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Marine Life and the Marine Environment

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© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER 12 Marine Life and the Marine Environment
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Page 1: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

CHAPTER 12 Marine Life and the Marine

Environment

Page 2: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Chapter Overview• There are more than 250,000 identified marine

species.• Most live in sunlit surface seawater.• A species’ success depends on the ability to

– find food,– avoid predation,– reproduce, and– cope with physical barriers to movement.

• Marine organisms are adapted to the ocean’s physical properties.

Page 3: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Classification of Life• Three domains

– Archaea– Bacteria– Eukarya

Page 4: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Classification of Living Organisms

• Five kingdoms– Monera– Protoctista– Fungi– Plantae– Animalia

Page 5: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Five Kingdoms of Organisms• Monera

– Simplest organisms, single-celled– Cyanobacteria, heterotrophic bacteria,

archaea• Protoctista

– Single- and multicelled with nucleus– Algae, protozoa

• Fungi – Mold, lichen

Page 6: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Five Kingdoms of Organisms• Plantae

– Multicelled photosynthetic plants– Surf grass, eelgrass, mangrove, marsh

grasses• Animalia

– Multicelled animals– Range from simple sponges to complex

vertebrates

Page 7: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Taxonomic Classification

• Carolus Linnaeus – 1758– Developed basis of modern classification of

organisms• Taxonomy – systematic classification of

organisms– Physical characteristics– Genetic information

Page 8: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Taxonomy • Kingdom• Phylum• Class• Order• Family• Genus• Species

– Fundamental unit– Population of

genetically similar, interbreeding individuals

Page 9: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Classification of Marine Organisms

• Plankton (floaters)• Nekton (swimmers)• Benthos (bottom

dwellers)

Page 10: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Types of Plankton

• Most biomass on Earth consists of plankton.

• Phytoplankton– Autotrophic

• Zooplankton – Heterotrophic

Page 11: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Other Types of Plankton• Bacterioplankton • Virioplankton• Holoplankton

– Entire lives as plankton• Meroplankton

– Part of lives as plankton– Juvenile or larval stages

• Macroplankton– Large floaters such as jellyfish or Sargassum

• Picoplankton– Very small floaters such as bacterioplankton

Page 12: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Life Cycle of a Squid

Page 13: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Nekton

• Independent swimmers• Most adult fish and squid• Marine mammals• Marine reptiles

Page 14: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Nekton

Page 15: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Benthos

• Epifauna live on the surface of the sea floor.• Infauna live buried in sediments.• Nektobenthos swim or crawl through water

above the seafloor.• Benthos are most abundant in shallower

water.• Many live in perpetual darkness, coldness,

and stillness.

Page 16: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Benthos

Page 17: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Hydrothermal Vent Communities

• Abundant and large deep-ocean benthos• Discovered in 1977• Associated with hot vents• Bacteria-like archaeon produce food using

heat and chemicals.

Page 18: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Number of Marine Species

• More land species than marine species• Ocean has relatively uniform conditions• Less adaptation required, less speciation• Marine species overwhelmingly benthic

(98%) rather than pelagic (2%)

Page 19: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Adaptations of Marine Organisms

• The marine environment is more stable than land.

• Organisms in the ocean are less able to withstand environmental changes.

• Marine animals do not risk desiccation.

Page 20: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Adaptations of Marine Organisms

• Physical support– Buoyancy– How to resist sinking– Different support

structures in cold (fewer) rather than warm (more appendages) seawater

– Smaller size

Page 21: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Adaptations of Marine Organisms

• High surface area to volume ratio– Unusual appendages

to increase surface area

• Oil in micro-organisms to increase buoyancy

Page 22: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Viscosity and Streamlining Adaptations

• Streamlining important for larger organisms

• Less resistance to fluid flow

• Flattened body• Tapering back end

Page 23: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Temperature and Marine Life• Narrow range of temperature in oceans• Smaller variations (daily, seasonally, annually)• Deep ocean is nearly isothermal

Page 24: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Ocean Temperature

• More stable than land for four reasons– Higher heat capacity of water– Ocean warming reduced by evaporation– Solar radiation penetrates deeply into ocean

layers– Ocean mixing

Page 25: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Cold vs. Warm Water Species

• Smaller in cooler seawater• More appendages in warmer seawater• Tropical organisms grow faster, live shorter,

reproduce more often• More species in warmer seawater• More biomass in cooler seawater (upwelling)

Page 26: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Temperature and Marine Organisms

• Stenothermal– Organisms withstand small variation in

temperature– Typically live in open ocean

• Eurythermal– Organisms withstand large variation in

temperature– Typically live in coastal waters

Page 27: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Salinity and Marine Organisms

• Stenohaline– Organisms withstand only small variation in

salinity– Typically live in open ocean

• Euryhaline– Organisms withstand large variation in salinity– Typically live in coastal waters, e.g., estuaries

Page 28: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Salinity Adaptations

• Extracting minerals from seawater

• High concentration to low concentration– Diffusion– Cell membrane

permeable to nutrients, for example

– Waste passes from cell to ocean

Page 29: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Osmosis • Water molecules

move from less concentrated to more concentrated solutions

• Osmotic pressure– In more concentrated

solutions– Prevents passage of

water molecules• Isotonic• Hypertonic• Hypotonic

Page 30: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Marine vs. Freshwater Fish

Page 31: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Dissolved Gases

• Animals extract dissolved oxygen (O2) from seawater through gills.

• Gills exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide directly with seawater.

• Low marine oxygen levels can kill fish.• Gill structure and location varies among

animals.

Page 32: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Gills on Fish

Page 33: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Water’s Transparency

• Many marine organisms see well.

• Some marine organisms are nearly transparent.– Elude predators– Stalk prey

Page 34: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Adaptations to Marine Environment

• Camouflage through color patterns

• Countershading – dark on top, light on bottom

• Disruptive coloration – large bold patterns, contrasting colors make animal blend into background

Page 35: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Camouflage and Countershading

Page 36: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Water Pressure

• Increases about 1 atmosphere (1 kg/cm2) with every 10 meters (33 feet) deeper

• Many marine organisms – no inner air pockets

• Collapsible rib cage (e.g., sperm whale)

Page 37: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Divisions of the Marine Environment

• Pelagic (open sea)– Neritic (< 200 meters) and oceanic

• Benthic (sea floor)– Subneritic and suboceanic

Page 38: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Pelagic Environment

• Divided into biozones • Neritic Province –

from shore seaward, all water < 200 meters deep

• Oceanic Province – depth increases beyond 200 meters

Page 39: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Oceanic Province• Further subdivided into four biozones• Epipelagic

– Only zone to support photosynthesis– Dissolved oxygen decreases around 200 meters

• Mesopelagic – Organisms capable of bioluminescence common

• Bathypelagic• Abyssopelagic

Page 40: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Dissolved Oxygen with Depth• Dissolved oxygen minimum layer (OML) about

700-1000 meters• Nutrient maximum at about same depths• O2 content increases with depth below

Page 41: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Ocean Zones Based on Light Availability

• Euphotic – surface to where enough light exists to support photosynthesis

• Disphotic – small but measurable quantities of light

• Aphotic – no light

Page 42: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Benthic Environments • Supralittoral• Subneritic

– Littoral– Sublittoral

• Inner• Outer

• Suboceanic– Bathyal– Abyssal– Hadal

Page 43: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

Organisms of the Deep

Page 44: Marine Life and the Marine Environment

© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc.

End of CHAPTER 12Marine Life and the Marine

Environment


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