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How is the Marine Biome Organised

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Essential Questions What is the marine biome? What are the marine life zones? What are the characteristics of marine life zones? What is the marine biome? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: How is the Marine Biome Organised


1
How is the Marine Biome Organised
2
Essential Questions
  • What is the marine biome?
  • What are the marine life zones?
  • What are the characteristics of marine life
    zones?

3
What is the marine biome?
4
Beneath the SurfaceThe Endless Voyage Series
  • http//learning.aliant.net/Player/ALC_Player.asp?P
    rogIDINT_ENDVOY03
  • Answer the Self-test questions after the video
  • 27mins

5
The Marine Biome
  • it is one of the largest biomes on earth
  • includes three quarters of the earths water that
    contains thousands of different animals and
    plants
  • includes
  • Oceans
  • oceans are very large bodies of water that
    dominate the Earth's surface
  • Coral reefs
  • warm shallow waters
  • can be found as barriers along continents,
    fringing islands, and atolls
  • Estuaries
  • where freshwater streams or rivers merge with the
    ocean

6
Oceans
  • 5 Major Oceans
  • Indian Ocean
  • washes upon southern Asia and separates Africa
    and Australia
  • Atlantic Ocean
  • separates the Americas from Eurasia and Africa
  • Arctic Ocean
  • covers much of the Arctic and washes upon
    northern North America and Eurasia
  • Southern or Antarctic Ocean
  • has no landmass separating it from other oceans
  • encircles Antarctica and covers much of the
    Antarctic
  • Pacific Ocean
  • separates Asia and Australia from the Americas

7
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8
Coral Reefs
  • they are the only animals that can build
    structures visible from space
  • are made of algae and tissues of animal polyps
  • corals obtain nutrients to survive through
    photosynthesis process carried out by algae and
    extending their tentacles to capture plankton in
    water
  • other marine animals and plants of the coral reef
    include microorganisms, invertebrates, fishes,
    sea urchins, star fishes, octopuses, etc

9
Estuaries
  • partially enclosed body of water that are formed
    in areas where freshwater from rivers and streams
    flows into the ocean and get mixed with the salty
    waters
  • also known around the world as bays, lagoons,
    harbors, inlets and sounds
  • plants and animals of the estuaries include
    algae, seaweeds, marsh grasses and mangroves
  • estuaries support a vast and diverse flora and
    fauna

10
What are the marine life zones?
11
Marine Life Zones
12
The Layers
  • Epipelagic
  • Mesopelagic
  • Bathypelagic
  • Abyssopelagic
  • Hadopelagic
  • Demersal Zone
  • Benthic Zone

photic zone or euphotic zone
aphotic zone
13
Photic/Euphotic Zone
  • is the depth of the water that is exposed to
    sufficient sunlight for photosynthesis to occur
  • it extends from the atmosphere-water interface
    downwards to a depth where light intensity falls
    to 1 percent of that at the surface
  • about 90 of all marine life lives in this region

14
Aphotic Zone
  • is the portion of water where there is little or
    no sunlight
  • the depths beyond which less than 1 of sunlight
    penetrates

15
One Ocean Mysteries of the Deep
  • http//oneocean.cbc.ca/series/episodes/3-mysteries
    -of-the-deep
  • Questions sheet provided
  • 4507mins

16
What are the characteristics of marine life zones?
17
Epipelagic
  • From the surface down to around 200 m (656 ft).
  • illuminated surface zone where there is enough
    light for photosynthesis
  • plants and animals are largely concentrated in
    this zone
  • nearly all primary production in the ocean occurs
    here

18
Mesopelagic
  • From 200 m down to around 1,000 m (3,281 ft)
  • Also known as the middle pelagic or twilight zone
  • some light penetrates this deep but it is
    insufficient for photosynthesis
  • at about 500 m the water becomes depleted of
    oxygen
  • some creatures living in the mesopelagic zone
    will rise to the epipelagic zone at night in
    order to feed
  • is the location of the thermocline, with
    temperatures varying from over 20C at the top to
    around 4C at the bottom

19
Bathypelagic
  • From 1,000 m down to around 4,000 m (13,124 ft)
  • also known as midnight zone
  • the ocean is pitch black, apart from the
    occasional bioluminescent organism
  • no living plants, and most animals survive by
    consuming the snow of detritus falling from the
    zones above or by preying upon others
  • average temperature is about 4C
  • larger by volume than the euphotic zone

20
Abyssopelagic
  • From 4,000 m down to above the ocean floor
  • Very few creatures are sufficiently adapted to
    survive in the cold temperatures and incredible
    pressures found at this depth
  • pressures of up to 76 megapascals (11,000 psi)
  • temperatures around 2 to 3C

21
Hadopelagic
  • The deep water in ocean trenches
  • is mostly unknown, and very few species are known
    to live here
  • many organisms live in hydrothermal vents
  • most life at this depth is sustained by marine
    snow or the chemical reactions around thermal
    vents
  • the deepest known is at 10,911 meters (35,814
    ft).
  • at such depths, e.g., 36k ft. below sea level,
    the pressure in the Hadal zone will reach over
    110 MPa (16,000 psi)

22
Demersal Zone
  • the part of the ocean comprising the water column
    that is near to (and is significantly affected
    by) the seabed and the benthos

23
Benthic Zone
  • the ecological region at the lowest level of a
    body of water, including the sediment surface and
    some sub-surface layers
  • Organisms living in this zone are called benthos
  • many such organisms are permanently attached to
    the bottom
  • live in close relationship with the substrate
    bottom
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