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15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity
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15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Dec 16, 2015

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Page 1: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life&

15.3 Oceanic Productivity

Page 2: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Classification of Marine Organisms

• Classified based on where they live & how they move– Plankton: floaters– Nekton: swimmers– Benthos: bottom dwellers

Page 3: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Plankton

• Include all organisms – algae, animals, & bacteria

• Move with the ocean currents• Can swim• Algae that undergoes photosynthesis =

phytoplankton • Microscopic • Animal plankton = zooplankton

Page 4: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.
Page 5: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Nekton

• Include all animals capable of moving independently of the ocean currents by swimming

• Can migrate long distance• Include most adult fish, squid, marine

mammals, & marine reptiles

Page 6: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.
Page 7: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Benthos

• Describes organisms living on or in the ocean bottom

• Shallow coastal ocean floor contains a wide variety of physical conditions & nutrient levels

• Deeper parts = photosynthesis can not occur– They feed on each other and whatever falls from

above

Page 8: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.
Page 9: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Marine Life Zones

• 3 factors used to divide the ocean into life zones:– Availability of sunlight – Distance from shore– Water depth

Page 10: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Availability of Sunlight

• Photic zone = sunlight• Euphotic zone = portion of the photic zone

near the surface where photosynthesis can occur (up to 100 m deep)

• Aphotic zone = no sunlight

Page 11: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Distance from Shore

• Subdivided based on distance

• Intertidal Zone = land & ocean meet & overlap– Harsh living conditions due to crashing waves,

drying out time to time, quick temperature changes, salinity, & oxygen concentrations

– Adapted

Page 12: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

• Neritic Zone = covers gently sloping continental shelf

• Narrow – hundreds of km from shore • Shallow enough for sunlight to reach ocean

floor = photic zone• 90 % of the worlds commercial fisheries

because it is so rich

Page 13: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

• Oceanic Zone = beyond continental shelf• Surface waters have lower nutrient

concentrations because nutrients sink out of the photic zone to the deep ocean floor– Smaller populations than the more productive

neritic zone

Page 14: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Water Depth

• Pelagic Zone = open ocean of any depth• Animals = swim or float freely– Photic area of the pelagic zone home to:

phytoplankton, zooplankton, nekton– Aphotic area fo the pelagic zone home to: giant

squid & other species that have adapted to deep waters

Page 15: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

• Benthic Zone = any sea – bottom surface (regardless of the distance from shore)

• Mostly inhabited by benthos organisms

• Abyssal Zone = subdivision of the benthic zone• Extreme pressure• Low temperatures• No sunlight• Little life forms

Page 16: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.
Page 17: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Hydrothermal Vents

• Along the oceanic ridges• Seawater seeps into the ocean floor through

cracks in the crust• Becomes heated and saturated with minerals• Minerals precipitate out when it comes in

contact with cold ocean water (black smoke color)

Page 18: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.
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15.3 OCEANIC PRODUCTIVITY

Page 20: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Primary Productivity• Production of organic compounds from inorganic

substances through photosynthesis or chemosynthesis• Photosynthesis – use of light energy to convert water

and CO2 into glucose molecules• Chemosynthesis – process by which certain

microorganisms create organic molecules from inorganic nutrients using chemical energy

• 2 factors influence a area’s photosynthetic productivity: – Available nutrients – Amount of solar radiation

Page 21: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Productivity in Polar Oceans

• Density & temperature change very little with depth in polar regions

• Summer = melting ice = lower salinity• Availability of solar energy is what limits

photosynthesis productivity in polar areas

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Productivity in Tropical Oceans

• Productivity is low & limited bc of lack of nutrients

• The sun is more directly overhead > light penetrates deeper into the tropical ocean than in temperate and polar waters

• Solar energy is available year around• Permanent therocline prevents mixing btw

surface waters and nutrient rich deeper waters

Page 23: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Productivity in Temperate Oceans

• Found at mid-latitudes • Winter• Spring• Summer• Combination of these 2 limiting factors to

control productivity– Sunlight– Nutrient supply

Page 24: 15. 2 Diversity of Ocean Life & 15.3 Oceanic Productivity.

Oceanic Feeding Relationships

• Tropic Levels– Feeding levels– Zooplankton = herbivores (eat algae)– Herbivores eaten by Carnivores

• Transfer efficiency – The transfer of energy btw tropic levels is inefficient

• Food Chain / Food Web– Sequence of organisms where energy is transferred

starting with a primary producer– Feeding relationships = Food Web

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Review Questions

• What factors influence a region’s photosynthetic productivity?

• Compare/Contrast Food Web & Food Chain• Compare/Contrast Photosynthesis &

Chemosynthesis• How are marine organisms classified?• Why is the neritic zone rich in life?