Title: Aquatic Biomes
1Aquatic Biomes
2Water on the Earth
- 75 - 78 of the Earths surface is covered in
water
3How much freshwater?
- Of all the water available on Earth
- Only 3 is freshwater
- Of the 3 freshwater, 2 is tied up in glaciers
and icebergs - Only leaving less than 1 available to humans.
4Types of Life in An Aquatic Biome
5What factors influence the kind of life an
aquatic biome contains?
- Salinity
- Depth (Sunlight)
- Speed of water flow
- Dissolved oxygen levels
6Major types of aquatic biomes
- Salt Water
- Estuaries
- Coastlines
- Coral Reefs
- Coastal Marshes
- Mangrove Swamps
- Oceans
- May be brackish
- Fresh Water
- Streams
- Rivers
- Lakes
- Ponds
- Wetlands (inland)
7Limnology
- The study of fresh water and its ecosystems
- The study of freshwater ecosystems can be divided
into 2 systems - 1. Lentic standing water
- (little or no current)
- 2. Lotic flowing water
8Examples of Lentic Systems
- Standing water
- Lakes
- Ponds
- Wetlands
- Marshes
- Swamps
- bogs
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10Lakes
- Oligotrophic poorly nourished
- Eutrophic richly nourished
11Examples of Lotic Systems
- Moving water
- Rivers
- Streams
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13Life Found in Aquatic Systems
14Phytoplankton
- Plant Plankton
- Free Floating
- Microscopic
- Cynobacteria or algae
- Producers
- Contain cholorphyll - photosynthetic
- Support most aquatic food chains and food webs
15Did you know????
- Plants in the ocean produce over half the world's
oxygen. - The most important plants in the ocean are too
small to be seen without a microscope. - They float near the surface and drift with the
currents, so they have been named phytoplankton
(phytoplant, planktondrifter). - Phytoplankton are the 'grass' of the sea. Where
they grow there is food for marine animals. - Ocean color tells you how much phytoplankton
there is in the water.
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17Zooplankton
- Animal Plankton
- Non-photosynthetic
- Consumers (herbivores)
- Feed on phytoplankton
- Single Celled Protozoa to larger invertebrates
such as jellyfish - Many zooplankton are larval stages of familiar
animals
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19Nekton
Strong Swimmers Consumers Fish, turtles, Whales
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21Benthos
- Bottom Dwellers
- Anchor to one spot barnacles, oysters
- Burrow in mud or sand worms
- Walk on bottom Lobsters, crabs
- Habitats
- Intertidal zones, rocky shores, tide pools
- Muddy Sandy communities
- Deep ocean/ coral reefs
- Hydrothermal vent areas
- archaebacteria
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23Decomposers
- Break down organic compounds into simple
nutrients that can be used by producers - Break down dead bodies and waste
24Characteristics of an Aquatic Biome
25- Have less pronounced and fixed physical
boundaries - Makes it difficult to count and manage
populations - due to the size of the ocean and many organisms
are largely hidden from view
26Catch and release
Tagging with electronic monitors
Acoustics used to measure Krill Populations
27Characteristics of an Aquatic Biome
- Have more complex and longer food chains and food
webs
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29Ocean Biomes
30High tide
Sun
Coastal Zone
Open Sea
Sea level
Low tide
Photosynthesis
Euphotic Zone
Estuarine Zone
Continental shelf
Bathyal Zone
Twilight
Abyssal Zone
Darkness
Fig. 6-5, p. 130
31Biological Zones in the Open SeaLight Rules
- Euphotic zone brightly lit surface layer.
- Nutrient levels low, dissolved O2 high,
photosynthetic activity. - Bathyal zone dimly lit middle layer.
- No photosynthetic activity, zooplankton and fish
live there and migrate to euphotic zone to feed
at night. - Abyssal zone dark bottom layer.
- Very cold, little dissolved O2.
32Advantages of living in the ocean
33Physical support from water buoyancy
Organisms take advantage of water's buoyancy to
transport themselves to nearby or distant
habitats with little energy expenditure
34Fairly constant temperature
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36Nourishment from dissolved nutrients
37Areas of pronounced upwelling
- -Deep oceanic currents colliding with sharp
coastal shelves - Temperature differences / changes
- Surface Winds
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39Water Availability
- Oceans cover 139,400,000 square miles of the
Earths surface - The average depth of the oceans is 12,238 feet
40Easy dispersement of organisms, larvae and eggs
Water propulsion
Water propulsion
41Hydrofoils - use of flippers
Up/Down movement of pectoral fins
42- A big difference between fish and dolphins is
that a fish's tail moves from side to side and a
dolphin's moves up and down.
43The more slender the body shape, the faster the
movement
44Advantages
- Less exposure to harmful radiation
- Dilution and dispersion of pollutants
45Disadvantages
- Can tolerate a narrow range of temperatures
- Exposure to dissolved pollutants
- Fluctuating populations size for many species
- Dispersion separates many aquatic offspring from
parents
46Why are oceans important?
- Covers 71-75 of earths surface
- Make up 99.5 of earths habitable volume
- Contain 250,000 known species of plant and
animals - Provide important and ecological and economic
services
47Ecological Services
48Ecological Services
- Climate moderation
- Carbon dioxide absorption
- Nutrient cycling
- Reduced storm impact (mangrove swamps, estuaries,
barrier islands) - Habitats and nurseries for species (shrimp, crab,
oysters, clams, fish) - Genetic resources and biodiversity
49Mangrove Swamps (Forest)
- Mangrove swamps are found along tropical
seacoasts on both sides of the equator
50Estuaries
51Barrier Islands
52Economic Services
53Food
54Pharmaceuticals
Algae Astaxanthin is a powerful natural
antioxidant / dietary supplement
55Transportation
- Ocean transport is the backbone of internal trade
56Coastal Habitats and Employment for Humans
57Recreation
58Offshore Oil and Natural Gas / Minerals
59Coastal Zones
60What is a coastal zone?
- The coastal zone is the warm, nutrient rich,
shallow water from high tide area on land to the
edge of the continental shelf. - Contains 90 of all marine species
- Site of most commercial fisheries
- Ample supply of sunlight and nutrients
61Estuaries / Coastal Wetlands
- Part of coastal zone
- Brackish (mixture of salt and freshwater)
- Usually due to the movement of the tides
- Salinity and temperature vary due to
- Daily tides
- Seasonal variations and its affect of water flow
- Unpredictable flows of water from flooding or
storms - Constant movement of nutrients due to flow of
water
62Estuaries / Coastal Wetlands
- Covered with water all or part of the year
- River mouths (deltas)
- Inlets
- Bays
- Sounds
- Mangrove forest swamps
- Salt marshes
63Major life zones in an ocean
64Continental Rise
65Oceans
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