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ENVI 21 Life in the Ocean

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Pelagic forms generally non-motile ... Two basic body shapes ... Reduced body size. Structural elaborations increase drag. Formation of chains ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ENVI 21 Life in the Ocean


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  • Phytoplankton
  • Over 4000 described species
  • Bacillariophyceae (Diatoms)
  • Dominant in temperate and high-latitude waters
  • Prefer well-mixed, nutrient-rich conditions
  • Pelagic and benthic forms
  • Pelagic forms generally non-motile
  • Unicellular, though some may form chains, which
    then may form mats
  • Test composed of two silica valves
  • Tests are important components of marine
    sediments in some areas - diatomaceous oozes
  • An ooze is any sediment that contains more than
    30 tests, the rest typically terrigenous

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Fig. 2.1
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  • Phytoplankton
  • Bacillariophyceae (Diatoms)
  • Two basic body shapes
  • Pennate Elongate, typically motile, mostly
    benthic (Exception Nitzschia)
  • Centric Mostly planktonic (Ex Coscinodiscus,
    Chaetoceros)

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  • Phytoplankton
  • Bacillariophyceae (Diatoms)
  • Planktonic forms typically non-motile with
    anti-sinking mechanisms
  • Reduced body size
  • Structural elaborations increase drag
  • Formation of chains
  • Reduction of internal ion concentration
  • Sequestration of low-density ions, e.g. NH4
  • Production and storage of oils
  • Many of these mechanisms are generally applicable
    to planktonic organisms
  • Living cells typically sink 0-30 m d-1, while
    dead cells may sink twice as rapidly
  • Senescent or near-senescent cells may
  • Lose ability to regulate ion content or sequester
    low-density ions
  • Lose ability to produce and store oils
  • Release a chemical (e.g. a polysaccharide) that
    lowers viscosity of water immediately surrounding
    cell

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  • Phytoplankton
  • Dinophyceae (Dinoflagellates)
  • Motile forms possess two flagella
  • Not all dinoflagellates are motile and not all
    are autotrophic
  • Some lack flagella
  • Some heterotrophic (50)
  • Some mixotrophic (auto- and heterotrophic)
  • Some symbiotic (e.g. zooxanthellae)
  • Two basic forms
  • Thecate Covered with theca made of cellulose
    plates
  • Theca may have spines
  • Athecate Less common

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Fig. 2.3
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  • Phytoplankton
  • Dinophyceae (Dinoflagellates)
  • Important open-water primary producers,
    especially in tropical regions
  • More tolerant of low nutrients and low light than
    diatoms
  • Advantage for thriving under post-diatom-bloom
    conditions
  • Often abundant in summer/autumn following spring
    and summer blooms of diatoms
  • Motility allows individuals to maintain position
    in water column under low-turbulence conditions
  • Motility also allows individuals to spend
    daylight hours in surface waters (light for
    photosynthesis) and night hours in deeper waters
    (nutrients more plentiful)
  • Most abundant phytoplankton in stratified,
    nutrient-poor tropical and subtropical waters

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Thecate species of heterotrophic dinoflagellates
use pallium feeding
Feed on other plankton with a pallium (sac)
extruded from a microtubular basket. Siana and
Montrasor (Eur. J. Phycol. 2005) reported
ingestion rates up to 36 diatoms/ Protoperidinium
vorax /hr Other reports are lower
http//chbr.noaa.gov/pmn/images/PhytoplanktonPics/
Protoperidinium/ProtoperidiniumSEM02.jpg
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  • Protoperidinum feeding on Ceratium furca
  • Arrow shows pallium
  • Arrowheads show multiple Protoperidinium feeding
    on the same prey
  • Olseng, et al. 2002 Mar Ecol Prog Series
  • Other species of dinoflagellates use a tube
    inserted into prey to consume the cytoplasm
  • Only naked dinoflagellate species engulf prey

Olseng, et al. (2002) Mar Ecol Prog Series
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Swimming with bioluminescent dinoflagellates
Campbell and Reece Figure 28.12x2
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Dinoflagellates often cause Harmful Algal Blooms
http//www.whoi.edu/redtide/
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  • Phytoplankton
  • Haptophyceae (Coccolithophorids)
  • Very small (typically less than 20 µm)
  • Covered by calcium carbonate coccoliths
  • Coccoliths may be important components of
    sediments
  • Typically motile at some life stage (have
    flagella)
  • Most species occur in warm water at relatively
    low light intensities
  • Most abundant at depths of ca. 100 m in clear,
    tropical, oceanic water
  • Blooms may cover extensive areas
  • Ex Bloom covering 1000 x 500 km of sea surface
    in North Atlantic (area roughly equivalent in
    size to Great Britain)

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  • Phytoplankton
  • Chrysophyceae (Silicoflagellates)
  • Silica test, usually with spines
  • Single flagellum
  • Relatively rare but more common in colder water
    than tropics
  • Cyanobacteria (Blue-Green Bacteria)
  • Most relatively minor primary producers
  • Certain species may be important in particular
    areas for limited periods of time
  • Some can fix nitrogen (e.g. mats of Oscillatoria)
  • Attribute may explain relatively high abundances
    of Oscillatoria in tropical waters which often
    have low concentrations of nitrogen sources
    generally used by algae (e.g. ammonia, nitrite,
    nitrate)

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Cyanophyceae (Cyanobacteria)
  • Phycoerythrin and phycobilin
  • accesory pigments.
  • Nitrogen Fixation
  • Some symbiotic
  • Some filamentous or colonial
  • Katagnymene spiralis
  • Two colonies of Trichodesmium
  • Aphanizomenon sp. colony note heterocyst (H)
  • Benthic Rivularia atra
  • Lichen Lichina confinis
  • Diatom with cyanobacterial symbiont Richelia
    intracellularis (R)
  • Dinoflagellate with a "collar" specialised for
    Synechococcus (S) cyanobionts.

http//www.bom.hik.se/njasv/mcb.htmlpics20cyano
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  • Phytoplankton
  • Prochlorophytes
  • Very small (0.6-0.8 µm diameter)
  • Components of nanoplankton and picoplankton
  • Resemble bacteria in some respects and algae in
    others
  • Structurally, resemble large chloroplasts with
    internal membranes that facilitate photosynthesis
  • Appear to be closely related to cyanobacteria and
    may be ancestors of modern algae
  • In some areas, e.g. oceanic equatorial Pacific,
    production by prochlorophytes may constitute a
    substantial fraction of total phytoplankton
    chlorophyll (up to 60) and primary production
  • Cell densities may be comparable to those for
    bacteria (ca. 106 ml-1)
  • Phytoplankton community in some areas may change
    from diatom- or dinoflagellate-dominated
    assemblages to prochlorophyte-dominated
    assemblages
  • Shift has profound consequences for entire food
    web

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  • Phytoplankton
  • Prochlorophytes
  • Very small (0.6-0.8 µm diameter)
  • Components of nanoplankton and picoplankton
  • Resemble bacteria in some respects and algae in
    others
  • Structurally, resemble large chloroplasts with
    internal membranes that facilitate photosynthesis
  • Appear to be closely related to cyanobacteria and
    may be ancestors of modern algae
  • In some areas, e.g. oceanic equatorial Pacific,
    production by prochlorophytes may constitute a
    substantial fraction of total phytoplankton
    chlorophyll (up to 60) and primary production
  • Cell densities may be comparable to those for
    bacteria (ca. 106 ml-1)
  • Phytoplankton community in some areas may change
    from diatom- or dinoflagellate-dominated
    assemblages to prochlorophyte-dominated
    assemblages
  • Shift has profound consequences for entire food
    web

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  • Phytoplankton
  • Blooms
  • Occur when conditions become favorable for one
    species or group of phytoplankton
  • Population of that species or group increases
    rapidly and suddenly
  • If bloom species is a dinoflagellate, densities
    sometimes increase so rapidly and reach such high
    levels that reddish-brown pigment they produce
    may color the water and cause a red tide

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http//www.whoi.edu/redtide/
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  • Phytoplankton
  • Blooms
  • Red tides typically become visibly apparent when
    cell concentrations reach 2-8 x 106 cells l-1
  • Cell concentrations may exceed 108 cells l-1
  • As nutrients are depleted and bloom begins to
    break down, bacteria begin to decompose the
    remaining organic material
  • If material is sufficiently abundant, bacterial
    decomposition may deplete oxygen in surface
    waters, negatively impacting local fauna
  • Phenomenon applies to any large phytoplankton
    bloom, not just red tides
  • Red tides may involve species that produce
    pigments but are not toxic or may involve species
    that produce compounds that are toxic to marine
    life

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  • Phytoplankton
  • Blooms
  • Toxin (Saxitoxin) may be
  • Released into water, where it may be consumed
    directly by organisms that graze on phytoplankton
    (e.g. zooplankton) and indirectly at higher
    trophic levels
  • Transmitted from dinoflagellates directly to
    higher organisms, e.g. clams, mussels, scallops,
    oysters, which then may be food for larger
    animals
  • Result of consuming tainted fish or bivalves is
    Paralytic Shellfish Poisoning (PSP) - may be
    fatal
  • Some forms can be extremely toxic
  • Ex Pfiesteria
  • Blooms triggered by coastal pollution
  • Causes extensive fish kills
  • Toxin can cause memory loss in humans

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