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The Oceans. An overview. A quick oceans tour. Marine ecosystems. Cover 70% of the Earth’s surface. List as many different marine ecosystems as you can. Estuaries: fresh water from river mixes with ocean Rich in nutrients Wetlands form in shallow areas. Marine ecosystems: Estuaries.
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The Oceans An overview
Marine ecosystems • Cover 70% of the Earth’s surface. • List as many different marine ecosystems as you can.
Estuaries: fresh water from river mixes with ocean Rich in nutrients Wetlands form in shallow areas Marine ecosystems: Estuaries
Salt marsh Estuaries: very productive ecosystems What does that mean? Make lots of biomass Lots of plant growth/m2 Nurseries for fish, crustaceans Estuaries
Estuaries • Coastal • Partly enclosed • One or more rivers flow into them • Water is brackish—ranges from fresher upstream to saltier where estuary grades into the ocean.
Value Aquatic nurseries Protected harbors Fishing, other recreation Habitat for non-aquatic animals, such as bald eagles, shorebirds Threats Many near populated areas May be filled Pollutants Sewage Runoff from rivers Estuaries
Florida salt marsh Tidal creek running through it Whole region is tidal, meaning affected by the daily tides Intertidal zone
Means: ``region between the tides’’ Constant change Intertidal zone
Marine ecosystems: mangrove swamps • Coastal areas • Mangrove trees grow partly submerged • Protect coasts from erosion, especially during storms • Tsunami of ‘04
Mangrove swamp • Roots hold sediment • Habitat for thousands of animal species, such as shrimp • In South America and Southeast Asia, mangrove swamps being cleared for shrimp farms
Coral reefs • Made of animals = coral polyps • Limestone skeletons form the reefs • Thousands of species of fish, plants live among the corals biodiversity hotspot • Need light for photosynthesis, water within temperature and salinity range • BUT: in trouble • People • Warming oceans
Coral reefs • Individual corals are polyps • Grow together to form large colonies • BUT: grow very slowly, inch or so a year
corals • ANIMALS • Individual = polyp • Colonies, like reefs, may have been in existence for thousands of years • Most corals contain an algae, zooxanthellae symbiotic
Fishing for tropical fish on coral reefs, using explosives. • For pet stores and for restaurants • Philippines • Also use cyanide • Small amounts stun fish, but continued use can kill coral
Continental shelf • aqua color
Continental shelves • Extension of the continents • Shallow (average about 460 ft) • Significance? • Light reaches much of the shelf • Teaming with life—many important fisheries
Littoral zone • Nearest the coast • From high water mark to shallow, submerged areas
Pelagic – water • Benthic – bottom • Abyssal – deep • Photic – affected by light
Marine ecosystems • Open ocean: Pelagic • Fish • Marine mammals • Plankton • Light at surface
Marine ecosystems • Deep Ocean: benthic zone • Very cold—light doesn’t penetrate • Few if any plants • Bottom feeding organisms • Starfish, anemones, sponges
Marine ecosystems • Deepest reaches of the ocean: Abyssal zone • Cold • Dark • High pressure • In some places: hydrothermal vents spew superheated water
Ocean circulation • Ocean conveyor
OCEANS How they work How we protect them
Oceanography • Study of the physical ocean • Cover 71% of the Earth • Contains 97 % of its surface water
Ocean water • 96.5 % H2O by mass • Remainder: various salts • Temperature: • Warmer near the surface • Deep water (below ~1000 m) is equally cold • Density: • Colder, saltier water is denser = deep water
Ocean currents • Water flows horizontally • Causes? • Surface: wind • Deep: density differences – salinity, temperature • ocean conveyor
Vertical movements • Upwelling • Deep, cold water rises to replace surface waters that flow away • Brings nutrients to surface • Site of rich fisheries
Marine ecosystems • Biological diversitydiversity_over_time.pdf
Coral reefs form in nutrient poor waters • Nutrients tied up in living things • Nutrients tightly recycled
Coral Bleaching • Corals expel the single-celled algae normally living in their tissues • Related to global warming