1 / 27

The Ocean’s primary Productivity

The Ocean’s primary Productivity. Marine Biomass. Phytoplankton bloom. Environment. Ecosystem – composed of living organisms and their nonliving environment Biotic – living organisms Abiotic – physical characteristics . Habitat. An organisms habitat is where it lives.

hogan
Télécharger la présentation

The Ocean’s primary Productivity

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. The Ocean’s primary Productivity Marine Biomass

  2. Phytoplankton bloom

  3. Environment • Ecosystem – composed of living organisms and their nonliving environment • Biotic – living organisms • Abiotic – physical characteristics

  4. Habitat • An organisms habitat is where it lives

  5. Niche: An organism’s environmental role • An organisms niche is the role the organism plays in its community • An organisms niche is determined by a variety of biotic and abiotic factors acting together on the organism.

  6. Environmental Factors • Maintaining Homeostasis • An organisms ability to maintain a stable internal environment regardless of the external environment • Homeostasis and the distribution of marine organisms • Optimal range allows for an organism to thrive and reproduce (sunlight, nutrients) • Zones of stress are areas above or below the optimal range • The organism expends more energy maintaining homeostasis • Less energy is available for reproduction • Zones of intolerance are areas beyond the optimal range where the organism cannot survive

  7. Environmental factors continued • Physical environment • Sunlight • Temperature • Salinity • Pressure • Metabolic requirements • Metabolic wastes

  8. Sunlight • Sunlight penetration • less than 1 meter in coastal waters • as much as 200 meters in tropical waters • Photosynthesis directly or indirectly provides energy to nearly all forms of life on earth • Phytoplankton – the largest group of photosynthetic organisms in marine environments • Phytoplankton are the primary sources of nutrients and energy for marine animals

  9. Temperature • Temperature influences the distribution of organisms • Ectotherms – obtain body heat from surroundings • Endotherms – maintains a constant body temperature • Most organisms can tolerate only a specific range of environmental factors • Temperatures above or below the critical range disrupt metabolism resulting in: • Decreased ability to reproduce, injury, or death

  10. Salinity • Salinity is a measure of the concentration of dissolved inorganic salts in the water • In order to maintain homeostasis all organisms must maintain a proper balance of water and solutes in their bodies • The process of osmosis is vital to cells • If a cell loses too much water it will become dehydrated and die • If a cell takes in too much water it will swell and burst

  11. Pressure • The pressure of the water affects organisms that inhabit the deep regions of the seas • Some animals must have special adaptations that allow them to survive at great depths to avoid compression (diving) and decompression (surfacing)

  12. Metabolic Requirements • The availability of nutrients influences the distribution of organisms in the marine environment • Nutrient – all of the organic and inorganic materials that an organism needs to reproduce

  13. Metabolic requirements continued • Limiting nutrients (ex. nitrogen, phosphorus) • Anaerobic organisms – survive in the absence of oxygen • Aerobic organisms – require oxygen • Eutrophication –nutrient enrichment • Algal bloom – population explosion of photosynthetic plankton

  14. Metabolic wastes • Waste products are usually removed from the environment by organisms or broken down by bacteria • Waste products can accumulate to toxic levels and prohibit growth

  15. Environmental factors continuedBiological Environment • Biological environment - all of the different species and the interactions an organism comes in contact with • Relationships • Competition • Predator-Prey relationships • Symbiosis: Living together

  16. Competition • Two or more species in the same habitat that have the same requirements for resources that are limited in supply are in competition

  17. Predator-prey relationships • Keystone predator (keystone species) – An animal in a community that makes it possible for other species to live there • Ochre seastar • REMOVAL OF A CERTAIN SPECIES OF STARFISH CAUSED A RAPID GROWTH IN THE NUMBERS AND BIOMASS OF THE MUSSEL UPON WHICH THE SEASTAR FED

  18. Symbiosis: Living together • Symbiosis – any prolonged association or living together of two or more organisms of different species • Mutualism • Both organisms benefit • Commensalism • One organism benefits, the other is neither harmed nor benefited • Parasitism • One organism benefits, the other is harmed

  19. Distribution of Marine Communities • Pelagic Division – the water column • Benthic Division – the ocean bottom

  20. Ecosystems: Basic units of the Biosphere • Producers – organisms that contain pigments like chlorophyll that capture the sun’s energy • Photosynthesis – the process by which energy of sunlight is used to form glucose • Chemosynthesis – the process by which energy from chemical reactions is used to construct organic glucose

  21. Producers • Autotrophs – organisms able to produce their own food • Chemoautotrophs – organisms that use energy from inorganic chemicals to produce their own food

  22. Measuring Primary Productivity • Grams of carbon per square meter of surface area per year gC/m2/yr

  23. Ecosystems: Basic units of the Biosphere continued • Trophic Levels

More Related