level • ecological efficiency • ten percent rule • trophic pyramids • as energy passed on decreases, so does the number of organisms that can be supported
Biogeochemical Cycles • Hydrologic cycle • water is lost through evaporation • carried north and south from equator • carried west to east within each hemisphere • returned through precipitation and runoff
Biogeochemical Cycles • Carbon cycle • Cellular respiration • carbon released from organisms through respiration and decomposition • That’s why we breathe out CO2 • Photosynthesis • The carbon in CO2 isrecycled by photosynthetic producers • carbon is used in shells, corals and skeletons as part of calcium carbonate • fossil fuels, when burned, release CO2 back into atmosphere
Biogeochemical Cycles • Nitrogen cycle • fixation of atmospheric nitrogen by microorganisms that have symbiotic relationship with plants • Producers (plants) use nitrogen to synthesize amino acids to form proteins • Other organisms eat those producers, to form their own proteins, nitrogen makes it’s way up the food chain • bacteria recycle nitrogen from wastes and decomposing, dead organisms
Biosphere • Includes all of earth’s communities and ecosystems • Examples of ecosystems: • estuaries • salt marshes • mangrove swamps • rocky and sandy shores • kelp forests • coral reefs • open ocean
Distribution of Marine Communities • Pelagic division • Zones according to location to land: • neritic zone (nearshore) and pelagic zone (open ocean) • Zones according to light penetration: • photic zone (light), disphotic zone (little light), and aphotic zone (no light, majority of the ocean) • Majority of the biomass of ocean is in photic zone • Organisms that live in the pelagic: • Plankton (organisms that float) and nekton (organisms that swim) • Benthic division • Bottom sediment area: • shelf zone, bathyal zone, abyssal zone, and hadal zone • Organisms that live in the benthic zone are divided into: • Epifauna (organisms that live on top of sediment) and infauna (organisms that live in the sediment)