Term
what percentage of animals on earth are invertebrates? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
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Term
How is the filter feeder process work |
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Definition
water is pumped through the ostia and goes out through the osculum |
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Term
what specialized cells move water through the sponge by beating cilia? |
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Definition
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what supports the body of a sponge? |
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Definition
spicules, either made of silaceous (silicon) or calcareous (calcium) |
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what protein contributes to supporting a sponge? |
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Definition
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how do sponges reproduce? |
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Definition
budding, which is when bud falls off and forms a new sponge |
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what is the other way sponges reproduce? |
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Definition
they can produce gametes (eggs and sperm) which are released into the water either within the sponge or outside and they join to form an embryo |
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Term
what do sponges have living in their tissues? |
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Definition
symbiotic algae live in the tissues. The algae photosynthesize and provide food for the sponges |
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Term
What are examples of the Phylum Cnidaria? |
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Definition
Jellyfish, Sea Anemonies, corals, and hydroids. Radically symmetrical |
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Definition
gelatinous layer that seperates the inner and outer body walls |
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Definition
They use tentacles to put food in their mouth and they have no anus so tehy poop out of their mouth tehee!!!! |
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Term
What are the two forms of Cnidarians? |
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Definition
A free swimming medusa or an attached polyp |
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Term
How does Medusa reproduce? |
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Definition
produces sperm and eggs that turn into polyps and polyps bud and create cute little medusa clis!!! |
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Term
What are the polyps that lack a medusa stage? |
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Definition
Anthozoans, which consist of anemones, sea fans, corals, and sea pens |
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Term
What do cnidarians have instead of a brain? |
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Definition
A nerve net that connects the cells and transmits impulses |
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Term
why are ribbon worms more complex than flatworms? |
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Definition
they have a mouth and an anus, and circulatory system. They also have proboscis that contains toxins |
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Term
where are nematodes common? |
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Definition
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Term
What doe nematodes mostly feed on? |
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Definition
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Term
beware of fresh sashimi? why... |
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Definition
because a nematode might be living in the flesh of fish and can infect humans... |
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Term
What are examples of Molluscs? |
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Definition
Snails, clams, squid, octopuses. Bodies are not segmented |
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Term
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Definition
a ribbon of small teeth used to feed; Molluscs have this |
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Definition
a thin layer of tissue that secretes the shell |
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Term
What is the gender makeup of molluscs? |
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Definition
Most molluscs are seperate sexes, but some have both female and male parts |
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Term
what are examples of gastropods? |
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Definition
snails, limpets, abalones, nudibranches |
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Term
What are examples of bivalves |
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Definition
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Term
What are examples of cephalopods |
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Definition
octopuses, squid, cuddlefish |
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Term
what are the other type of molluscs? |
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Definition
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Term
what is the largest bivalve? |
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Definition
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Term
what are squids shells called? |
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Definition
chitinous shell, or a "pen" |
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Term
What are examples of Arthropods? |
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Definition
Barnacles, shrimps, lobster, crabs, copepods etc. |
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Term
what are characteristics of Arthropods? |
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Definition
Have segmented body, jointed appendages Exoskeleton of chitin |
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Term
what is the largest group of Arthropods? |
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Definition
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Definition
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Term
what does a decapod's body consist of? |
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Definition
cephalothorax body and segmented abdomen |
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Term
What are examples of Echinoderms? |
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Definition
starfish, brittle stars, sea urchins, sea cucumbers, and crinoids. They have endoskeletons, and a unique water vascular system. Larval stage that looks like a tadpole, |
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Term
What is an example of a Chordate |
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Definition
sea squirts (Tunicates). Have a larval stage which looks like a tadpole thus are related to primitive vertebrates. |
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Term
What are the three major groups of genetic information |
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Definition
eubacteria, archaea, eukaryotes |
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Term
Are Eubacteria and Archaea prokaryotes? |
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Definition
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Term
what type of environments do Archea live in> |
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Definition
extreme environments, very salty, very hot, etc |
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Term
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Definition
obtain energy from reduced inorganic compounds |
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Term
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Definition
obtain energy from sunlight |
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Term
What bacteria produce methane? |
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Definition
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Term
What does bacteria do to what organic matter? |
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Definition
breaks them down into dissolved chemicals, these chemicals can be be used for the growth of bacteria |
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Term
What do bacteria form with higer organisms? |
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Definition
Symbiosises to provide energy for both |
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Term
What are bacteria in hydrothermal vent communities? |
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Definition
They are the basis for energy transformation |
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Term
What is the basis of life in hydrothermal events? |
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Definition
symbiotic bacteria and reduced sulfur compounds |
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Term
where are hydrothermal events located? |
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Definition
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Term
vent organisms depend on bacteria because...? |
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Definition
They convert reduced chemicals to organic matter |
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Term
How many bacteria are in seawater? |
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Definition
200,000-5 million cells per mL |
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Term
How fast do cells divide? |
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Definition
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Term
What is very abundant in seawater and constantly attacks bacteria? |
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Definition
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Term
How many viruses are in seawater? |
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Definition
5 million-15 million to mL |
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Term
What kind of bacteria do viruses tend to specialize on? |
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Definition
cyanobacteria and phytoplankton |
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Term
what are the two main types of virus attacks? |
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Definition
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Term
What is a lysogenic attack? |
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Definition
the virus becomes part of the DNA until the host starts producing other viruses |
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Term
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Definition
when the virus enters the cell, it immediately starts producing viruses, then it bursts |
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Term
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Definition
eukaryotic organisms such as ciliates that eat bacteria and cyanobacteria, the main grazers in teh microbial loop |
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Term
What are foraminifera (Forams)? |
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Definition
They are protozoan amoebas with a shell they live inside of |
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Term
Whose shells are at the bottom of the ocean and become sedimentary rock? |
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Definition
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Term
What are benthic organisms? |
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Definition
organisms that live on ocean sediments or in ocean sediments |
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Term
what are types of benthos? |
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Definition
Epifauna, who live on or attached to sediments. And Infauna, who live in soft sediments |
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Term
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Definition
Epifauna- 80 %
Infauna- 20 % |
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Term
What are the three size categories> |
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Definition
Macrofauna, greater than .5 mm........Meiofauna, less than .5 mm, but more than .1..........Microfauna is less than .1 mm |
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Term
What are sessile organisms? |
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Definition
organisms that are attached and can;t move, for example barnacles. They need a moving larval stage to disperse their colony. |
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Term
What is biogenic sorting? |
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Definition
When organisms make smaller particles on top, and larger particles on bottom |
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Term
what are the 5 types of feeding? |
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Definition
suspension, deposit, herbivore, carnivores, and scavengers |
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Term
What are suspension feeders? |
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Definition
They filter particles from the water column |
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Term
what are deposit feeders? |
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Definition
deposit feeders eat sediments, and digest organic material and bacteria on sediments. Such as crabs and sea cucumbers |
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Term
What are the different substratum types? |
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Definition
sandy, Silts, mud and clay. and soft sediments |
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Term
Deposit vs suspension feeders |
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Definition
suspension feeders need water current to bring food to them, and deposit feeders need weak current in order to walk |
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Term
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Definition
graze algae and marine grasses |
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Term
what is detritus and how does it help benthic organisms? |
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Definition
dead plant material and benthic organisms eat it |
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Term
What are deep ocean sediments? |
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Definition
desert dust (red clay), diatoms (siliceous), and forams (carbonate) |
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Term
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Definition
when high latitude waters produce high currents and they disturb benthic organisms |
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Term
How do respiration rates differ from deep water to shallow water? |
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Definition
rates in deep water, fish are much lower |
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Term
What are the different ways food gets to teh deep sea? |
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Definition
large food falls, small food falls as well |
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Term
How do coral defend their territory |
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Definition
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Term
What is the different between PAcific and Atlantic when it comes to Coral |
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Definition
Pacific has 500, Atlantic has 75 |
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Term
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Definition
symbiotic algae that live in polyp tissues |
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Term
where are stony corals located> |
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Definition
only in warm clear water, they need sunlight |
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Term
What are the three types of coral reefs |
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Definition
fringing reef, barrier reef, and atoll |
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Term
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Definition
behind the crest. sandgrass is found on the floor |
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Term
what are the primary producers in coral reefs? |
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Definition
macroalgae, seagrasses, zoozanthallae, phytoplankton |
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Term
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Definition
have bacteria living inside of them. |
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Term
what percent of surface primary production gets to bottom depths |
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Definition
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Term
what is the reef coral temp limit? |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
a semi-enclosed coastal water where salt water is mixed with fresh water from rivers |
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Term
Why are estuaries important? |
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Definition
They are important for commerce and recreation, important as fishery nursery areas |
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Term
What are the four different types of salinity distributions |
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Definition
Vertically mixed, slightly stratified, Salt Wedge, Fjord |
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Term
What are vertically mixed estuaries? |
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Definition
shallow, low volume, strong tidal mixing, low river flow |
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Term
What is a slightly stratified estuary? |
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Definition
shallow, salinity increases from head to mouth. Strong seaward flow of fresh water. fresh water on top, ocean water on bottom |
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Term
what is a salt-wedge estuary? |
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Definition
surface water is fresh, but there is a salty wedge underneath teh fresh water |
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Term
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Definition
still at the mouth, fresh water on top, but underneath fresh water there is a portion of salt water that is trapped in |
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Term
what limits photosynthesis in estuaries? |
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Definition
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Term
what are euryhaline organisms? |
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Definition
organisms that can tolerate a wide range of salinities |
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Term
what are stenohaline organisms? |
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Definition
those that can only tolerate a narrow range of salinity. Usually live in fresh water in the upper estuaries |
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Term
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Definition
organisms that don't osmoregulate, example molluscs |
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Term
what are estuaries vulnerable to? |
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Definition
invasive species, sewage, industrial pollution |
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Term
what is the percentage of drinking water that the bay area provides for california |
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Definition
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Term
what are the three states of mercury? |
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Definition
elemental, divalent, or methyl. Highly toxic metyhl |
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Term
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Definition
they are low lying coasta areas that are submerged by salt water, and their sediments have little or no oxygen. Consists of marshes and mangroves |
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Term
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Definition
main plant in marshes, can tolerate 0 oxygen cuz its able to pump oxygen down its roots |
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Term
what does spartina do with salt? |
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Definition
extracts salt and excretes it through its leaves |
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Term
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Definition
almost nothing, until it dies and bacteria breaks it into small pieces so that marsh animals can eat it as deitrtal material |
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