Title: Chapter 13 - Life in the Ocean
1Chapter 13 - Life in the Ocean
2characteristics of life
- require energy
- can capture, store, and transmit
- ultimately from sun, earth heat or chemical
reactions - highly ordered
- reproduce
- change through time
- adapt to environment
3capture and flow of energy
- cell
- energy capture
- from sunlight
- from food
4capture and flow of energy
- trophic relationships
- autotrophs
- primary producers
- convert energy to food
- heterotrophs
- consumers decomposers
- consume food produced by others
5capture and flow of energy
- depicting trophic relationships
- trophic levels
- food chain - simple
- food web - complex
- trophic pyramid
6physical (abiotic) factors
- transparency
- dissolved nutrients
- temperature
- exothermic/poiklilothermic/cold-blooded
- endothermic/homeothermic/warm-blooded
- salinity
- extremes - 6 to 30 ppt
7physical (abiotic) factors
- dissolved gases
- cold water holds more
- oxygen
- not easily dissolved
- avg - 6 ml/l
- plants use at night
- large blooms can result in low oxygen levels esp.
in closed basins
- CO2
- easily dissolved
- avg - 50 ml/l
- 60x that of the atmo.
- deep water has the most
- consumers
- downwelling cold water
- dissolving organisms
8physical (abiotic) factors
- pH
- avg seawater is about 8
- below CCD
- about 7.6
- lowered by CO2
- hydrostatic pressure
- animals equalize inside and outside pressure
- effects of high pressure
- gasses more soluble
- enzymes dont work
- metabolic rates higher
9physical (abiotic) factors
- factor interplay
- factors are interlinked
- also influenced by life
10biotic factors
- diffusion
- tendancy of a concentration of a substance to
even out - from high concentration to low concentration
- faster in warm water
- across membranes
11biotic factors
- osmosis
- diffusion of water through a semi-permeable
membrane - diffusion from high concentration of water to low
concentration of water
12biotic factors - osmosis
- isotonic
- concentration inside concentration outside
- Some animals in ocean
- hypotonic
- concentration of salts inside gt concentration of
salts outside - concentration of water inside lt concentration of
water outside - marine animal in fresh water
- animal gains water
- hypertonic
- concentration of salts inside lt concentration of
salts outside - concentration of water inside gt concentration of
water outside - animal in Great Salt Lake
- freshwater and some marine animal in ocean
- animal loses water
13biotic factors - osmosis
- examples and exceptions
- animal with salt concentration less than seawater
drinks seawater - cells lose water to even concentration in the
blood - animal dehydrates
- fish (?evolved in fresh water?)
- internal salinity 1/3 that of the ocean
- lose water through gills
- solution drink seawater and excrete salts
- seabirds - excrete salt through glands in skull
- salmon - large kidneys remove excess water during
freshwater phase of life, able to recover salts
from food and urine
14biotic factors
- active transport
- movement of dissolved substances from low
concentration to high concentration - requires energy
15biotic factors
- surface-to-volume ratio
- smaller cells are more efficient at transport and
diffusion - spherical cell
- surface area increases with the square of its
diameter - volume increases with the cube of its diameter
- cells divide to maintain proper ratio
16biotic factors
- gravity and bouyancy
- density differences
- water 1 g/cm3
- seawater 1.025 g/cm3
- marine fish 1.07 g/cm3
- adaptations
- gas bladders
- strong muscles
- less dense solutions in body ie.NH3Cl
- food stored in waxes and oils
17biotic factors
- viscosity and movement
- reduce drag to swim
- increase drag to stop sinking
- large surface area to volume ratio
- ornamentation
- warm water less viscous than cold
- water movement
- use of currents to move
18classification of environment
19classification of environment
- location
- pelagic - open water
- neritic - shallow
- oceanic - deep water
- epipelagic
- mesopelagic
- bathypelagic
- abyssopelagic
- benthic
- supralittoral - above the tidal range
- littoral
- sublittoral
- inner - near shore
- outer - to the edge of the shelf
- bathyal
- abyssal
- Hadal
20Marine Communities
- organization
- organism
- population
- community
- ecosystem
- ecosphere
21Marine Communities
- organisms place
- habitat - organisms physical location within a
community - niche - organisms place (duties) within a habitat
22Marine Communities
- physical and biological factors
- examples
- temp, pressure, salinity
- crowding, predation, grazing, parasitism, shading
from light, waste substances, competition for
resources (food, oxygen, nutrients) - limiting factors
- limits chances for success
- different for different animals
- steno- tolerant of a narrow range
- eury- tolerant of a wide range
23Marine Communities competition
- within a species
- between species
- overlapping niches
- results
- survival and reproduction of the most successful
- less successful moves or dies off
- growth rate and carrying capacity
24distribution of organisms
- population density
- species diversity
- distribution patterns
- random
- rare
- same conditions must exist throughout the
community - clustered
- most common
- individuals of a spies cluster near optimal
conditions - uniform - vary rare
- motile vs sessile
25species interaction
- trophic
- symbiotic
- often species specific
- types
- mutualism
- commensalism - symbiont benefits, host is not
harmed - parasitism - host is harmed
- dependencies
- one species depends on another (for food) but
they do not live in extended contact
26change in marine communities
- usually slow
- marine conditions rarely change rapidly
- some rapid processes - volcanoes, earthquakes,
landslides - climax community
- stable
- long established
- reestablished through succession
- may be slightly different
27evolution
- development of complex life forms
- through mutation and selection
- natural selection - survival of the
- fittest (for a niche)
- luckiest
- combination
- species
- reproductively isolated group of living organisms
- speciation extinction
- divergent convergent evolution
- phyletic gradualism punctuated equilibrium
28Organic evolution observations
- sedimentary rocks
- deposited in layers
- oldest layers are on the bottom
- layers may be correlated with other sedimentary
layers - fossil record
- oldest rocks have only simple fossils
- younger rocks have more organisms similar to
those living today (at levels from species to
kingdom) - fossils record includes appearances and
extinctions of many species
29Organic evolution observations
- geographic distribution of organisms
- many organisms are similar but unique
- they are confined to specific areas (islands,
continents, water bodies) - includes modern and fossil organisms
- distribution has changed through time
30Organic evolution observations
- anatomy
- cell structure is similar in all living organisms
- embryology - embryos of mammals, birds, and
reptiles are very similar - homologus organs - similar organs, different
functions - vestigal organs - no purpose in one, purpose in
another
31Organic evolution observations
- genetics
- structure of DNA and RNA is the same in all
living organisms - similarity in genetic code varies between
organisms (some organisms are more similar than
others)
32Organic evolution conclusions
- the characteristics of populations of living
organisms have changed through time - life has become more complex
- life has become more diverse
- this is excepted as a factual observation
- all life is related
33Natural selection observations
- populations of organisms display a variety of
characteristics - characteristics may be useful, not useful, or
detrimental - the variety is reflected in an organisms genes
- mutations
- produced by random alteration of genes and passed
to offspring during reproduction - provides variety
34Natural selection observations
- artificial selection
- domesticated plants and animals can be bred to
favor certain characteristics - populations of wild and domestic plants and
animals develop characteristics that favor their
survival
35Natural selection observations
- the natural environment
- organisms with favorable characteristics for
their niche are more likely to thrive and
reproduce - organisms with unfavorable characteristics are
less likely to thrive and reproduce - a new niche or stress on an existing niche will
enhance selection
36Natural selection conclusion
- the natural environment provides conditions that
result in evolution through the process of
natural selection
37Evolutionary trends
- speciation extinction
- divergent convergent evolution
- phyletic gradualism punctuated equilibrium
38Natural selection speciation
- a population has a gene pool
- members of the population interbreed
- the population may become isolated from others of
a species - development of niches resource partitioning
- migration
- development of physical barriers
- populations may be selected
- by stress
- by opportunity
- isolation may result in genetic divergence
39Natural selection extinction
- stress on limiting factors reduce or destroy a
population - evolution into subsequent species
(pseudo-extinction)
40Phylogeny
- relationships between organisms can be determined
using - genetics
- anatomy physiology
- Fossils
41Evolutionary trends
- speciation extinction
- divergent convergent evolution
- phyletic gradualism punctuated equilibrium
42primary productivity
- photo- and chemo-synthesis
43primary productivity
- measurement
- grams of carbon bound (appx 10 of producers
mass) - per square meter of ocean surface
- per year
- sampling
- measure oxygen produced in a suspended set of
bottles - follow carbon through the process (in the lab)
- breakdown
- phytoplankton - 90-98
- seaweeds - 2-10
- chemosynthesis - 1
- production
- avg - 75 to 150 g(C)/m2/yr
44primary productivity - limiting factors
- water - plenty
- CO2 - plenty
- nutrients
- non-conservative - change with bio activity
- nitrates, phosphates, silicates
- lost to organisms then to the depths
- replaced by runoff, upwelling, atmosphere
45primary productivity - limiting factors
- light
- quantity - can have too much or too little
- quality - color
- red and violet are best absorbed by green
- quantity and quality vary with
- depth
- red is absorbed near the surface
- concentration of organisms
- concentration of sediment
- adaptations accessory pigments - absorb light
for chlorophyll
46Plankton
- floaters and weak swimmers
- producers and consumers
- collection and study
- plankton nets
- microscopic
47phytoplankton
- autotrophs
- depth of greatest productivity
- 20 m at noon
- 5-10 m daily
- compensation depth
- energy consumed energy produced
- go below - die
48global distribution of productivity
- polar
- low sun angle
- dark winter, long days in summer
- upwelling
- seasonal blooms
- temperate and subpolar
- good mix of light and nutrients
- seasonal
- near cont. shelves
- upwelling runoff
- 1 g(C)/m2/day
- tropics
- much sunlight CO2
- low nutrients
- 30 g(C)/m2/yr
- reefs - tightly cycle nutrient through the reef -
more productive
49phytoplankton - dinoflagellates
- swim with whirling flagella
- reproduce through fission
- nutrients can causes blooms
- red tides
- some are bioluminescent
50phytoplankton - diatoms
- SiO2 shell (frustule)
- two perforated valves
- highly energy efficient
- store energy as oils - for floating
- some are benthic
- reproduction
- fission - generate new shell inside the parent
- smaller with each generation
- size gets too small
- sexually reproduce new offspring with no shell
51phytoplankton - nanoplankton
- very small
- coccolithopores - carbonate shells made of plates
- chalk - silicoflagellates
52Plants
- vascular
- sap
- transport substances through vessels
- non-vascular
- algae
- seaweed
53Plant structure
- problems
- shock
- abrasion
- water drag
- covered with a mucus-like substance
- lubricates
- retards drying
- deters grazers
54Plant structure
- fluids
- algae - isotonic
- angiosperms - hypotonic
- thermal stress - heat
- speeds metabolic rate
- may not have enough oxygen available at night
- damages pigments
- anchorage/substrate
- algae - solid base
- rooted plants - unconsolidated base
- depth
- less than 2 of ocean floor is shallow enough
55Plants - seaweeds
- thallus (plant)
- blade
- stipe
- gas bladder
- holdfast
- reproduction
- alternate sexual and asexual
- zonation due to depth other factors
- classification
- chlorophytes - green
- phaeophytes
- tan or brown
- kelp
- some are free-foating
- rhodophytes
- red
- most of worlds seaweeds
56Plants - angiosperms
- flowering plants
- moved from land to water
- live at the surface
- structure
- leaves
- stem
- roots extract nutrients from the substrate
- types
- sea grasses
- mangroves
57animals - classification
- artificial systems
- exterior similarities
- functions, colors, etc.
- natural systems
- originally based on structural and biochemical
similarities - now based on DNA
- Linnaeus
- K, P, sub-P, C, O, F, G, S
- scientific name
- genus-species
- permanent
- unchanging words - usually Latin
- internationally monitored
58animals - key events
- oxygen in the ocean and atmosphere
- 2 BYA - 1 oxygen
- 400 MYA - 20 oxygen
- thanks to photsynthetic oxygen
- metazoans - multi-cellular
- soft-bodies - first appx. 600 MYA
- Ediacara Hills, Aust.
- bizzare
- segmented worms
- shelled animals - first appx. 550 MYA
- arthropods - trilobites
59zooplankton
- consumers
- most animal groups represented
- create oxygen minimum zone just below the
well-lighted surface zone - size
- most less than 1 cm
- some gt 1 cm - macroplankton
- life cycle
- holoplankton - spend entire lives as plankton
- meroplankton - spend part of life as plankton
60Protista
- (zooplankton)
- foraminifera
- amoeba-like
- carbonate shells
- radiolarians
- amoeba-like
- spike-like pseudopods
- amoebas
61P. Porifera
- sponges
- suspension feeders
- structure
- collar cells - capture and digest
- amoeboid cells - transport food
- surface cells - protect
- spicules and spongin - support
62P. Cnidaria
- jellyfish, anemones, corals
- radial symmetry
- structure
- stinging cells - capture food, repel predators
- some nerve cells
- mouth/anus
- digestive cavity
- form - polyp or medusa
63P. Platyhelminthes
- flat worms - tape worms
- parasitic free-living
- bilateral symmetry
- structure
- mouth/anus
- nervous system, brian, eyespots
- no resp or excret systems
64P. Nematoda
- roundworms
- structure
- flow-through digestive system
- important sediment-feeders
65P. Annelida
- segmented worms
- structure
- head
- flow-through digest
- segment with circ, excret, nerv, musc, repro
systems
66P. Mollusca
- characteristics
- soft body
- most have a shell
- bilateral symmetry
- flow-through digest
- circ, excret, nerv, musc, repro systems
- classes
- polyplacophora
- gastropoda
- bivalvia
- cephalopoda
67P. Arthropoda
- characteristics
- exoskeleton
- must molt to grow
- striated muscle
- articulated
- classes
- insecta - poorly represented at sea
- Crustacea
- crabs, krill, lobsters, barnacles
- copepods
- zooplankton
- crustaceans
- 70 of animals
68P. Echinodermata
- five-way symmetry
- start as bilaterally symmetrical
- classes
- asteroidea - sea stars
- tube feet
- water vascular system - locomotion feeding
- ophiuroidea - brittle stars
- widely distributed
- echinoidea - sea urchins and sand dollars
- holothuriodea - sea cucumbers
69other Phyla
- Bryozoa - important ancient reef builders
- Brachiopoda - very important bivalved shell
animals in the Paleozoic - Hemichordata - important transitional phyla
70P. Chordata
- invert
- tunicates - suspension feeders
- lancelets
- example amphioxis
- transitional species
71Fish (vertebrates)
- agantha
- jawless fishes
- lampreys, hagfish
- condrichthyes
- cartiliginous fishes
- sharks, skates, rays, chimera
72Fish (vertebrates)
- osteichthyes - bony fishes
- shape - antidrag
- movement - eel-like or hinged-tail
- maintenance of level - swimming or gas bladder
- gas exchange - gill membranes
- osmotic problems (advanced fish) - hypotonic
(lose water) - drink water excrete salt -
conservative kidneys - feeding defense - sight, hearing (inc. lateral
line), coloration (cryptic coloring and
top/bottom counter-shading), schooling
73amphibians
- none exclusively marine
- adapted to land and freshwater
- permeable skin
74reptiles
- characterisics
- lungs
- scales
- salt glands
- groups
- sea turtles
- 8 species
- all endangered
- streamlined shells, flippered feet
- marine crocodiles - one species, in tropical W
Pacific - marine lizards - only Galapagos marine iguana
- sea snakes
- 50 known species
- highly venomous
75birds
- sea birds - 270 species
- warm-blooded
- characteristics
- salt-excreting glands
- avoid land except for breeding
- obtain almost all food from the sea
- groups
- Tubenoses - albatrosses petrels
- pelicans et. al.
- gulls puffins
- penguins
76mammals
- characteristics of marine mammals
- streamlined
- warm-blooded
- resp. system modified to collect and retain large
quantities of oxygen
77Mammal orders
- cetacea
- evolved from early ungulates (horses and sheep)
- horizontal tail flukes that move up and down
- toothed whales - orca, dolphins, porpoises - echo
location - baleen whales - filter-feeders
- carnivora
- pinnipedia - seals, sea lions, walruses
- fissipedia - sea otters, polar bears
- sirenia - mantees
78rocky intertidal
- problems
- wave shock
- wetting and drying
- land and water predators
- daily and annual sediment movement
- benefits
- lots of food
- stirred up food and gasses
- many niches
- very diverse
- zoned
79sand and cobble beaches
- problems
- as above
- loose bottom
- moving sand
- abrasive
- mixed with food
- much less habitable
80salt marshes and estuaries
- salinity can vary greatly
- salty - brackish - fresh
- vertically and horizontally
- leads to complex zonation
- isolation at low tide
- raises salinity
- raises temp
- estuaries
- highly diverse and productive
- marine nurseries
81open ocean
- top 200 meters
- 83 of biomass
- almost all productivity
- deep scattering layer
- top of the dark zone
- move up to feed at night
- can see shadows of prey above
- may have light organs to mask own shadow
- bathypelagic
- little food available
- bizarre animals
- little known
82deep sea floor
- dark
- cold
- slightly hyper saline
- weak currents
- organisms
- blind
- many scavangers, some predators
- low metabolic rate
- may eat less than once per year
- may live to be 100
- large
- fragile
83vent communities
- discovered in 1977
- chemosynthetic producers
- superhot water (350EC)
- some animals (tube worms, clams) house
chemosynthetic bacteria for food
84reefs
- materials are tightly cycled
- corals
- other animals
- types
- fringing
- barrier
- atolls