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Marine Ecology

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Chapter 9 Marine Ecology Chapter 9 Marine Ecology Bathypelagic Deep water where it is completely dark Abyssopelagic Water near the sea floor Hadopelagic Water in deep ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Marine Ecology


1
Chapter 9
  • Marine Ecology

2
Habitat
  • The place where an organism resides

3
Ecology
  • The study of the interaction of organisms with
    their environment

4
Biotic
  • Living

5
Abiotic
  • Non-living

6
Resources
  • Anything an organism needs to survive
  • Trouble when short

7
Nutrients
  • Required substances other than O2, CO2, H2O,
    sunlight

8
Growth Curve
  • A graph representing growth over time

9
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10
Self Regulation
  • Growth rate depends on its own population due to
    limited resources

11
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12
Natural Selection
  • Survival of the fittest

13
Evolution
  • Genetic changes over many generations due to
    natural selection

14
Competition
  • Fighting over resources

15
Competitive Exclusion
  • When one species becomes extinct due to losing
    out in the struggle for resources

16
Resource Partitioning
  • Sharing resources
  • Each species find a way to get its share of
    resources

17
Ecological Niche
  • How each species fits in
  • Unique methods that species adapt to

18
Predation
  • One organism eating another

19
Predator
  • The organism doing the eating

20
Prey
  • The organism getting eaten

21
Carnivore
  • Meat eater

22
Herbivore
  • Plant or algae eater

23
Coevolution
  • When two species are involved in competition or
    predation, both improve

24
Symbiosis
  • Living together in some association

25
Symbiont
  • Smaller partner in a symbiotic relationship

26
Host
  • Larger partner in a symbiotic relationship

27
Types of Symbiosis
  • Mutualism
  • Commensalism
  • Parasitism

28
Mutualism
  • A symbiotic relationship in which both partners
    benefit

29
Commensalism
  • A symbiotic relationship in which one partner
    benefits while the other is unaffected

30
Parasitism
  • A symbiotic relationship in which one partner
    benefits at the others expense

31
Autotrophs
  • Produce their own food
  • Carbon fixers
  • Producers

32
Heterotrophs
  • Must consume food
  • Consumers

33
Food Chain
  • Chain of organisms in which successively larger
    organisms eat smaller ones

34
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35
Trophic Levels
  • Primary producers
  • Primary consumers, 1st
  • Secondary consumers 2nd
  • etc

36
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37
Food Web
  • Because most species eat many different species,
    each species can be linked to many

38
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39
Determining Trophic Levels
  • Each trophic level is classified as one level
    above the highest level its organisms consume

40
Top Predator
  • The top animal in any food chain

41
Biomass
  • The total mass of an entire species or designated
    group

42
Trophic Pyramid
  • Pyramid of levels designed to show relative
    biomass of each level

43
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44
Decomposers
  • Organisms that help break down other organisms

45
Detritus
  • The combination of sediment, dead organic matter,
    waste products, and decomposers on the bottom

46
Productivity
  • A measure of the carbon fixation within an unit
    volume

47
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48
Carbon Fixation
  • Converting atmospheric carbon in the form of
    carbon dioxide to a usable form (organic matter)

49
Nitrogen Fixation
  • Converting atmospheric nitrogen in the form of
    nitrogen gas to a usable form (organic matter)

50
Standing Stock
  • The biomass of organisms that exist at any given
    time

51
Chlorophyll
  • The main pigment that absorbs energy in the form
    of light that is used to drive photosynthesis

52
Nutrient Cycles
  • Carbon Cycle

53
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54
Nutrient Cycles
  • Nitrogen Cycle

55
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56
Biological Zonation
57
Pelagic
  • In the water column

58
Planktonic
  • Organisms that cannot swim against the currents
  • Floating or drifting organisms

59
Phytoplankton
  • Photosynthetic plankton

60
Zooplankton
  • Heterotrophic plankton

61
Nektonic
  • Organisms that can swim against the currents
  • Swimming organisms

62
Benthic
  • Bottom dwelling

63
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64
Epipelagic
  • Surface water where light can penetrate
  • Photic zone

65
Mesopelagic
  • Middle water just below where light can penetrate
    where shadows exist
  • Twilight zone

66
Bathypelagic
  • Deep water where it is completely dark

67
Abyssopelagic
  • Water near the sea floor

68
Hadopelagic
  • Water in deep trenches

69
Splash Zone
  • Area of the shoreline just above the highest
    tides that get wet with spray from the waves

70
Intertidal Zone
  • Area of shoreline between the lowest and the
    highest tides

71
Subtidal Zone
  • Benthic area from the lowest tides to the edge of
    the continental shelf (shelf break)

72
Bathyl Zone
  • Benthic region along the continental slope

73
Hadal Zone
  • Benthic areas in trenches

74
Abyssal Zone
  • Benthic area of the sea floor

75
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76
Coastal Zone
  • Area of the oceans near shore or along the
    coastline
  • Neritic Zone

77
Oceanic Zone
  • Area of the oceans away from shore
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