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Marine Biome and Biodiversity
17

Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Jan 17, 2016

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Page 1: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Marine Biome and Biodiversity

Page 2: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Biome:

A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate

Page 3: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

• The Marine Biome covers about three-fourths of the Earth’s surface.

• Divided into 3 main regions:

1. Ocean

2. Coral Reefs

3. Estuaries

Page 4: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

1. Oceans

• The ocean biome can be separated into several different ecosystems, each characterized by different biotic and abiotic factors, such as temperature, substrate, plants and animals.

Biotic: Living

Abiotic: Non-living

Page 5: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

We’re going to look at:

• Kelp forests• Mangrove swamps• Migratory animals

Page 6: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Focus for all ecosystems: FOOD!

• In an ecosystem, energy is recycled through living organisms.

• Autotrophs make their own food using energy from the sun (plants, algae, bacteria)

• Heterotrophs need to eat other organisms to get energy

herbivores (eat plants, algae, bacteria)

omnivores (eat plants and animals)

carnivores (eat animals primarily)

Page 7: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Energy is cycled through the food chain: who eats whom?

Page 8: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Basically:

Page 9: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

So, what’s at the base of all these aquatic food chains?

One guess…

Page 10: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Plankton• Plankton are tiny open-water plants, animals or

bacteria. • The name is derived from a Greek root that

means, "wanderer." • These organisms range in size from microscopic

bacteria and plants to larger animals, such as jellyfish.

• Plankton generally have limited or no swimming ability and are transported through the water by currents and tides.

Page 11: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Marine Plankton -- microscopic ocean animals - magnified 140 times

Page 12: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

3 types of plankton:

1. phytoplankton–microscopic plants and bacteria (photosynthetic, these are the autotrophs) ex. diatoms

2. zooplankton–microscopic animals (eat phytoplankton) ex. dinoflagellates

3. macrozooplankton–larger fish eggs and larvae and pelagic invertebrates. Ex. jellyfish

Page 13: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.
Page 14: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Giant Jellyfish

Page 15: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Plankton nets

Net is hauled slowly for a known distance behind a ship and organisms carefully removed

Page 16: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

Why Collect and Study Plankton?

1)They are the beginning of food chains in the sea and are very important in ocean food webs. The abundance of plankton directly correlates to the abundance of other marine organisms. (more plankton = more fish, sharks and whales!)

2) Red tides – a type of oceanic algae bloom that tinges the water red. We need to avoid shellfish that have been exposed to the toxins produced in a red tide.

Page 17: Marine Biome and Biodiversity. Biome: A distinct ecological community of plants and animals living together in a particular climate.

IN YOUR JOURNAL

• March 11th: What is plankton’s role in the Ocean? What would happen if there was a large increase or decrease in the amount of plankton?