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Ocean Biomes

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Marine Biome ... Ocean Biomes – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ocean Biomes


1
Ocean Biomes
2
Oceans Locations
  • Oceans 71 of earths surface

3
Major Zones
  • Intertidal
  • Sandy Beaches
  • Rocky Shores
  • Estuaries
  • Coastal Sub-tidal
  • Kelp Forests
  • Coral Reefs
  • Open Ocean
  • Divided by depth

4
Marine plants
  • Phytoplankton, Algae
  • Non-vascular plants drift or holdfasts
  • Produce 60 of atmospheric O2
  • Absorb CO2 slows Global Warming

5
Marine Animals
  • Absorb O2 through gills or by diffusion
  • Most Ectothermic
  • 95 invertebrates
  • Adaptations to deal with cold, pressure, low
    oxygen, low visibility
  • Sound and smell major senses

6
Sandy Beach
7
Sandy Beach
8
Sandy Beaches
  • Harsh conditions, highly variable
  • wave action
  • shifting sands
  • Diversity LOW
  • High population s
  • Adaptations to deal with waves
  • Adaptations against drying out

9
Sandy Beaches
  • Functions
  • Provides a habitat
  • Acts as a rest spot
  • Recreation

10
Animals
Yellow-eyed penguin
11
Rocky Shores
  • Drastic changes in pH, salinity
  • Tidepools submerged then dry

12
  • Moderate Diversity
  • Moderate population s
  • Many move between zones
  • LOTS of scavengers

13
Algae
  • Shallow Calcareous red algae, Green algae
  • Deeper brown, some red
    algae

14
Adaptations
  • To hold tightly to rocks
  • Scuttle out of the way
  • Bend" with the waves
  • Survive drastic chemical
    physical changes

15
Rocky Shores
  • Major function is for erosion protection

16
Animals
17
Estuaries
18
EstuariesCaliforniaSanta Monica Bay, San
Francisco, and Morro Bay
19
Estuaries
  • Found at deltas, edges of bays
  • fed by streams rivers, high siltation
  • mixture of fresh salt

20
Estuaries
  • Flat, prone to succession
  • Low tidal change, nutrient build-up
  • Temperate to cold waters

21
Estuaries
  • DO2 can be anaerobic in mud can accumulate
    toxins
  • Mud, clay, silt
  • Composition determines community
  • True soil on edges
  • Nursery for
  • invertebrates and
  • fish

22
Estuaries
  • HIGH Diversity HIGH Population s
  • HIGHEST bioproductivity
  • Many decomposers

23
Estuaries
  • Critical bulking up and rest station for
    migratory sea and shorebirds

This is a VERY important Function and is one of
the reasons why estuary conservation is so
important.
24
Animals
  • Adapted to changes in pH, salinity

25
Plants
  • Adapted to high salinity
  • Rapid growth, high turn-over rate, e.g. eel grass

26
Mangroves are woody, specialized types of trees
of the tropics that can live on the edge, where
rainforests meet oceans. Found on sheltered
coastlines and river deltas, they grow in
brackish wetlands between land and sea where
other plants can't grow.
They protect the coastline and prevent erosion by
collecting sediment from the rivers and streams
and slowing down the flow of water. There are
about 39.3 million acres of mangrove forests in
the warm coastlines of tropical oceans all over
the world. More than 10.5 million acres, or 27
of mangrove forests are found in Southeast Asia.
27
Mangrove Swamps
  • Coastal wetland that occurs only in warm climates
    - Mangroves cannot grow in areas that freeze more
    than 2 days/year
  • Mangroves can either be tree or shrub, 800
    species total, 10 live in US
  • Trees, shrubs, variety of birds, insects,
    mammalsmangroves are just good habitats
  • So have high diversity and high population
    numbers

28
Mangroves
  • Adaptations
  • Low O2 in swamps
  • Mangroves have roots that grow up and stick out
    of the water
  • Some have roots that grow high on the trunk, look
    like stilts

29
Importance
  • Essential for flood control, shoreline
    stabilization nursery of the ocean
  • 80 world-wide lost to
  • agricultural drainage
  • marinas
  • reclaimed as land for development
  • We lose 308,875 acres every year
  • How can this be stopped?

30
Kelp Forests
  • Temperate near-shore waters below 72oF
  • Surface to 160 ft
  • Good currents upwelling
  • Variable by season

31
Kelp Forests
  • Moderate Diversity
  • HIGH Population s
  • Many generalists, move between canopy layers and
    substrate schooling
  • HIGH productivity
  • Provides excellent habitat camouflage

32
Kelp
  • Green algaeshallow
  • Brown algae (kelp) to 150 ft
  • Red algae to 600 ft
  • Kelp provides vertical orientation
  • schooling species on edges

33
Garibaldi
Animals of the Kelp Forest
West Coast Sea Nettle Jellyfish
Ocean Sunfish
Brown Cup Coral
Light Bulb Tunicates
34
Coral Reefs
35
Coral Reefs
  • Corals are marine organisms that exist as small
    sea anemone-like polyps, typically in colonies of
    many identical individuals.
  • Includes the important reef builders that are
    found in tropical oceans, which secrete calcium
    carbonate to form a hard skeleton.
  • A coral "head", commonly perceived to be a single
    organism, is formed from many individual but
    genetically identical polyps, each polyp only a
    few millimeters in diameter.
  • Over thousands of generations, the polyps lay
    down a skeleton that is characteristic of their
    species.
  • Reproduce through both asexual and sexual
    reproduction

36
Coral Reefs
  • Found in tropical near-shore waters, surface to
    300 Ft
  • Little variability, constant temps above 72o F
  • Coral cemented together by algae, provides habitat

37
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38
Coral Reefs
  • HIGH diversity
  • LOW population s
  • VERY sensitive to environmental change

39
Coral Reefs
  • In pairs, schooling species, solitary predators,
    filter feeders
  • Specialists
  • Toxic, venomous

40
Open Ocean
  • High variability in surface waters from waves,
    currents
  • Temp becomes
  • constant in abyss
  • PRESSURE increases with depth

A Hawksbill sea turtle and a red octopus
41
Zones
42
Adaptations
  • Species need to hang "in space
  • Surface fast-swimming predators
  • Abyss slow moving, mushy bodies,
    bioluminescent, huge teeth
  • Need to cope with pressure, scarce food and sex
    partners

43
Ecology
  • LOW diversity
  • HIGH population s
  • Sporadic schools in surface waters, solitary
    individuals deeper down
  • Diversity decreases w/depth - many specialists
  • Phytoplankton, Chemotrophs producers

44
Human Uses for Oceans
  • Transportation
  • Tidal Energy
  • Minerals
  • Fossil Fuels
  • Fishing
  • Medicine
  • Desalinization plants
  • Recreation

45
Human Impacts on Oceans
  • Overharvesting
  • Pollution
  • Dynamiting Chloroxing reefs

46
Human Impacts on Oceans
  • Alteration of coastline
  • jetties, breakwaters
  • Loss of biodiversity
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