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Marine Life and the Marine Environment

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Abundant and large deep-ocean benthos. Discovered in 1977. Associated with hot vents ... Marine versus freshwater fish. Fig. 12.14. Adaptations to marine life ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marine Life and the Marine Environment


1
Marine Life and the Marine Environment
Fig. 12.5
2
Physical and Chemical Factors
  • Solar energy availability
  • Salinity variations
  • Water depth
  • Temperature variations with depth
  • Pressure variations with depth
  • Nutrient availability and distribution
  • Dissolved oxygen variations
  • pH variations

3
Sunlight Penetration
  • Euphotic
  • Disphotic
  • Aphotic

Euphotic zone (0 to 200 meters depth) Disphotic
zone (200 to 1000 meters depth) Aphotic zone (gt
1000 meters depth)
4
Fig. 1.3cd
5
Salinity of sea water The average salinity of
sea water is 35 grams dissolved salt / kg sea
water. Also listed as 3.5 by weight or 35
p.p.t.(parts per thousand) or 35 o/oo (parts per
mil). 99 of sea water is in the range 30 to 37
g/kg.
6
Main divisions of the marine environment
  • Pelagic (open ocean)
  • Neritic (lt 200 m water depth)
  • Oceanic
  • Benthic (sea floor)
  • Supralittoral (above tidal influenced region)
  • Subneritic (continental shelf)
  • Suboceanic (continental slope to abyssal plain)

7
Pelagic environments
  • Epipelagic
  • Mesopelagic
  • Bathypelagic
  • Abyssopelagic

Fig. 12.19
8
Pelagic environments
  • Dissolved O2 minimum layer about 700-1000 m
  • Nutrient maximum at about same depths
  • O2 content increases with depth below

Fig. 12.20
9
Benthic environments
  • Supralittoral
  • Subneritic
  • Littoral
  • Sublittoral
  • Inner
  • Outer
  • Suboceanic
  • Bathyal
  • Abyssal
  • Hadal

Fig. 12.19
10
Marine Life Overview
  • More than 250,000 identified marine species
  • Most live in sunlit surface seawater (Euphotic
    zone)
  • Species success depends on ability to
  • Find food/nutrients
  • Avoid predation
  • Reproduce
  • Cope with physical barriers to movement

11
Classification of living organisms
  • Physical characteristics
  • Three domains
  • Archaea
  • Bacteria
  • Eukarya

Fig. 12.1
12
Classification of living organisms
  • Physical characteristics
  • Five kingdoms
  • Monera
  • Protoctista
  • Fungi
  • Plantae
  • Animalia

Fig. 12.1
13
Five kingdoms
  • Monera simplest organisms, single-celled
  • Cyanobacteria, heterotrophic bacteria, archaea
  • Protoctista single and multicelled with nucleus
  • Algae, protozoa
  • Fungi
  • Mold, lichen
  • Plantae multicelled photosynthetic plants
  • Surf grass, eelgrass, mangrove, marsh grasses
  • Animalia multicelled animals
  • Simple sponges to complex vertebrates

14
Taxonomic classification
  • Systemized classification of organisms
  • Kingdom
  • Phylum
  • Class
  • Order
  • Family
  • Genus
  • Species
  • Fundamental unit
  • Population of genetically similar, interbreeding
    individuals

15
Classification by habitat and mobility
  • Plankton (floaters)
  • Nekton (swimmers)
  • Benthos (bottom dwellers)

Fig. 12.6
16
Plankton
  • Most biomass on Earth consists of plankton
  • Phytoplankton
  • Autotrophic (an organism capable of synthesizing
    its own food from inorganic substances, using
    light or chemical energy)
  • Zooplankton
  • Heterotrophic (An organism that cannot synthesize
    its own food and is dependent on complex organic
    substances for nutrition)
  • Bacterioplankton
  • Bacteria that live in the open waters of the
    ocean
  • Virioplankton
  • virioplankton communities are composed
    principally of bacteriophages and, to a lesser
    extent, eukaryotic algal viruses

17
Plankton
  • Holoplankton
  • Entire lives as plankton
  • Meroplankton
  • Part of lives as plankton
  • Juvenile or larval stages
  • Macroplankton
  • Large floaters such as jellyfish or Sargassum
  • Picoplankton
  • Very small floaters such as bacterioplankton

18
Nekton
  • Independent swimmers
  • Most adult fish and squid
  • Marine mammals
  • Marine reptiles

Fig. 12.3
19
Benthos
  • Epifauna - live on surface of sea floor
  • Infauna - live buried in sediments
  • Nektobenthos - swim or crawl through water above
    seafloor
  • Most abundant in shallower water often because
    of sunlight penetration

20
Hydrothermal Vent Biocommunities
  • Abundant and large deep-ocean benthos
  • Discovered in 1977
  • Associated with hot vents
  • Bacteria-like archaeon produce food using heat
    and chemicals (autotrophic)

21
Number of marine species
  • More land species than marine species
  • Ocean relatively uniform conditions
  • Less adaptation required, less speciation
  • Marine species overwhelmingly benthic rather than
    pelagic

22
Adaptations of marine organisms
  • Physical support
  • Buoyancy
  • How to resist sinking
  • Different support structures in cold (fewer)
    rather than warm (more appendages) seawater
  • Smaller size

23
Adaptations to marine life
  • Appendages to increase surface area
  • Oil in micro-organisms to increase buoyancy

Fig. 12.9
24
Adaptations to marine life
  • Streamlining important for larger organisms
  • Less resistance to fluid flow
  • Flattened body
  • Tapering back end

Fig. 12.10
25
Adaptations to marine life
  • Narrow range temperature in oceans
  • Smaller variations (daily, seasonally, annually)
  • Deep ocean nearly isothermal

Fig. 12.11
26
Adaptations to marine life
  • Cold- versus warm-water species
  • Smaller in cooler seawater
  • More appendages in warmer seawater
  • Tropical organisms grow faster, live shorter,
    reproduce more often
  • More species in warmer seawater
  • More biomass in cooler seawater (upwelling)

27
Adaptations to marine life
  • Stenothermal
  • Organisms withstand small variation in
    temperature
  • Typically live in open ocean
  • Eurythermal
  • Organisms withstand large variation in
    temperature
  • Typically live in coastal waters

28
Adaptations to marine life
  • Stenohaline
  • Organisms withstand only small variation in
    salinity
  • Typically live in open ocean
  • Euryhaline
  • Organisms withstand large variation in salinity
  • Typically live in coastal waters, e.g., estuaries

29
Adaptations to marine life
  • Extracting minerals from seawater
  • High concentration to low concentration
  • Diffusion
  • Cell membrane permeable to nutrients, for example
  • Waste passes from cell to ocean

Fig. 12.12
30
Adaptations to marine life
  • Osmotic pressure
  • Less concentrated to more concentrated solutions
  • Isotonic
  • Hypertonic
  • Hypotonic

Fig. 12.13
31
Marine versus freshwater fish
Fig. 12.14
32
Adaptations to marine life
  • Dissolved gases
  • Animals extract dissolved oxygen (O2) from
    seawater through gills

Fig. 12.15
33
Adaptations to marine life
  • Waters transparency
  • Many marine organisms see well
  • Some marine organisms are nearly transparent to
    avoid predation

34
Adaptations to marine life
  • Camouflage through color patterns
  • Countershading
  • Disruptive coloring

Fig. 12.17a
Fig. 12.17b
35
Adaptations to marine life
  • Water pressure
  • Increases about 1 atmosphere (1 kg/cm2) with
    every 10 m (33 ft) deeper
  • At 1000 m, pressure 100 atm (100 kg/cm2)
  • Many marine organisms do not have inner air
    pockets
  • Collapsible rib cage (e.g., sperm whale)
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