1 / 62

Marine Biology

Marine Biology. Study of living organisms in the ocean LIFE = ? Ability to capture, store, and transmit energy Ability to reproduce Ability to adapt to their environment NASA: A self-sustained chemical system capable of Darwinian evolution. Evolution.

chogan
Télécharger la présentation

Marine Biology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Marine Biology • Study of living organisms in the ocean • LIFE = ? • Ability to capture, store, and transmit energy • Ability to reproduce • Ability to adapt to their environment • NASA: A self-sustained chemical system capable of Darwinian evolution

  2. Evolution • Explains the unity and diversity of life • Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace • Definition? • Change • Mechanism = natural selection • reproduction, mutation/variation, selection

  3. Diversity of Life

  4. Likely between 6-12 million species total • Likely about 1 million marine species • 2000 new marine species discovered each year

  5. Land is more variable- leads to more species • Oceans more stable • Ex: temperature

  6. Classifying marine organisms • Pelagic (in water) • Plankton (drifters) • Nekton (swimmers) • Benthic (along the bottom)

  7. Life Cycle of a Squid

  8. Divisions of the Marine Environment

  9. Living in the Ocean: Advantage= Water everywhere • makes up large % of living organisms • supportive

  10. Living in the Ocean: Disadvantage= Hard to move • Streamlining in larger organisms

  11. Living in the Ocean: Advantage= Hard to move • Appendages to slow sinking in plankton

  12. Common Problem: Surface Area to Volume Ratios

  13. Primary Producers • aka autotrophs • Organisms that can capture solar energy and convert it to chemical energy by building organic compounds • Photosynthesis

  14. Fig. 12-2, p. 238

  15. Primary Producers • Others use chemosynthesis • Much less common • Use the oxidation of inorganic compounds as energy source, • ex: bacteria use hydrogen sulfide at hydrothermal vents

  16. Cellular Respiration • Opposite of photosynthesis • Breakdown of food • All organisms

  17. Figure 13.1

  18. Consumers • aka heterotrophs • Must consume (eat) other organisms

  19. Consumers • Primary consumers • Eat producers • Secondary Consumers • Eat primary consumers • These all are Trophic Levels

  20. Food webs • Complex representation of who eats who

  21. Primary Productivity • Refers to how active the producers are • grams of Carbon bound into organic material per square meter per year (gC/m2/y)

  22. Figure 13.18

  23. Only 10% of “food” gets transferred to the next trophic level

  24. Figure 13.19

  25. Ocean’s Primary Producers • Algae – in Kingdom Protista • Have chlorophyll but no vessels to conduct fluids • Unicellular = phytoplankton – pelagic • Multicellular = seaweed – benthic • Plants • Angiosperms = flowering plants

  26. The Pelagic Zone • Pelagic organisms are suspended in the water • Plankton = drifters • Phytoplankton= unicellular photosynthetic algae • Zooplankton = “animal” plankton • Nekton = swimmers

  27. Phytoplankton • 95% of ocean’s primary productivity • Mostly Single-celled organisms • Diatoms & Dinoflagellates

  28. Diatoms • Dominant (>5600 species) • Silica shell – two valves • Produce large portion of O2 in ocean and atmosphere

  29. Dinoflagellates • Mostly autotrophs • Most are free living (except zooxanthellae) • Two whip-like flagella • “Red tides” or HABs (Harmful Algal Blooms)

  30. Phytoplankton Distribution • Depends on: • light availability • nutrient concentration • Varies with: • Depth, Proximity to land, Location on the earth

  31. Phytoplankton Distribution • Compensation Depth • Where rate of photosynthesis = rate of respiration • Below this phytoplankton will die

  32. Phytoplankton Distribution • Higher near coast • Runoff • upwelling

  33. Figure 13.6

  34. Phytoplankton Distribution Varies across the globe – How?

  35. Phytoplankton Distribution • Tropics • Low • Nutrients trapped below thermocline

  36. Phytoplankton Distribution • Poles • Mostly Low (except for summer peak) • Insufficient light

  37. Phytoplankton Distribution • Temperate Regions • Highest overall • sufficient light & nutrients • Spring Peak • Increasing sunlight • Fall Peak • Increasing mixing of nutrients

  38. Zooplankton • Animal plankton – many different types • Heterotrophic – primary consumers • Based on the phytoplankon abundance graph…how would you expect zooplankton abundance to vary?

  39. Figure 13.11a: Arctic Ecosystem

  40. Figure 13.13a: Temperate Ecosystem

More Related