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Ocean
The open ocean is the most
 extensive biome on earth.
Ocean
• The open oceans or pelagic ecosystems are
  the areas away from the coastal boundaries
  and above the seabed. It encompasses the
  entire water column of the seas and the
  oceans and lies beyond the edge of the
  continental shelf. It extends from the tropics
  to the polar regions and from the sea surface
  to the abyssal depths. It is a highly
  heterogeneous and dynamic habitat.
Geography
• The world ocean covers over 360 million km2
  of earth’s surface and consists of one
  continuous, interconnected mass of water.
  This water is spread among three major
  ocean basins:
 Pacific
Atlantic
Indian
Classification of the Marine
   Environment Classification of the
                Marine
• Marine scientists divide the ocean
  environment into zones. Marine Zones are
  areas with uniform physical conditions.
  Common classifications are based on physical
  factors such as
  depth, light, temperature, salinity, etc. The
  most basic zonation is based on substrate:
  exclusively water environment (pelagic) and
  bottom interface (benthic).
• The pelagic zone is divided by depth
  into: nerithic zone, which includes the
  nearshore areas over the continental shelves;
  and the oceanic zone,the areas seaward of
  the continental shelves. The oceanic zone
  is further divided into epipelagic zone (same
  as photic
  zone), mesopelagic, bathypelagic, and abysso
  pelagic zones. Abyssopelagic zone is water in
  the deep ocean trenches. The last three
  zones are all at aphotic depths.
The shallowest benthic environments
    (below the neritic zone) are:

• * Supralittoral - bottom substrate above high
  tides (not part of ocean).
  * Littoral - bottom substrate within the
  intertidal zone.
  * Sublittoral - bottom substrate below the
  lowest tides.
Beyond the continental shelf break
                are:
• * the Bathyal zone (ocean bottom down to
  the abyssal plain or the average depth of the
  ocean floor),
  * the Abyssal zone (from 4,000 - 6,000 m
  depths), and
  * the Hadal zone representing the deepest
  ocean bottom in the deepest trenches.
• Physical factors affecting Marine Life
  Any factor of the physical environment that
  affects the survival of marine organisms are
  physical factors. These physical factors form
  barriers between various communities of
  marine organisms. The most important of
  these are:
• Light
          the primary importance of light is photosynthesis.

   – The depth of penetration of light will determine the birth of a food
     chain sequence.

        Most marine organisms live in the well-lighted neritic zone and in the
epipelagic zone where food is abundant.

         Some deep water fish use light for body orientation (even dim light),
feeding, and predator avoidance.

         Some marine organisms produce their own light by biochemical reaction,
known as bioluminescence. Organisms typically living at depths within the aphotic
zone, (or those that are active at night) such as squids, some fish and shrimps, are
bioluminescent. They use light to see, to communicate, and to facilitate predation.
• Temperature -
      the metabolic rate of organisms increases
 with the temperature of their bodies.
      Temperature range in the oceans is -50 to
 40 C, except around hydrothermal vents where
 temperatures can be as high as 110 C. So in
 general, marine organisms live within a much
 narrower temperature range than land
 organisms.
• Dissolved Nutrients -
      Nutrients are chemical substances that
 play vital role in the growth and general
 functioning of an organisms.
      In the oceans, nutrients in short supply
 are nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P).
• Salinity - marine salinity varies from 6 - 40
  ppt. This large range is controlled by
  evaporation rates, sea ice formation, and
  freshwater supply rates. The greatest impact
  of salinity variation is at the ocean
  surface, whereas deeper ocean salinity
  (below the halocline), is far less variable.
  Salinity affects the tissues of organisms
  thorough osmosis.
• Most marine organisms are isotonic and no
  special salinity problems are imposed on
  them. But marine fish (bony fish)
  is hypotonic, that is, their body fluids are less
  salty than seawater. Hence, they are
  constantly losing water and are threatened
  by dehydration.
• Dissolved gases - gases dissolve more in cold
  water than in warm water. The two most
  important gases to marine organisms are:
  O2, and CO2. O2 is essential for respiration
  and CO2 for photosynthesis. O2 is less
  soluble is seawater and tends to be in
  abundance only in surface waters. Why? CO2
  is more soluble in seawater and its
  concentration increases with depth. Why?
• Planktons
  In the biosphere, nearly all living organisms
  use converted solar energy as the primary
  fuel to facilitate their daily activities.
• In the oceans, the organisms that capture
  solar energy and bind it into usable energy
  for their own use as well for the use of other
  organisms are known
  as phytoplanktons and seaweed.
• Planktons represent a community of
  organisms associated solely on their mode of
  locomotion. All planktons drift or swim very
  weakly, moving around with the currents or
  waves. Many can move vertically through the
  water column.
• In general, planktons live in the euphotic
  zone, in the upper layers of the open ocean
  down to the compensation depth. This is the
  depth to which 1% of surface light penetrates
  and photosynthetic organisms produce just
  enough carbohydrate to serve all the
  organisms' needs (zero net productivity).
  Although the compensation depth is
  variable, it averages about 150 m from the
  ocean surface.
• Planktons are generally diverse, ranging from
  those with soft, gelatinous bodies with little
  or no hard parts, to those encrusted in hard
  parts. The common planktons are drifting
  jellyfish, arrowworms, single-celled
  organisms, some crustaceans, a few marine
  mollusks, some algae, etc. Hence both
  animals (zooplanktons) and plants are part of
  the plankton community.
• There are, at least, eight major types
  of phytoplanktons (the plant variety)
  responsible for the nearly all the oceans
  primary productivity. These phytoplanktons
  are mostly single-celled, microscopic
  organisms that
  include diatoms, dinoflagellates, cocclithoph
  ores, silicoflagellates, and extremely very
  minute varieties
  called nannoplanktons and picoplanktons.
• Photosynthesis
  Photosynthesis is the process used by
  primary producers to manufacture their own
  food in the presence of light. These
  organisms possess a green
  dye, called chlorophyll, which is the molecule
  that traps sunlight and converts it to chemical
  energy in chemical bonds of substances
  called carbohydrates. When these bonds are
  broken, the energy is released and used in a
  variety of ways by organisms.
• Carbohydrates are assembled from
  small, simple, low-energy molecules such as
  water and CO2, to produce large, high-energy
  molecules (sugar) and oxygen.
• 6CO2 + 6H2O --> C6H12O6 + 6O2
• Chemosynthesis
  This is another energy binding process
  performed by organisms that do not use light to
  harness energy for living organisms. Instead,
  because these organisms live in the aphotic
  zone, they capture energy from breaking down
  chemical bonds of simple molecules (such as
  hydrogen sulfide), and use the energy obtained
  to synthesize carbohydrates from carbon dioxide
  and water. Chemosynthesis is estimated to
  contribute 2% to 8% of the ocean's primary
  productivity.
Structure
   The oceans can be divided into
several vertical and horizontal zones.
Structure
• Litoral zone- the shallow shoreline under the
  influence of the rise and fall of the tides
• Neritic zone- extends from the coast to the
  margin of the continental shelf
• Oceanic zone- beyond the continental shelf
• Epipelagic zone- is the surface layer of the
  ocean that extends to a depth of 200m
• Mesopelagic zone- extends from 200m to
  1000m
Structure
• Bathypelagic zone- extends from 1000 to
  4000m
• Abyssal zone- the layer from 4000to 6000m
• Hadal zone- the deepest part of the ocean
Structure
Ocean Light Zone
• 1. Sunlit Zone: This is the top layer, nearest
  the surface. It is also called the euphotic
  zone. Here there is enough light penetrating
  the water to support photosynthesis.
2. Twilight Zone: Only a small amount of light
  can penetrate the water at this depth. As the
  water becomes deeper, the pressure
  increase, too. Plants do not grow here. Only
  animals that have adapted to little light
  survive.
• 3. Midnight Zone: Ninety percent of the
  ocean is in the midnight zone. It is entirely
  dark—there is no light. The water pressure is
  extreme. The temperature is near freezing.
Ocean Light Zone
Human Impact
  Humans have a lot of 'waste' that is
    often disposed of in the ocean -
trash, sewage, oil, chemicals, heat, and
      even 'noise' to name a few.
Human Impact
•   Over fishing
•   Climate change
•   Oil spills
•   Noise pollution
•   Habitat destruction
•   Introduction of alien species
•   Sewage and trash
Ocean

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Ocean

  • 1. Ocean The open ocean is the most extensive biome on earth.
  • 2. Ocean • The open oceans or pelagic ecosystems are the areas away from the coastal boundaries and above the seabed. It encompasses the entire water column of the seas and the oceans and lies beyond the edge of the continental shelf. It extends from the tropics to the polar regions and from the sea surface to the abyssal depths. It is a highly heterogeneous and dynamic habitat.
  • 3. Geography • The world ocean covers over 360 million km2 of earth’s surface and consists of one continuous, interconnected mass of water. This water is spread among three major ocean basins:  Pacific Atlantic Indian
  • 4.
  • 5. Classification of the Marine Environment Classification of the Marine • Marine scientists divide the ocean environment into zones. Marine Zones are areas with uniform physical conditions. Common classifications are based on physical factors such as depth, light, temperature, salinity, etc. The most basic zonation is based on substrate: exclusively water environment (pelagic) and bottom interface (benthic).
  • 6. • The pelagic zone is divided by depth into: nerithic zone, which includes the nearshore areas over the continental shelves; and the oceanic zone,the areas seaward of the continental shelves. The oceanic zone is further divided into epipelagic zone (same as photic zone), mesopelagic, bathypelagic, and abysso pelagic zones. Abyssopelagic zone is water in the deep ocean trenches. The last three zones are all at aphotic depths.
  • 7. The shallowest benthic environments (below the neritic zone) are: • * Supralittoral - bottom substrate above high tides (not part of ocean). * Littoral - bottom substrate within the intertidal zone. * Sublittoral - bottom substrate below the lowest tides.
  • 8. Beyond the continental shelf break are: • * the Bathyal zone (ocean bottom down to the abyssal plain or the average depth of the ocean floor), * the Abyssal zone (from 4,000 - 6,000 m depths), and * the Hadal zone representing the deepest ocean bottom in the deepest trenches.
  • 9. • Physical factors affecting Marine Life Any factor of the physical environment that affects the survival of marine organisms are physical factors. These physical factors form barriers between various communities of marine organisms. The most important of these are:
  • 10. • Light the primary importance of light is photosynthesis. – The depth of penetration of light will determine the birth of a food chain sequence. Most marine organisms live in the well-lighted neritic zone and in the epipelagic zone where food is abundant. Some deep water fish use light for body orientation (even dim light), feeding, and predator avoidance. Some marine organisms produce their own light by biochemical reaction, known as bioluminescence. Organisms typically living at depths within the aphotic zone, (or those that are active at night) such as squids, some fish and shrimps, are bioluminescent. They use light to see, to communicate, and to facilitate predation.
  • 11. • Temperature - the metabolic rate of organisms increases with the temperature of their bodies. Temperature range in the oceans is -50 to 40 C, except around hydrothermal vents where temperatures can be as high as 110 C. So in general, marine organisms live within a much narrower temperature range than land organisms.
  • 12. • Dissolved Nutrients - Nutrients are chemical substances that play vital role in the growth and general functioning of an organisms. In the oceans, nutrients in short supply are nitrogen (N) and phosphorus (P).
  • 13. • Salinity - marine salinity varies from 6 - 40 ppt. This large range is controlled by evaporation rates, sea ice formation, and freshwater supply rates. The greatest impact of salinity variation is at the ocean surface, whereas deeper ocean salinity (below the halocline), is far less variable. Salinity affects the tissues of organisms thorough osmosis.
  • 14. • Most marine organisms are isotonic and no special salinity problems are imposed on them. But marine fish (bony fish) is hypotonic, that is, their body fluids are less salty than seawater. Hence, they are constantly losing water and are threatened by dehydration.
  • 15. • Dissolved gases - gases dissolve more in cold water than in warm water. The two most important gases to marine organisms are: O2, and CO2. O2 is essential for respiration and CO2 for photosynthesis. O2 is less soluble is seawater and tends to be in abundance only in surface waters. Why? CO2 is more soluble in seawater and its concentration increases with depth. Why?
  • 16. • Planktons In the biosphere, nearly all living organisms use converted solar energy as the primary fuel to facilitate their daily activities.
  • 17. • In the oceans, the organisms that capture solar energy and bind it into usable energy for their own use as well for the use of other organisms are known as phytoplanktons and seaweed.
  • 18. • Planktons represent a community of organisms associated solely on their mode of locomotion. All planktons drift or swim very weakly, moving around with the currents or waves. Many can move vertically through the water column.
  • 19. • In general, planktons live in the euphotic zone, in the upper layers of the open ocean down to the compensation depth. This is the depth to which 1% of surface light penetrates and photosynthetic organisms produce just enough carbohydrate to serve all the organisms' needs (zero net productivity). Although the compensation depth is variable, it averages about 150 m from the ocean surface.
  • 20. • Planktons are generally diverse, ranging from those with soft, gelatinous bodies with little or no hard parts, to those encrusted in hard parts. The common planktons are drifting jellyfish, arrowworms, single-celled organisms, some crustaceans, a few marine mollusks, some algae, etc. Hence both animals (zooplanktons) and plants are part of the plankton community.
  • 21. • There are, at least, eight major types of phytoplanktons (the plant variety) responsible for the nearly all the oceans primary productivity. These phytoplanktons are mostly single-celled, microscopic organisms that include diatoms, dinoflagellates, cocclithoph ores, silicoflagellates, and extremely very minute varieties called nannoplanktons and picoplanktons.
  • 22. • Photosynthesis Photosynthesis is the process used by primary producers to manufacture their own food in the presence of light. These organisms possess a green dye, called chlorophyll, which is the molecule that traps sunlight and converts it to chemical energy in chemical bonds of substances called carbohydrates. When these bonds are broken, the energy is released and used in a variety of ways by organisms.
  • 23. • Carbohydrates are assembled from small, simple, low-energy molecules such as water and CO2, to produce large, high-energy molecules (sugar) and oxygen. • 6CO2 + 6H2O --> C6H12O6 + 6O2
  • 24. • Chemosynthesis This is another energy binding process performed by organisms that do not use light to harness energy for living organisms. Instead, because these organisms live in the aphotic zone, they capture energy from breaking down chemical bonds of simple molecules (such as hydrogen sulfide), and use the energy obtained to synthesize carbohydrates from carbon dioxide and water. Chemosynthesis is estimated to contribute 2% to 8% of the ocean's primary productivity.
  • 25. Structure The oceans can be divided into several vertical and horizontal zones.
  • 26. Structure • Litoral zone- the shallow shoreline under the influence of the rise and fall of the tides • Neritic zone- extends from the coast to the margin of the continental shelf • Oceanic zone- beyond the continental shelf • Epipelagic zone- is the surface layer of the ocean that extends to a depth of 200m • Mesopelagic zone- extends from 200m to 1000m
  • 27. Structure • Bathypelagic zone- extends from 1000 to 4000m • Abyssal zone- the layer from 4000to 6000m • Hadal zone- the deepest part of the ocean
  • 29. Ocean Light Zone • 1. Sunlit Zone: This is the top layer, nearest the surface. It is also called the euphotic zone. Here there is enough light penetrating the water to support photosynthesis. 2. Twilight Zone: Only a small amount of light can penetrate the water at this depth. As the water becomes deeper, the pressure increase, too. Plants do not grow here. Only animals that have adapted to little light survive.
  • 30. • 3. Midnight Zone: Ninety percent of the ocean is in the midnight zone. It is entirely dark—there is no light. The water pressure is extreme. The temperature is near freezing.
  • 32. Human Impact Humans have a lot of 'waste' that is often disposed of in the ocean - trash, sewage, oil, chemicals, heat, and even 'noise' to name a few.
  • 33. Human Impact • Over fishing • Climate change • Oil spills • Noise pollution • Habitat destruction • Introduction of alien species • Sewage and trash