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The Benthic Environment

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Substrate (material on the ocean floor where did it come ... Bivalve mollusks. Annelid worms ... Bivalves and other mollusks (infauna) Fiddler ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Benthic Environment


1
The Benthic Environment
2
Benthic Environment Habit Factors to Understand
  • Sunlight penetration (solar energy supply)
  • Water depth
  • Substrate (material on the ocean floor where
    did it come from, what is its composition, what
    is its texture?)
  • Nutrient supply and distribution
  • Current and wave interactions energy from wind
    (atmosphere) or thermohaline circulation
    processes
  • Pressure with depth affects not only what lives
    there (body adaptations) but also the materials
    that can be dissolved in water (carbonate
    compensation depth CCD)

3
Benthic environments
  • Supralittoral
  • Subneritic
  • Littoral zone between high tide and low tide

Fig. 12.19
4
Distribution of benthic organisms
Fig. 15.1
  • High concentration of benthic organisms beneath
    areas of high primary productivity
  • Mainly on continental shelves (within euphotic
    zone)
  • Affected by surface ocean currents and sediment
    fluxes

5
Littoral zoneIntertidal zonation (rocky
shore)
Fig. 15.2 a
6
Benthic organisms on rocky shores
  • Epifauna
  • Sessile - attached to substrate (e.g., marine
    algae)
  • Mobile/Motile - move over seafloor (e.g., crabs,
    snails)
  • Moderate diversity of species
  • Greatest animal diversity at tropical latitudes
  • Greatest algae diversity at mid-latitudes

7
Intertidal zonation (rocky shore)
  • Spray zone (supratidal)
  • Avoid drying out
  • Many animals have shells
  • Few species of marine algae

Fig. 15.2b
8
Intertidal zonation (rocky shore)
  • High tide zone
  • Avoid drying out so animals have shells
  • Marine algaerock weeds with thick cell walls
  • Middle tide zone
  • More types of marine algae
  • Soft-bodied animals
  • Low tide zone
  • Abundant algae
  • Many animals hidden by sea weed and sea grass
  • Crabs abundant in all intertidal zones

9
Littoral ZoneIntertidal zonation (sandy shore)
Fig. 15.8
10
Benthic organisms on sediment-covered shores
  • Similar intertidal zones (littoral zone)
  • Less species diversity
  • Greater number of organisms
  • Mostly infauna
  • Burrow into sediment
  • Microbial communities

11
Benthic organisms on sediment-covered shores
  • Coarse boulder beaches
  • Sand beaches
  • Salt marshes
  • Mud flats
  • Energy level along shore depends on
  • Wave strength
  • Longshore current strength
  • Fine-grained, flat-lying tidal flat more stable
    than high energy sandy beach

12
Sandy beaches
  • Animals burrow (infauna)
  • Bivalve mollusks
  • Annelid worms

Crustaceans Echinoderms Meiofauna (small fauna
that live in between the substrate particles in
both fresh and saltwater)
Fig. 15-9
13
Mud flats
  • Eelgrass and turtle grass common
  • Bivalves and other mollusks (infauna)
  • Fiddler crabs (epifauna)
  • This environment is also supratidal and has
    variable salinity, inundation, and temperature
    variations.

14
Benthic environments
  • Continental shelf
  • Subneritic
  • Littoral
  • Sublittoral
  • Inner
  • Outer

Fig. 12.19
15
Shallow ocean floor
  • Continental shelf ( max 200 meters water depth)
  • Mainly sediment covered (substrate from
    continents and weathered ocean floor)
  • Kelp forest associated with rocky seafloor
  • Lobsters (motile)
  • Oysters (sessile)

16
Coral reefs
  • Most coral polyps live in large colonies
  • Hard calcium carbonate structures
  • Coral reefs limited to
  • Warm (gt 18 C but not hot) seawater
  • Sunlight (for symbiotic algae - photosynthesis)
  • Strong waves or current action
  • Clear seawater filter feeders
  • Normal salinity
  • Hard substrate (anchoring)

17
Reef-building corals
Fig. 15-17
18
Symbiosis of coral and algae
  • Coral reefs made of algae, mollusks, foraminifers
    (zooplankton) as well as corals
  • Hermatypic coral have a mutualistic relationship
    with algae
  • Algae provide food
  • Corals provide nutrients

19
Coral reef zonation
  • Different types of corals at different depths

Fig. 15.19
20
Importance of coral reefs
  • Largest structures created by living organisms
  • Great Barrier Reef, Australia, more than 2000 km
    (1250 m) long
  • Great diversity of species
  • Important tourist locales
  • Fisheries
  • Reefs protect shorelines

21
Humans and coral reefs
  • Activities such as fishing, tourist collecting,
    sediment influx due to shore development harm
    coral reefs
  • Sewage discharge and agricultural fertilizers
    increase nutrients in reef waters
  • Hermatypic corals thrive at low nutrient levels
  • Phytoplankton overwhelm at high nutrient levels
  • Bioerosion of coral reef by algae-eating organisms

22
Crown-of-thorns starfish and reefs
  • Sea star eats coral polyps
  • Outbreaks (greatly increased numbers) decimate
    reefs

Fig. 15.21
23
Benthic environments
  • Deep ocean benthic environments
  • Suboceanic
  • Bathyal
  • Abyssal
  • Hadal

Fig. 12.19
24
Benthic organisms on the deep seafloor
  • Little known habitat difficult to observe
  • Bathyal, abyssal, hadal zones
  • Little to no sunlight (aphotic zone)
  • About the same temperature
  • About the same salinity
  • Oxygen content relatively high
  • Pressure can be enormous
  • Bottom currents usually slow (thermohaline
    currents)

25
Food sources for deep seafloor
  • Most food from surface waters
  • Low supply (consumed before reaches deep water)

Fig. 15.22
26
Deep-sea hydrothermal vent biocommunities
  • First discovered 1977
  • Chemosynthesis inorganic processes
  • Archaea use sea floor chemicals to make organic
    matter
  • Tube worms
  • Giant clams and mussels
  • Crabs
  • Microbial mats
  • Hot water and chemicals from magma at depth
    provide energy and materials for food manufacture

27
Global hydrothermal vent fields
Fig. 15.24
28
Deep-sea hydrothermal vent biocommunities
  • Vents active for years or decades
  • Animals species similar at widely separated vents
  • Larvae drift from site to site
  • Dead whale hypothesis
  • Large carcasses may be stepping stone for larvae

29
Deep-sea hydrothermal vent biocommunities
  • Life may have originated at hydrothermal vents
  • Chemosynthesis also occurs at low temperature
    seeps
  • Hypersaline seeps
  • Hydrocarbon seeps
  • Subduction zone seeps

30
Beneath the sea floor
  • Deep biosphere
  • Microbes (bacteria, viruses, and smaller) live in
    pore fluids
  • Might represent much of Earths total biomass
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