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Coastal Habitats Oregon Coast Field Trip. Animals of the Benthos. 98% of marine species are benthic Hydrothermal vents Coral reefs Rocky shore Sandy shore Oregon info at the Oregon Coastal Atlas www.coastalatlas.net.
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Animals of the Benthos • 98% of marine species are benthic • Hydrothermal vents • Coral reefs • Rocky shore • Sandy shore • Oregon info at the Oregon Coastal Atlas • www.coastalatlas.net
Oregon Coast Field Trip - Sat., May 21st 2011dusk.geo.orst.edu/oceans/field.html • Be here by 7:15 a.m. • 7:30 - Busses leave from Wilkinson lot • 10:00 - Seal Rock volcanic rocks and tide pools • 11:30 - Lunch at Seal Rock (bring your own; eat lunch in busses if weather is bad) • 12 noon - Travel to HMSC • 12:30 - HMSC Visitor Center • 2:00ish - Return to Corvallis • Back by ~4:30 p.m.
Exploring the Tide Pools (and associated geology) Shoes with good tread/grip Extra socks Rubber boots, if you have them Pillow/stuffed animal Take your field trip guide with you! Be prepared with questions!!!
Required Field Trip Guidedusk.geo.orst.edu/oceans/field.html • Answers to bolded questions in guide • Turn assignment in to your TA • Due by 5:00 p.m., June 3rd • This constitutes LAB 9
Rocky Shores • spray zone • mostly dry, covered by water only during storms • high tide zone • fairly dry, covered only by the highest high tide • middle tide zone • equally exposed & covered during all high & low tides • low tide zone • mostly wet
Spray Zone:periwinkle snails boundary between spray & intertidalrock louse & sea roachesscavenge organic debris
High Tide Zone:filter-feed seawater / larvae are planktoniclimpets, buckshot barnacles
Chiton Tonicellamollusc related to sea snails, clams, limpets
Middle Tide Zone:more variety, competition for spacegoose barnacles, mussel, sea stars
Low Tide Zone (Tide Pools):dominated more by plants than by animalsalgaes, sea urchins, sea anemones
Shore Crabs roam entire intertidal rangeScavengers feeding on dead animals, seaweed
Animals of the Rocky Shores • spray zone • mostly dry, covered by water only during storms • periwinkle snail • rock louse • high tide zone • fairly dry, covered only by the highest high tide • buckshot barnacles • limpets
Rocky Shores cont. • middle tide zone • equally exposed & covered during all high & low tides • more variety, competition for space • goose barnacle, mussel, sea star • sea anemone, hermit crabs, sea urchins (tidal pools) • low tide zone • mostly wet • surf grass, algae, seaweeds, • sea urchins, sea anemones
Sandy Shores • no fixed surface to attach to • different adaptations protect animals from fluctuations in • temperature • salinity • water levels (so as not to dry out) • clams, worms, sand stars, amphipods
Feeders on Sandy Shores • Clams • suspension feeding • Worms • deposit feeding by ingestion • Amphipods • deposit feeding on surface • Sand stars • carnivorous feeding on unlucky neighbors
Important Web Sites • Field Trip Page and Guide • dusk.geo.orst.edu/oceans/field.html • dusk.geo.orst.edu/oceans/OC103FieldTrip.pdf • Oregon Coastal Atlas • www.coastalatlas.net • HMSC Summer Experiences • hmsc.oregonstate.edu/summer.html
Maybe we’ll see a little guy like this in the woods near the parking lot! One of the bus drivers took this photo there in 2006!
Oregon Coast Field Trip - Sat., May 21st 2011dusk.geo.orst.edu/oceans/field.html • Be here by 7:15 a.m. • 7:30 - Busses leave from Wilkinson lot • 10:00 - Seal Rock volcanic rocks and tide pools • 11:30 - Lunch at Seal Rock (bring your own; eat lunch in busses if weather is bad) • 12 noon - Travel to HMSC • 12:30 - HMSC Visitor Center • 2:00ish - Return to Corvallis • Back by ~4:30 p.m.