Term
What are Plankton? -Characteristics -size -groups |
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Definition
- Plankton are organisms that swim or drift weakly
- migrate vertically
- usually microscopic in size
- two main grous: phyoplankton, zooplankton
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Term
What are Nekton? -characteristics? -size? -examples |
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Definition
- active swimmers
- vertical and latitudinal migration
- often macroscopic with specialized muscles for locomotion
- very diversified group
- ex: fish, squid, reptile
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Term
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Definition
-both plankton and nekton are pelagico rorganisms -these 2 groups can be distinguished by their size - larger organisms tend to be nekton and smaller tend to be plankton
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Term
Benthos -general characteristics? -types? -groups? |
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Definition
- organisms that live attached to, on, or below the sea bottom
- Benthic flora require light, so live in shallow waters of photic zone
- Benthic bacteria/fauna can live in deeper areas including hadal zone
- two groups:
- epifauna- live on sea bottom
- infauna- live embedded in sea bottom
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Term
Can organisms be both benthic and pelagic? If so, provide an example |
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Definition
yes, ex: Halibut 70% of Nektonic Larvals often metamorphomise into a benthic lifestyle after adulthood. |
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Term
What are the Classification of Organisms? (In order) |
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Definition
Kingdom--> Metazoan Phylum-->Chordata Class-->Mammilia Order-->Primates Family-->Homonidae Genus-->Homo Species-->Homosapiens King Philip Constantly Offends Families and Generations Shamelessly Man Constantly Manifests Pollution, Hunger, and Human Havoc
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Term
What are the 5 Kingdoms? (Just the names) |
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Definition
1. Monera 2. Protista 3. Fungi 4. Metaphytae 5. Metazoa My Papa Ficticiously Misses Mama. |
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Term
Monera -characteristics -examples -importance |
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Definition
- simple, unicellular organisms with no true nucleus (prokaryotic)
- cells contain "naked" DNA
- Nutrition is mainly absorbed
- ex: Bacteria, cyanobacteria (blue green algae)
- conducts simple amounts of photosynthesis
- converts nitrogen into nitrates (essential for plants)
- dominate in environments too stressful for most organisms
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Term
Protista -characteristics? -examples? -importance? |
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Definition
- organisms that possess a true nucleus (eukaryotic)
- many are unicellular (animals, plants, and intermediate forms)
- many live in colonies
- nutrition is autotrophic and heterotrophic
- ex:foraminifera, dinoflagellates, diatoms
- crtitical for ecology of ocean
- large portion of marine living mass
- take up and release chemicals in seawater
- serve as food for other organisms
- skeletons contribute to sedimentary deposits of the deep sea
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Term
Fungi -characteristics? -importance? |
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Definition
- there are very few marine fungi (most live on land)
- eukaryotic
- heterotrophic
- live mainly in intertidal zone
- there, they keep algae from drying at a low tide
- primary role is to decompose organic matter
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Term
Metaphytae (Kingdom Plantae) -characteristics? -examples? -importance? |
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Definition
- multicellular
- eukaryotic
- autotrophic
- conduct photosynthesis, use CO2, and produce oxygen
- found on inner continental shelf, where there is sufficient light
- ex: brown algae, red algae, eelgrass
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Term
Metazoa (Kingdom Animalia) -characteristics? - examples? |
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Definition
- multicellular
- eukaryotic
- heterotrophic
- invertebrates and vertebrates
- ex: comb-jelly, polychaete worm, blue whale
- size=macroscopic; >30m
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Term
What does Autotrophic mean? |
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Definition
-the synthesizing of organic materials from inorganic materials -They mainly extract Carbon (C) from CO2 and Nitrogen (N) from NO3 -all green plants are autotrophic |
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Term
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Definition
-one that extracts food from organic compounds (plants or animals) -all animals are heterotrophic |
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Term
What are the main physical distributors of life in the ocean? |
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Definition
light, water temperature, nutrient availability |
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Term
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Definition
- the amount of organic matter that is synthesized from inorganic materials (C,N) by autotraphs
- amount of carbon fixed by organisms during the synthesis of organic matter (expressed in g Carbon/m^3/day)
- most primary production is from photosynthesis and uses light as a source of energy
- factors controlling it are light zones and nutrient availability
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Term
What are the zones of light and their characteristics? |
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Definition
Light zones- - light photic zone- penetrates colors at strong wavelengths , esp green and blue
- Twilight Dysphotic Zone- can only penetrate blue and green
- dark aphotic zone- penetrates no colors
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Term
What is salinity? Examples of Major Solutes and Species? |
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Definition
- A measure of the concentration of dissolved solids in seawater
- average seawater sample has salinity of 35% (3.5% salt, 96.5% water)
- Major Solutes- Chloride (Cl-), sodium (Na+), sulfate, magneisum(Mg2+) ,calcium (Ca2+), potassium (K+)
- Euryhaline species tolerate a wide range of salinity (oysters, estuarine and coastal environments)
- Stenohaline species tolerate a low range of salinity (most open ocean organisms)
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Term
Phytoplankton -characteristics? -examples? -importance |
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Definition
- mainly unicellular organisms that float in ocean's surface waters
- some can be macroscopic (ex: Sargassum algae)
- present throughout Photic Zone, including under Polar Ice
- dominant plants in the ocean
- predominant roles in food chains
- approx 4000 species (diatoms, dinoflagellates, coccolithophorides, silicoflagellates)
- dominant primary producers of pelagic realm
- convert inorganic materials (nitrate, phosphate) into organic matter (thus, base of marine food chains)-->stimulates photosynthesis
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Term
What is the Photosynthesis Equation? |
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Definition
6CO2 + 6H20<-->C6H12O6 + O2 Carbon Dioxide Water Respiration Carbohydrates Oxygen (Respiration requires metabolic energy) photosynthesis measured in mgC/m3/day or gC/m3/year |
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Term
Photosynthesis and Primary Production are dependent on what? |
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Definition
- Source of CO2 (abundant quantities in ocean, so doesn't limit amount of photosynthesis)
- Solar energy
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Term
What does solar energy used in photosynthesis require in order to convert to chemical energy? |
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Definition
- conversion is depndent on presence of pigements
- Chlorophyill is the dominant pigment
- Chlorphyll b,c, and d
- these pigments are contained within chloroplasts found in a plant's cell
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Term
What is an Assimilation Index? |
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Definition
- it is a measure of growth rate per unit time within photosynthesis
- expresses amount of carbon fixed coupled to measurements of Chlorophyll a
- expressed in mg C/mg Chlorophyll a/ hour
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Term
The amount of photosynthesis works in proportion with what? How does this work? |
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Definition
- The amount of photosynthesis is proportional to light density
- increases up to a maximal value: Pmax
- at higher light intensities, photosynthesis decreases-->photoinhibition
- can be caused by shrinkage of chloroplasts
- at lower light intensities, it increases
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Term
What can limit phytoplankton growth? How does it do so? |
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Definition
- low concentrations in nitrates, silicate, iron, and manganese can limit phytoplankton growth
- distribution of these nutrients govern marine plant and animal life
- phyoplankton distribution is based on the nutrition needs of different species
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Term
What kind of relationship do light and nutrients have in primary productivity? |
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Definition
From the equator to the poles: - solar radiation decreases
- nutrients increase (esp in upwelling zones)
Thus, amount of light and nutrients necessary for primary productivity form an inverse relationship this affects the seasonal variations of primary productivity at different latitudes |
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Term
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Definition
large water-circulation system that rotates clockwise in the northern hemisphere and anticlockwise in the southern hemisphere |
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Term
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Definition
gyre (water circulation system) that moves clockwise in northern hemisphere and anticlockwise in the southern hemisphere examples: north atlantic gyre, north pacific gyre, south pacific |
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Term
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Definition
gyres that move anticlockwise in the northern hemisphere and clockwise in the southern hemisphere ex: Alaska gyre, Oyashiu gyre |
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Term
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Definition
- have same morphology of gyres but are much smaller
- formed when two water masses of different temperature meet
- a cold core ring occurs where nutrients and productivity are low
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Term
Continental Divergence and Continental Convergence Where does each one usually occur? |
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Definition
Continental Divergence - when two oceanic plates move away from each other (aka seafloor spreading)
- leads to the formation of a new oceanic crust
- occurs mainly in upwelling zones where nutrients are rich
Continental Convergence - when two oceanic plates collide
- as a result, some crust is destroyed and both plates get smaller
- occurs where surface waters accumulate and nutriets are poor (ex: w. pacific ocean)
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Term
Planetary frontal systems |
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Definition
systems of when two currents of different characteristics meet (different temperatures, salinity, etc) |
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Term
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Definition
- Rivers that enter oceanic seas
- often have high nutrient concentration
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Term
What are the biological processes that affect the distribution of phytoplankton productivity |
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Definition
- self-shading effect- as algae grows, they reduce light penetration and nutrient availability
- Grazing effect- as phyoplankton quanties grow, so does the zooplankton that feeds off the phytoplankton
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Term
What are the general classifications of zooplankton? Examples? |
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Definition
- Holoplankton- permanent residents of plankton community
- ex: foraminifera, copepods, Radiolaria, Medusae (jelly fish) heteropods, euphausiids
- Meroplankton- temporary residents of the plankton community
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Term
How are zooplanktons classified? What type of organisms exist within each classification? |
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Definition
classification can be based on either their position in the food chain or by their nutrition- based on food chain position
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- herbivores
- carnivores
- detrivores (feed on organic debris)
- omnivores
based on nutrition Grazers- consume plants directly (herbivores)
Predators- hunt other animals (carnivores)
Scavengers- eat dead organic matter (ex: many benthic species, crabs)
Filter Feeders-obtain food by filtering organic matter (living or dead) out of water (ex: barnacles use their cirri to extract food from their surroundings)
Deposit Feeders- ingests sediment and mud and extracts food particles mixed within it (ex: earthworms)
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Term
Where do Copepods fit within the first 4 taxonomic classification of organisms? Characteristics?
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Definition
- Classification
- Kingdom- metazoa
- Phylum-Anthropoda
- Class- Crustacea
- Order: Calanoida, Cyclopoida, Harpacticoida
- most abundant zooplankton
- Holoplankton
- ominvores
- carnivores
- play major role in the food chain, 70% of plankton nets
- found in all regions
- 3 distinctive body parts (characterized by head and body segments): Cephalosome, 2 pairs of antennae, abdomen
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Term
Euphausiids -What Kingdom and Phylum are they? - Characteristics? |
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Definition
- kingdom- metazoa
- Phylum- Crustacea
- holoplankton
- common name: krill
- generally omnivores
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Term
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Definition
- Ichthus= fish in greek
- Kingdom- metazoa
- Phylum- Chordata
- vertebrates
- meroplankton during egg and larvae stage
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Term
What is Diel Vertical Migration? What are the 3 Diel Migration Patterns? |
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Definition
Diel Vertical Migration are vertical patterns that zooplankton move in within 24 hour processes 3 Diel migration patterns - Nocturnal Migration- single daily ascent at sunset, single descent at sunrise (most common)
- Twilight Migration- 2 ascents and 2 descents every 24 hours
- Reverse migration- single daily descent at sunset, single ascent at sunrise (least common)
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Term
What are the 3 major hypothesis explaining why different species undergo diel migration? |
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Definition
- to avoid predators that migrate downwards during daylight
- to conserve energy by spending their non-feeding time in deeper, cooler waters (where metabolic demands are lower)
- Zooplankton are subject to currents moving in different directions and speeds, usually in zonesof high productivity
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Term
What are the distributions of Zooplankton characterized by? |
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Definition
vertical distribution patterns |
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Term
What are seasonal vertical migration patterns? What kind of species follow these patterns? |
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Definition
patterns of vertical ascent and descent of zooplankton within different seasons -ex: copepods |
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Term
What characterizes the amount of Zooplankton biomass? What other species' biomass can Zooplankton's biomass be compared to? |
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Definition
Zooplankton biomass decreases rapidly with depth phytoplankton |
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Term
What is an Ecosystem? What are its characteristics? |
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Definition
- totality of an environment, chemical and physical characteristics, plants and animals
- ecosystems are diverse but share common characteristics
- they all involve the exchange of energy and organic matter (plants-->herbivores-->carnivores-->omnivores)
- They all involve the decomposition of organic matter into inorganic compounds
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Term
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Definition
- linear arrangements depicting the transfer of energy/organic matter through various trophic (nutrition) levels
- Simple food chains apply when the dietary habits of each trophic level are simple
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Term
What are Trophic Dynamics? |
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Definition
study of the nutritional itnerconncetions among the parts of an ecosystem |
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Term
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Definition
simple levels composed of organisms that obtain their energy in similar ways |
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Term
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Definition
- network of interlaced and independent food chains
- more complex system where animals have varied diets
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Term
What are the main characteristics of Food Chains and Food webs? |
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Definition
as trophic levels increase--> animal size increases, generation time becomes longer, and body weight increase w/proportion to size food webs account for species of more complex dietary systems and/or more competitve relationships of certain predator species a phytoplankton's size is the determinor of the number of trophic levels a microbial loop is an independent food web; it's essential for nutrient remineralization (regeneration)
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Term
What is an energy pyramid? |
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Definition
- a pyramid presenting the complexities of organisms based on their nutritional habits and illustrates the process of energy transfer
- the larger the size, the larger the amount of energy contained in that trophic layer
- from order to largest to smallest: plants, herbivores, primary carnivores, secondary carnivores, tertiary carnivores
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Term
What is ecological efficiency? |
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Definition
- the efficiency in which energy is transferred between trophic levels
- aka transfer efficiencies
- common transfer efficiencies:
- 20% from plants to herbivores (1st-->2nd trophic level)
- 15-10% from herbivores to carnvores (2nd-3rd trophic levels)
- thus, 80-90% energy loss between first and third layer
- transfer of energy from one level to another is NOT an efficient process
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Term
What are the general characteristics of Nektonic species? |
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Definition
- active swimmers, can swim against currents
- mostly vertebrates
- many migrate
- have developed strategies necessary for 1) life at deep depths, 2) to live w/o shelter and 3) to avoid obstacles (camouflage)
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Term
What are the 5 main groups of Nektonic species? |
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Definition
- Cephalopods (squids, cuttlefish, octopods)
- Reptiles (marine turtles, sea snakes)
- Mammals (whales, sea lions, seals)
- Seabirds (auks, albatrosses, penguins)
- Agnatha (primitive jawless fish), Chondrichthyes (cartilaginous fish), and Osteichthyes (bony fish)
Christina Rarely Misses Stupid, Annoying and Callous Orphans
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Term
How are gyres or oceanic rings formed? |
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Definition
When two water masses of different temperatures meet |
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Term
What are the 2 morphological adaptations of nektonic species? |
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Definition
1) Epipelagic - fish that live in upper 200 meters water depth
- most common
- commercially harvested
- ex: Anchovy, Cod, Halibut, Tuna
2) Mesopelagic - only about 1000 fish species
- live 200 meters below water depth
- nutrition depends on food produced elsewhere
- no primary productivity
- small sizes
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Term
What is osmosis? How do fish in the ocean undergo osmosis? |
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Definition
Osmosis is the movement of water from one solute concentration to another through a semipermeable membrane The water travels between the fish's body fluids and the seawater; body fluid and seawater have different salt concentrations |
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Term
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Definition
The transfer process of nutrients from the seawater to the body fluids of fish |
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Term
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Definition
The ability to float or rise in a liquid |
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Term
What is Locomotion? What characterizes the locomotion of fish? How is a fish's locomotion measured? |
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Definition
- Locomotion is a fishes ability to maneuver through the effects of friction (counteract friction)
- Fish have developed rapid and swift locomotion
- Locomotion, or frictional resistance, is proportional to the fish's surface area in contact with water
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Term
What adaptations have mesopelagic fish developed in response to the conditions they endure? What features or characteristics evolved from these adaptations? |
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Definition
- Adaption to Scarcity of Light
- large eyes
- bioluminescence
- Adaptation to scarcity of food
- large mouth
- hinged jaw
- large ingestion capacity
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Term
What are the 2 type of fish that migrate? Why do they migrate? What are their migration patterns? |
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Definition
Fish migrate to select favorable conditions for feeding and reproduction. - Anadromous Fish
- lay eggs in freshwater and then migrate back to sea
- Catadromous Fish
- lay eggs in seawater and migrate back to freshwater
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Term
What characterizes the Benthic Realm? What characteristics do the species within this region share? Examples of Benthic Species? |
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Definition
- The Benthic Realm is life at the seafloor
- Benthic Species are:
- very diverse group
- 98% of marine species
- have reduced locomotion
- feeding is largely dependant on food from from photic zone
- most are scavengers, filter feeders, deposit feeders
- Benthic Species
- Benthic plants
- foraminifera
- sponges
- marine worms
- mollusca
- echinoderms
- crustacea
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Term
How do endobenthic and epibenthic species differ? |
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Definition
Endobenthic - smaller
- infauna
- ex: worms, clams
Epibenthic - epifauna
- 80% of larger species
- ex: corals, barnacles, mussels, starfish, sponges
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Term
What kind of substrates exist within the Benthic Realm? |
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Definition
Muddy Substrates, Sandy Substrates, Soft Substrates |
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Term
What characterizes Intertidal Environments? What is this type of environment also known as? |
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Definition
It is the zone between the mean high spring tide and the mean low spring tide aka Mid Littoral Z|one |
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Term
What are Estuaries? What characterizes them? How do species adapt to this environemnt? |
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Definition
- Estuaries are the zones where fresh waters meet salt waters
- characteristics
- very complex environment, physically and biologically
- species must adapt to this highly variable environment
- lowbiodiversity
- species adapt by evolving from freshwater species to brackish species to marine species
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Term
What are Coral Reefs? Characteristics? |
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Definition
- Coral Reefs are organic structures created by carbonate secreting animals and plants
- Characteristics
- unique biodiversity and trophic dynamics
- grow in desert areas of ocean that are nutrient depleted (phytoplankton)
- some share symbiotic relationship w/ zooxanthellae, where coral provides nutrients, coral provides oxygen
- still has high high biodiversity,rich and abundant environment
- highly self-contained system
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Term
What are the two types of Coral Reefs? How do they differ? |
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Definition
Hermatypic Corals: Ahermatypic Corals: - do not possess zooxanthellae
- solitary lifestyle
- found in deep waters (below photic zone) in polar areas
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Term
What characterizes the recently discovered deep sea benthic communities? |
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Definition
- 300-500 degrees C surface waters
- precipitation of dissolved metals that give off a black smoky aspect
- 375 species of high biodiversity, large, mostly filter feeders
- no light
- no source of primary producers
- high concentrations of hydrogen sulphide
- species here feed themselves through chemosynthesis
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Term
What is hydrogen sulphide? Where are there high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide? |
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Definition
- compound that is usually very toxic, even at low concentrations
- produced through volcanic activity and released by black smokers
- high concentrations in deep sea benthic zones
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Term
What is chemosynthesis? What kind of species undergo chemosynthesis? |
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Definition
- process of using bacteria to produce organic matter
- used by species of deep sea benthic communities
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