Top Banner
Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II
12

Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Jan 17, 2016

Download

Documents

Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Nutrient Cycles in Marine

Ecosystems Part II

Page 2: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Limited Productivity• Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate

ions) are essential for growth of primary producers

• Productivity of primary producers will affect productivity of higher trophic levelsExample: upwelling – high productivity

Page 3: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Benguela upwelling system

Page 4: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Removal of Nutrients1. Sink to sea floor

• In feces• Detritus (decaying organic

materials); organisms die• Loss of nutrients from surface

water• Will only return to surface by

upwelling

• Slow decomposition on sea bed (floor) due to cold/lack of oxygen

Page 5: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.
Page 6: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Removal of Nutrients

2. Incorporated into coral reefs• Deposition of calcium carbonate for

growth of corals

Page 7: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Removal of Nutrients3. Removed by harvesting

• Removing/eating fish and other marine organisms

Page 8: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.
Page 9: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Nutrient Biological UsesNutrient Biological Use

Nitrogen Make proteins; synthesis of amino acids

Carbon Synthesis of all organic materials (ex: carbohydrates, proteins)

Magnesium Make chlorophyll for plants

Calcium Production of bones, corals and shells

Phosphorus Production of bones and synthesis of DNA

Page 10: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

• Summary of ways in nutrients are cycled in marine systems

Nutrients derived from both

Removal (3)

Page 11: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

In Summary• Fertilizers, like nitrogen (N), phosphorous (P), and potassium

(K), are important for plant growth and are called 'nutrients.' The level of dissolved nutrients increases from animal feces and decomposition (bacteria, fungi). Surface water often may be lacking in nutrients because feces and dead matter tend to settle to the bottom of the ocean. Most decomposition is thus at the bottom of the ocean. In the oceans most surface water is separated from bottom water by a thermocline (seasonal in temperature and marginal polar regions, constant in tropics) which means that once surface nutrients get used up (by the plants there) they become a limiting factor for the growth of new plants. Plants must be at the surface for the light. Nutrients are returned to surface waters by a special type of current called 'upwelling' and it is in these areas of upwelling that we find the highest productivity of marine life.

Page 12: Nutrient Cycles in Marine Ecosystems Part II. Limited Productivity Inorganic nutrients (ex: nitrate and phosphate ions) are essential for growth of primary.

Website References

• http://www.seafriends.org.nz/oceano/seawater.htm#composition

• http://www.marinebio.net/marinescience/02ocean/swcomposition.htm