marine life and ecology

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Marine Life Marine Life and Ecology and Ecology 2. 2. From phytoplanktons From phytoplanktons to invertebates to invertebates

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Marine Life and Ecology. 2.From phytoplanktons to invertebates. Virtually all primary productivity on land comes from large plants. … seaweeds such as these do exist, but they need shallow water where Sunlight is available and firm substrate for anchorage by their holdfasts. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Marine Life and Ecology

Marine LifeMarine Lifeand Ecologyand Ecology

2.2. From phytoplanktons From phytoplanktons to invertebatesto invertebates

Page 2: Marine Life and Ecology

Virtually all primary productivity on land comes from large

plants

Page 3: Marine Life and Ecology

… seaweeds such as these do exist, but they need shallow water where

Sunlight is available and firm substrate for anchorage by their

holdfasts.

Page 4: Marine Life and Ecology

… whereas microscopic unicellular plants (diatoms, dinoflagellates) and

algae account for most of the ocean’s primary productivity.

Page 5: Marine Life and Ecology

Phylum Phaeophyta or Brown Algae

Phylum Rhodophyta or Red Algae

Seaweeds are large marine multicellular algae. These non-vascular plants are grouped as green, red and brown algae.

Phylum Chlorophyta or

Green Algae

Page 6: Marine Life and Ecology

BacteriaBacteria

Producers Producers (photosynthesizers)(photosynthesizers)

Blue-green algaeBlue-green algaeCoccolithophoresCoccolithophoresSilicoflagellatesSilicoflagellatesDiatomsDiatomsDinoflagellatesDinoflagellates

Consumers (Oxidizers)Consumers (Oxidizers)ProtozoansProtozoans

RadiolariansRadiolariansForaminiferaForaminifera

<5 <5 mm

5 5 mm3-10 3-10 mm5-40 5-40 mm

20-80 20-80 mm10-50 10-50 mm

50-500 50-500 mm100-1000 100-1000 mm

NoneNone

NoneNoneCaCOCaCO33

SiOSiO22

SiOSiO22

Cellulose Cellulose or noneor none

SiOSiO22

SiOSiO22

BenthicBenthic

Surface watersSurface waterswarm open oceanwarm open oceancool open oceancool open ocean

upwellingupwellingwarm quiet waterswarm quiet waters

Surface waters and Surface waters and sedimentssediments

Size Skeletalmaterial Habitat

Unicellular Unicellular Marine LifeMarine Life

Page 7: Marine Life and Ecology

Moss

Page 8: Marine Life and Ecology

Fern

Page 9: Marine Life and Ecology

Kelp bed

Marsh grass

Page 10: Marine Life and Ecology

0 24001600800

800

400

0

Distance from shore (km)Distance from shore (km)

Cel

l co

un

ts p

er 5

0 cm

Cel

l co

un

ts p

er 5

0 cm

33 o

f w

ater

of

wat

er

DiatomsDiatoms

DinoflagellatesDinoflagellates

CoccolithophoresCoccolithophores

Page 11: Marine Life and Ecology

SpermatophytaeSpermatophytae(seed bearing plants)

Thallophytae(algae and fungii)

SpermatophytaeSpermatophytae(seed bearing plants)

Pteridophytae(ferns)

Bryophytae(moss)

Thallophytae(algae and fungii)

Land plants Marine plants

Page 12: Marine Life and Ecology

Mangroves thrive in warm tropical waters, kelp prefers cooler waters.

Page 13: Marine Life and Ecology

Photomicrograph of tiny marine bacteria (~1 m) attached to the larger diatoms.

Page 14: Marine Life and Ecology

Cyanobacteria(x 3000 magnification)

Page 15: Marine Life and Ecology

Diatoms

Page 16: Marine Life and Ecology

CoccolithophoresCoccolithophoresCoccolithophoresCoccolithophores

Page 17: Marine Life and Ecology

DinoflagellatesDinoflagellates

Page 18: Marine Life and Ecology

Marine invertebrates Phylum Porifera (Sponges) Phylum Cnidaria

(Corals, Portugese Man-of-War, Jellyfish) Phylum Mollusca

(Clams, Snails, Octopi) Phylum Anthropoda

(Crabs, Shrimp, Lobsters, Copepods) Phylum Echinodermata

(Sea Stars, Brittle Stars) Marine worms (Polychaeta,

Vestimentifera)

Marine vertebrates

Marine animals

Page 19: Marine Life and Ecology

As Robert May (Scientific American, October 1992) has argued, most of the species display a predictable

relation between physical size and population size: the smaller they are, the more

abundant they tend to be.

Characteristic size (meters)

1 mm 1 cm 1 m

Implication: More species < 1 mm await discovery

than ones > 1 cm.

Page 20: Marine Life and Ecology

Jellyfish are cnidarians which lack the polyp stage of the life cycle. Therefore, they are always in the medusae stage. They are considered plankton because they cannot swim on their own--they are dependent upon the current to take them places. They are normally found in the epipelagic layer of the ocean.

Page 21: Marine Life and Ecology

The deep scattering layerThe deep scattering layer

Page 22: Marine Life and Ecology

Zooplankton concentration shows two peaks in the very productive summertime subarctic or cold temperate waters:

• some are feeding at the surface, while

• others are resting, or metabolizing what they have consumed, just below the photic zone.

In contrast, in the tropics, the zooplankton concentration is on the photic surface waters.

Page 23: Marine Life and Ecology

Yellow sponges on a

reef. Sponges are filter feeders

- they filter their food particles

from water that passes

through them.

Page 24: Marine Life and Ecology

An anemone is a cnidarian, a simple animal consisting of an open gut surrounded by tentacles - stinging cells in these tentacles help paralyze small prey that the tentacles then help bring into the gut.

Page 25: Marine Life and Ecology

Jellyfish, a cnidarian, consuming a fish that it has captured

Page 26: Marine Life and Ecology

Different species of jellyfish have different innate buoyancies, so when they are not swimming, some hang neutrally in the water, while others slowly sink when passive; a few float. Some of them are rather small, often less than an inch (or 2.5 cm) and also often found in freshwater as well are subject to the oceans currents, tides and waves for their large-scale movements.

But giants like the Lion’s Mane Jellyfish* are known to be excellent swimmers. This is the largest known species of jellyfish, and is mostly found in cold waters north of 42°N (Arctic, North Atlantic and theNorth Pacific) and off Australia and New Zealand. The largest recorded specimen, found washed up on the shore of Massa-chusetts Bay in 1870, had a bell (body) with a diameter of 2.3 m (7 feet 6 inches) and tentacles 36.5 m (120 feet) long. It was longer than a Blue Whale, the longest known animal in the world.

Is Jellyfish a plankton or a nekton?

* The Sherlock Holmes story, The Adventures of the Lion’s Mane, is centered around a professor who is mysteriously killed. At the end of the story, Holmes discovers the killer is a huge Lion's mane jellyfish.

Page 27: Marine Life and Ecology

A bizarre new species of jellyfish has been discovered in the deep waters off the Californian coast. The bell-shaped creature spans a meter in diameter and has been nicknamed "big red", because of its unusual deep red color. The US and Japanese teams that discovered it say the species deserves its own subfamily.

Tiburonia granrojo was discovered using video cameras on deep-diving remotely operated vehicles (ROVs). Its color and shape set it apart from its other gelatinous relatives, but it has another unusual characteristic — a complete lack of tentacles.

Bizarre new jellyfish discovered 18:03 07 May 03 NewScientist.com news service 

Page 28: Marine Life and Ecology

Orange Finger SpongePurple and Yellow Tube Sponge

Phylum Porifera

Page 29: Marine Life and Ecology
Page 30: Marine Life and Ecology

The animals of the class hydrozoa

have both a polyp and medusa

stage. Siphonophores

are a type of hydrozoan with a

float for buoyancy.

Probably the most famous of these is

the species physalia, the

Portugese-man-of-war, which is a type of colonial siphonophore.

Page 31: Marine Life and Ecology

Marine worms include

Page 32: Marine Life and Ecology

Octopus

Page 33: Marine Life and Ecology

Mussels

Page 34: Marine Life and Ecology

krill

Page 35: Marine Life and Ecology

crabs

Page 36: Marine Life and Ecology

barnacles

Page 37: Marine Life and Ecology

sea urchin

starfish

sea cucumber