Top Banner
Polar Ecology
37

Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Dec 17, 2015

Download

Documents

Lily Baker
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: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Polar Ecology

Page 2: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Bhopal, India

Minamata, Japan

Chernobyl, USSR

Toxic Events

Page 3: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

“Sea ice is a key component in structuring polar environments. Beside its important role as a platform for marine mammals and birds, it serves as a habitat for a unique highly specialized community of bacteria, algae, protozoa and metazoa, which contribute to the biogeochemical cycles of the Arctic and Antarctic seas.’’

Page 4: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Arctic Ocean bloom

Page 5: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Southern Ocean bloom

Page 6: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

2050

Page 7: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Tuvalu will disappear

Page 8: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Will sea level rise from Arctic melts?

Page 9: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Not uniformocean heat storageLight blue constant Yellow to white most rapid riseSlow down in the sub-polar gyreThermohaline circulation weakening?Major Extinctions

Warming water and melting land ice : mean sea level up 4.5 cm from1993 to 2008

Page 10: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Antarctic vs Arctic Ocean • 50 to 70 degrees S• 35-38 million sq km• Narrow shelf, few islands• Shelf 400-600 m• Open to 3 oceans• Circumpolar current• Vertical mixing high• Nutrient high continuously• High primary productivity• Little to no freshwater input • Salinity 34 ppt• High seasonal ice pack• Low benthos disturbance

• 70 to 80 degrees N• 14.6 million sq km• Broad shelf, archipelagos• Shelf 100-500 m• At Fram & Bering Straits• Transpolar• Little vertical mixing• Seasonally depleted• Moderate primary productivity• Extensive fluvial input• Salinity 31 ppt• Ice pack seasonally low• Extensive bottom disturbance

Page 12: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 13: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 14: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

FIG. 1. Polyacrylamide gel of fluorescently labeled AFGPs from Antarctic notothenioid Dissostichus mawsoni (Dm) and Arctic cod Boreogadus saida (Bs) and the amino acid compositions of the three size groups of Arctic cod AFGPs. The two polar fishes show comparable size heterogeneity, especially AFGP 6-8

Convergent evolution of antifreeze glycoproteins in Antarcticnotothenioid fish and Arctic cod(repetitive sequenceygene duplicationysequence convergenceytrypsinogen)LIANGBIAO CHEN, ARTHUR L. DEVRIES, AND CHI-HING C. CHENG*

Page 15: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Antitropical Distribution: Carl Hubbs (1952)

Page 16: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Number of fish species between Antarctic and Arctic

• Chondrichthyes• Salmoniformes• Myctophiformes• Gadiformes• Cottidae• Liparidae• Zoarcoidei• Nototheniodei• Pleuronectiformess

• 11 vs 26• 0 vs 32• 35 vs 7• 21 vs 44• 0 vs 44• 31 vs 17• 22 vs 67• 95 vs 0• 4 vs 28

Page 17: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Marine Mammals

• Mammals that use the sea in their natural history

• Has evolved 5-8 times• Extant groups

– Ceataceans– Sirineans– Pinnipeds– Sea Otter : Mustelidae, Enhydra lutris– Polar Bear : Ursidae, Ursus maritimus

Page 18: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Break

• 4 types of people

Page 19: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 20: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 21: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 22: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 23: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Living at sea

• Can’t respire in water

• Heat loss greater

• Locomotion in denser medium

• Hearing: asymmetrical skull

• Low visibility

• Time spent in water varies with species

• Lack of freshwater

Page 24: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Adaptations

• Polar bears: not adapted for diving

• Sea otters: not accomplished divers

• Pinnipeds: great diving capabilities

• Sirenians: totally aquatics, decent diver

• Cetaceans: Most derived

Page 25: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Sirenians

Page 26: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 27: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Character transformation

Page 28: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Types of Characters

• Behavioral

• Physiological

• Morphological

• Molecular

Page 29: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Suborder Pinnipedia

• Otariidae (eared seals, 16 spp)– Shallow divers

• Odobenidae (walrus, 1 spp)

• Phocidae (true seals, 19 spp)

Page 30: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 31: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Order Cetacea60 to ~200,000 kg

• Baleen whales (mysticetes, 13 spp)– Balaenopteridae: 8 spp of rorqual whales– Balaenidae: 3 spp of right whale & bowhead– Neobalaenidae: 1 spp pygmy right whale– Eschrichtiidae: 1 spp gray whale

• Toothed whales (odontocetes, 70 spp)

Page 32: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 33: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 34: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Toothed whales (odontocetes)

• 10 families, 70 spp

• Physeteridae: sperm whale

• Monodontidae: beluga & narwhal

• Delphinidae: 35 spp dolphins, killer whale

• Phocoenidae: 6 spp porpoises

Page 35: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 36: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.
Page 37: Polar Ecology. Bhopal, India Minamata, Japan Chernobyl, USSR Toxic Events.

Dolphin vs Porpoise