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Oceans Exam 1
Ocean Exam 1
65
Other
Undergraduate 4
09/28/2010

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Cards

Term

Meroplankton: 

Benthic Invertebrates

Definition

 

  • 70% marine species have a juvenille planktonic stage (egg or larvae)
  • could be minutes, months, or years
  • either eaten or settle onto suitable substrate and metamorphose into adult
  • deep sea species often lack the planktonic stage due to lack of food 

 

 

Term
Definition

Shelled Veliger larva

 

  • benthic invertebrate meroplankton 
  • snails and clams
  • ciliated membrane (velum) for food collection and locomotion 

 

Term
Definition

 

bipinnaria of starfish

(meroplankton: benthic invertebrate)

Term
[image]
Definition

Polychaete trochophore

(early stage larva)

 

  • meroplankton: benthic invertebrate
  • several bands of cilia
  • develops a segmented body and appendages

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Polychaete 

(late stage larva)

 

  • later stage of polychaete trochophore
  • meroplankton: benthic invertebrate

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Barnacle nauplius larva

 

  • meroplankton: benthic invertebrate
  • free-swimming
  • usually 6 stages

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Crab Zoea

 

  • meroplankton: benthic invertebrate
  • stages of development separated by molting

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Crab megalopa

 

  • meroplankton: benthic invertebrate
  • settled form of the larva that resembles adult 

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Barnacle cypris

 

  • meroplankton: benthic invertebrate
  • attaches to substrate
  • metamorphoses to the adult form 

 

Term

 

Ichthyoplankton

(eggs + larvae)

Definition

Eggs...

 

  • attach to substrate, free floating
  • varying amounts of yolk (less time in egg = less yolk) and oil (more oil floats at a different level in the water column)
  • rate of development is species-specific and affected by temp.
  • large + few eggs vs. small + many eggs 

 

Term

 

Pleuston

Definition


  • suface zooplankton with an over water portion
  • rich in warm and tropical water

 

Term

 

Neuston

Definition

 

 

  • zooplankton at surface of the water BUT all under water 
  • rich in topical and warm waters

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Siphonophore: Physalia

 

  • holoplankton: cnidaria
  • stinging cells on tentacles that are up to 10m
  • pleuston/neuston
  • jump out of water to avoid predation

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Velella (by the wind sailor)

 

  • pleuston/neuston
  • jump out of water to avoid predation
  • short tentacles
  • captures food (copepods) very near surface
  • turtles + suface molluscs feed on them 

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Glaucus

 

  • Pleutson/neuston
  • counter-shading to avoid predation
  • nudibranch
  • float upside down at surface using air in digestive tract sacs
  • eats Physalia, Velella, and ingests nematocysts triggering them, then cilia move them to dorsal surface where they become protection vs. predators

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Janthina

 

  • pleustion/neuston
  • builds mucus-encased bubble rafts to hang upside down from
  • east Physalia and Velella

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Halobates

 

  • Pleuston/neuston
  • only insect in open ocean
  • east Physalia, Velella, and copepods

 

Term

 

Epipelagic Plankton

Definition

 

  • below neuston (200-300m deep)
  • euphotic --> disphotic
  • many herbivores and omnivores
  • high diversity, mostly small and transparent organisms (to avoid predation)
  • zooplankton may be permanent here or migrate in/out of zone

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Salps

 

  • Epipelagic plankton 
  • omnivore
  • provide nutrients to deep water via fecal matter

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Larvaceans

 

  • Epipelagic plankton
  • omnivore
  • form marine snow = move production to deep water

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Thecosomatus pteropods

 

  • epipelagic plankton
  • omnivore

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Copepods & Smaller Crustaceans

 

  • epipelagic plankton
  • herbivores 

 

Term

 

Sargassum Weed

Definition

 

  • a genus of brown algae with ~150 species
  • MOST are temperate intertidal
  • most famous are free-floating and pelagic
  • large clumps occur in Sargasso Sea in the western Atlantic 
  • provide habitat and shelter for entire specialized communities

 

Term
[image]
Definition

 

Sargassum Frog Fish

Term
[image]
Definition

 

Sargassum Crab

 

  • in sargassum weed

 

Term
[image]
Definition

 

Loggerhead Turtle Hatchling

 

  • in sargassum weed

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Flying Fish

 

  • in sargassum weed

 

Term
[image]
Definition

 

Sargassum Nudibranch

Term

 

Mesopleagic plankton

Definition

 

  • 200-300m --> 1000m
  • larger than epipelagic relatives even though gelatinous (b/c no wave action deep down)
  • some larger species partly herbivorous with nightly migration into epipelagic
  • most carnivorous or detritivores 
  • black/red coloring + big eyes with sensitivity to blue/green light

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Vampire Squid

 

  • mesopelagic plankton
  • adapted to life at oxygen minimum zone
  • 400-800m depth, density gradient causes accumulation of fecal material --> high bacterial growth and bacterial grazers --> respiration reduces oxygen content from 4-6mg/l to <2mg/l

 

Term
[image]
Definition

 

Deep Sea Larvacean

mesopelagic plankton

Term

 

Bioluminescence

 

Definition

 

  • enzyme (luciferase) reaction in special cells (photophores)
  • bact., dinoflag., inverts., fishes
  • communication? predator defense? counter-illumination? lure?

 

Term

 

Bathy- (1K-3/4Km)

Abbysso- (>3/4Km)

pelagic plankton

Definition

 

  • zooplankton and fish dark red/black colored with small eyes
  • fewer species, fewer individuals (less productive waters)
  • longer generation times, lower fecundity (lots of energy into 1 offspring)
  • bioluminescence occurs 

 

Term

 

Benthic environments

 

Definition

 

  • demersal or epibenthic: live near or temporarily on sea floor
  • like: bottom-dwelling fish, plaice, and crustaceans

 

Term

 

Problems with vertical 

Definition

 

  • 1. individuals and species are not uniformly distributed b/w these depths + many species may morve b/w depths ( deeper zones blur)
  • 2. zone of a species can change with latitude 

 

Term

 

Zooplankton

Definition

categories: what they eat (ex. herbivore)

Size

Habitat (oceanic vs. neritic)

length of residency in pelagic (holoplankton vs. meroplankton)


Term

 

Collection Methods for zooplankton

Definition

Patchy distributions + broad size range = challenging

 

  • concentrated using "net tow"
  • now, optical plankton counters = standard

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Dinoflagellate

 

  •  holoplankton: protozoa
  • gelatinous sphere >1mm
  • eats small zooplankton, diatoms, etc.
  • it eats by generating currents or extending cytoplasmic trap
  • dense swarms near coast 

 

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Foram

 

  • holoplankton: protozoa
  • CaCO3 perforated shell with chambers
  • 30 µm to mm
  • very abundant 40'N to 40'S
  • eat bact., phytos., smalls zooplank. by capture with pseudopodia
  • paleo importance: foraminiferan ooze

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Radiolarian

 

  •  Holoplankton: protozoa
  • spherical amoeboid with central silica based capsule
  • 50µm to mm
  • occur everywhere but most common in cold or deep
  • eat bact., phytos., protists and crustaceans by capture with branched pseudopodia
  • paleo impt: radiolarian ooze

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Zooflagellate

 

  • holoplankton: protozoa
  • colorless, strictly heterotrophic
  • 2-5 µm, abundant when bloom
  • eat bact., detritus
  • 20-80% of nanoplankton --> important food source for zooplankton

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Ciliate: Tintinnid

 

  • large subgroup of Ciliates > 1000 species
  • eat 4-60% of coastal phytos

 

Term

 

Ciliates

 

Definition

 

  • holoplankton: protozoa
  • ubiquitous in oceans
  • use cilia for locomotion, and food capture
  • eat bact., small phyto-/zoo-plankton

 

Term

 

Cnidaria

Definition

 

  • holoplankton
  • long tentacles with stinging cells (nematocysts) for capture of larger prey

 

Term
[image]
Definition

 

Medusae (jellyfish)
  • primitive structure, carnivorous
  • few mm to 3.5 m
  • up to 60 m tentacles
  • pigmentation is due to symbionts ?
  • box jelly : is one of the most venomous animals (death in 4 minutes) 

 

Term

 

Ctenophores

Definition

 

  • holoplankton
  • transparent animals
  • swim by 8 rows of fused cilia (called comb plates)
  • most cms to 2m
  • complete digestive system + colloblast cells (adhesive)

 

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Tentacula

 

  • holoplankton: ctenophores
  • long paired tentacles with colloblast for prey
  • some have large ciliated oral lobes for prey
  • have significant impact on fish populations via egg and larvae consumption 

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Tentacula

also see other card

Term
[image]
Definition

Nuda

 

  • holoplankton: ctenophores
  • lack tentacles
  • large mouth to engulf prey
  • eat mostly tentacula and ctenophores

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Heteropod

 

  • Holoplankton: mollusca
  • closely related to snails, swim with single fin from "creeping foot"
  • some can completely withdraw into shell others lack shells and are transparent
  • well-developed eyes --> eat planktonic molluscs, copepods, chaetognaths, siphonophores
  • large chitinous teeth protrude form mouth
  • mostly in warm waters --> not abundant 

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Thecosome

  • holoplankton: mollusca
  • shelled "snails" with paired wings for swimming (derived from foot)
  • up to 30mm 
  • suspension feeders --> exude a mucous web that captures phytos, small zoo., and detritus
  • can be very abundant in epipelagic seas, and polar regions
  • impt food source for fisheries
  • paleo importance: pteropod ooze

Term
[image]
Definition

Gymnosomes

  • holoplankton: mollusca
  • lack shells, but have paired wings
  • 85mm long, prey upon specific pteropods
  • capture prey with special tentacles and chitinous hooks, then remove soft tissue of pteropods before swallowing 

Term
[image]
Definition

Ctenophora

  • each comb row has many "teeth" and each tooth has many thousand cilia
  • combs interact with light, creating prism-like effect
  • refraction and diffraction NOT chemically mediated
  • many also have true bioluminescence, not in combs 

Term

 

Arthropods

 

Definition

  • holoplankton
  • Generally, the arthropods = the most successful animal group on earth - greatest diversity of habitats, eat the most food, have the highest numbers (75% of known animal spp ~1.1m spp.) - Key innovation = exoskeleton (protective, flexible, suit of armor = chitin + protein)

Term
[image]
Definition

Euphausiids

(keystone of Antarctic ecosystem)

holoplankton

-86 spp, 15-20mm (100mm for E. superba)

-Eat diatoms at upwelling regions, when bloomed Euphausiid mass > human mass (750 million metric tons!)

-Fast swimming, undersampled by nets due to avoidance behavior -So abundant that 100m D.V.M. can actually mix deep-water nutrients into surface waters at the Antarctic Convergence

-Eaten by seabirds, squids, fishes, whales

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Copepod

holoplankton

70% of the larger zooplankton -

1850 spp., usually <6mm in size -

Eat phytos, particularly diatoms using currents generated by movement of swimming legs and mouthparts -12 distinct anatomical life history stages

Term
[image]
Definition

Caldocera: Arthropod

holoplankton

400 freshwater spp (e.g., Daphnia), only 8 marine spp -

coastal / brackish water

-Can rapidly increase #s parthenogenically (no male / no fertilization) when favorable

Term
[image]
Definition

Amphipods: arthopod

holplankton

laterally compressed bodies

-Small fraction of zooplankton -

Parathemisto is common in polar regions

-Predators / parasites on medusae, ctenophores, salps, other amphipods

-Direct development (young = adults)

Term
[image]
Definition

Decapod: Arthropod

holoplankton

-most advanced crustacea -

10-100mm, larger zooplankton

-Strong swimmers, live >150m depth,

eat copepods, euphausiids, planktonic crustacea -

Impt as food for albacore tuna, dolphins and whales

Term
[image]
Definition

Ostracod: arthropod

holoplankton

-minor components of zooplankton -

Hinged bivavle exoskeleton

-<20mm, scavengers?

Term
[image]
Definition

Mysids: arthropods

holoplankton

not important overall?

-benthic, but rise at night to form breeding swarms

 

Term
[image]
Definition

Appendicularia(larvaceans): Chordota

holoplankton

-look like a “tadpole”

-secrete mucous ‘house’

-<5mm body, house 5- 40mm

-tail directs water into house to capture suspended material on a feeding filter

-clogged filter, discard house == “marine snow"

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