EPS 15: Final Review

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The dissolution of CO2 from burned fossil fuels leads to..

a decrease in ocean pH, caused by the formation of carbonic acid, which dissociates and releases protons

Which is the most familiar type of wave? How is it produced?

Wind Waves- produced on the ocean surface by effects of time-varying winds

Kelp Forests

- cover 25% of the world's coastline -most productive and dynamic ecosystems on earth - 3-dimensional habitat for marine organisms -foundation organism that provides the habitat for the community -thrive in cold, nutrient-rich waters -Kelp is one of the fastest growing organisms on Earth

At what temperature does fresh water freeze?

0°C

Sinking Particle Flux

decreases with water depth due to continuous remineralization during transport -the amount of labile (easily digestible) organic carbon also decreases with depth

Wave Shoaling

deep water to shallow water transition

Brine Rejection

once the seawater beings to freeze, salt is excluded from the ice crystal in this process and the surrounding seawater becomes becomes saltier and denser

Inhabitants of Salt Marshes

shellfish, coastal birds, winter flounder, migratory birds

Tides

driven by gravitational pull of sun & moon Powerful, but only 1-2 per day Shallow

Ice Algal communities

dominated by diatoms, live at the ice/water interface and in recently flooded surface and interior layers, Although protists dominate the sea ice biomass, heterotrophic bacteria are also abundant

Deep Sea characteristics

dark, high pressure, low temperature, limited food

Since CO2 is the product of organic matter remineralization, in which of the deep oceans would you expect to find the highest concentration of CO2?

Pacific Ocean

Light penetration in the ocean varies by

(a) amount of particles in the water that absorb/reflect light (b) seasonality (particularly at high latitudes (c) sun vs. moon light

The Antartic

- Coldest place on the earth -the Antarctic is at the bottom of the earth (south) -Penguins live in the Antarctic -land mass surrounded by an ocean -because surrounded by ocean, open ocean allows the forming sea ice to move more freely -forms ice ridges much less often -because there is no land boundary to the north, the sea ice is free to float northward into warmer waters where it eventually melts

The Arctic

- at the top of the earth (North) -Polar bears live in the Arctic and eat seals - 2 million native people call the Arctic home -semi closed ocean surrounded by land - because surrounded by land, ice that forms is not as mobile -converging floes make ice thicker

Viperfish

- characterized by long, needle-like teeth and hinged lower jaws - believed to attack prey after luring them within range with light-producing organs called photophores, which are located along the ventral sides of its body, and with a prominent photophore at the end of a long spine in the dorsal fin

Gulper (or Pelican) Eel

- most notable feature is its large mouth, which is much larger than its body -mouth is loosely hinged, and can be opened wide enough to swallow a fish much larger than the eel itself

Hydrothermal Vents

- seawater is heated through volcanic activity and is released with reduced chemical species -commonly found near volcanically active places, areas where tectonic plates are moving apart, ocean basins, and hotspots

Zooxanthellae

- single-celled dinoflagellates that are able to live in symbiosis with marine invertebrates such as corals, jellyfish, and sea anemones -photosynthetic organisms, which contain chlorophyll as well as the dinoflagellate pigments

Black Smoker vs. White Smokers

-Black Smokers release iron sulfides -White smokers release minerals including calcium and magnesium

Chemosynthesis

-Ecosystems depend upon the ability of some organisms to convert inorganic compounds into food that other organisms can then exploit -runs on chemical energy

3 Domains of Life

-Eukaryotes (contain cell nucleus) -Bacteria (no cell nucleus, Prokaryote) -Archaea(no cell nucleus, Prokaryote)

Maximum wave size/speed depends on:

-Fetch: distance over which the wind blows to generate waves -Duration: length of time the wind blows across the fetch -Relative Wind Speed: difference between wave speed & wind speed

Habitable Oceanic Zones

-Pelagic (in the free water) -Neritic (close to the coast, above shelf) -Oceanic (off the shelf, in the open ocean) -Benthic (on/in or near seafloor) -Littoral (in the tidal shelf, on shelf) -Sublittoral (below tidal zone, on shelf) -Photic (light present) -Aphotic (complete darkness)

Vampire Squid

-an extreme example of a deep-sea cephalopod - lives in a discrete habitat known as the oxygen minimum zone -feed on marine snow

Crinoids

-belong to echinoderms (relatives of the starfish) - feed by filtering small particles of food from the sea water with their feather-like arms

Coral Reefs

-built by colonies of tiny animals found in marine water that contain few nutrients -held together by calcium carbonate structures secreted by corals -form the most diverse ecosystems on Earth -25% of all marine species

Hatchetfish

-gets its name from the distinct hatchetlike shape of its body -believed that they migrate to shallower waters at night to feed mainly on plankton and tiny fish -hunt by looking for the silhouettes of their prey moving overhead

Manganese nodules

-grow at the abyssal plains when metal compounds dissolved in water precipitate around a nucleus -have been found to contain a significant amount of rare earth elements

Nekton in food chains

-occupies the higher consumer levels in food chains

Polar sea ice is...

-one of the largest ecosystems on earth -provides food for a host of animals (crustaceans being the most visible) -Uneaten organic matter from the ice sinks through the water column and feeds benthic ecosystems

Why do waves break at the shore?

-they interact with the ocean bottom -crests travel faster than troughs -when the crest catches up with the trough ahead of it, the wave "breaks" (crest overtakes the lead trough, the wave steepens and then breaks)

Rare Earth Elements (REE)

-used in cars, industry motors, electronic devices, etc -not common, but actually not that rare *China is currently the largest producer for rare earth elements

Whale Fall Stages

1. Scavenger stage (most of the whale biomass is been consumed by scavengers such as hagfish, amphipods, and sleeper sharks) 2. Opportunist Stage ( features high abundances of a few opportunistic organisms, such as crabs and polychaete worms, that feed on biomass from bones or that has been transferred to the sediment) 3. Sulfophilic Stage(represents the sulfophilic stage, in which bacteria that consume whale biomass in sediments and inside bones (bone lipids) generate hydrogen sulfide by breathing sulfate. The hydrogen sulfide (similar to hydrothermal vents and cold seeps) provides the energy basis for a chemosynthetic ecosystem at whale falls, including free-living sulfur bacteria, and symbiont tubeworms, clams, and mussels, can last up to 50 years)

Trophic relationships

1. phytoplankton -> krill -> small fish -> penguin -> seal 2. phytoplankton -> krill -> baleen whale 3. phytoplankton -> zooplankton -> krill -> penguin -> orca whale *depending on the food source of the top consumer, food chains can be long or short

Cold Seeps

= Hydrocarbon Seeps - located at subduction zones and passive margins -bacteria and archaea that metabolize methane or oil are the first type of organisms to take advantage of this deep-sea energy source, breathe sulfate and convert into hydrogen sulfide.

Why do you think the southern ocean is not as productive as it should be according to the availability of nitrate and phosphate?

Because another essential component must be missing

Why does chlorophyll look green?

Because it absorbs red and blue light, thus, reflecting green light

What stimulates microbial organic matter degradation in sediments?

Bioturbation (mixing) and Bioirrigation (ventilation)

How can production of manganese nodules be accomplished?

By harvesting machines that vacuum the nodules from the seafloor and pump them into a shit *this procedure can have multiple negative effects on the deep-sea environment

Redfield Ratio

C:N:P = 106:16:1 the atomic ratio of carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorus found in phytoplankton and throughout the deep oceans -named after the American oceanographer Alfred C. Refield

In what regions is CO2 (atmospheric recycled) released from the ocean back to the atmosphere?

Coastal upwelling regions

The Anatomy of a Wave

Crest Trough Wave Height (Amplitude) Wave Length Depth

Deep Vs. Shallow Water Waves

Deep- ocean bottom does not affect wave Shallow- ocean bottom strongly affects wave Speed (S) increases with water depth(d)

How much organic carbon reaches the seafloor?

Depends on the productivity at the surface and the water depth

Where were the most significant discoveries of gas and oil?

Discoveries of gas and oil fields in water depths greater than 400 meters were made in the South Atlantic & off the coast of West Africa

Wind Waves

Driven by wind (wind wave size increases with speed, distance, and duration of wind) Less potent individually, but common everywhere Deep

Benthic Infauna and Epifauna

Epifauna (lives ON the seafloor) Infauna (lives INSIDE the seafloor)

Types of Coral Reef (3)

Fringing reef: directly attached to a shore, most common reef type, follow coastlines and can be many kilometers long Barrier Reefs: separated from a mainland or island shore by a deep channel or lagoon, resemble the later stages of a fringing reef with its lagoon, differs in size and origin Atolls: more or less circular or continuous barrier reef extends all the way around a lagoon without a central island, usually formed from fringing reeds around volcanic islands. Over the course of time, the island is eroded away and sinks below the level of the sea. A ring of reefs results, which enclose a lagoon.

How are Oxygen Minimum Zones (OMZ) created?

In nutrient-rich (hence very productive) coastal upwelling regions, organic carbon degradation in the water can be so high that oxygen declines dramatically

How is organic carbon remineralized in the water column?

It can be remineralized within the surface ocean via the microbial loop (mostly DOC consumption) or it can be exported to the deep ocean as POC (marine snow, fecal pellets)

Where would you expect low/high phytoplankton productivity?

Low --> downwelling, subtropical gyres High --> upwelling, southern ocean

Two Major Types of Kelp world-wide

Macrocystis (contains the largest of all brown algae) Laminaria (characterized by long, leathery, latitude and laminae, and relatively large size)

Which mineral resources does the Ocean seafloor harbor?

Manganese nodules, cobalt crusts, and volcanogenic massive sulfides

What is a reasonable solution to ensure protein delivery from fish and shellfish without reducing wild populations?

Marine aquaculture, however, aquacultures need strong regulations to avoid for example habitat damage, spreading diseases, escapes of farmed fish, or eutrophication

Oxygen Minimum Zones (OMZs)

Most major OMZs are located in nutrient-rich coasts upwelling regions

An organism that lives in coastal waters and can swim against the currents is a...

Neritic nekton

What are the 3 key phytoplankton nutrients in the ocean?

Nitrate (to make animo acids) Phosphate (to make DNA) Silicate (to make diatom shells) *strongly reduced (bio-limiting) in the surface ocean

Which ocean has the highest concentration?

Pacific

Consequences of Ocean Warming

Ocean deoxygenation- the intensification and spreading of oxygen minimum zones. At higher temperatures, water dissolves less oxygen and develops stronger and shallower thermoclines, which decrease ocean ventilation Coral Bleaching- lead to the death of corals Arctic Sea Ice Decline- Global/Ocean Warming has lead so far to a 50% reduction of the sea ice in the Arctic Ocean. Starving Polar Bears

Which are the most important fossil fuels in the world?

Oil (33.2%) Coal (30%)

Dynamics of a Wave

Period- time between crests Frequency- number of crests per second Speed- rate crests move (meter/second)

Autotroph

Photo-autotroph: builds biomass from CO2 and yields energy through light (i.e plants, algae, prokaryotes) Chemo-autotroph: builds biomass from CO2 and builds energy through inorganic chemical reactions (i.e prokaryotes)

Heterotroph

Photo-heterotroph: builds biomass from organic compounds and yields energy through light (i.e prokaryotes) Chemo-heterotroph: builds biomass and yields energy through organic compounds (i.e animals, fungi, prokaryotes)

Who is especially affected as they need sea ice to hunt for their food - the seals?

Polar Bears

Trophic Levels in the Ocean

Producers, consumers, decomposers

Prokaryotes vs. Eukaryotes

Prokaryotes- no nucleus, no membrane around genetic material (single cell organisms) Eukaryotes- cells contain a nucleus with genetic material within membranes (can be single cell organisms "Protists" and multicellular organisms with diversified cells)

Who is the primary consumer of the kelp forest?

Sea Urchin

Tsunamis

Seismic sea waves, driven by earthquakes, volcanic eruptions or underwater landslides Powerful, but rare Shallow (most occur along the ring of fire)

What burrows into substrate in the lower parts of the beach

Soft-shelled clams and Razor clams

Phytoplankton's chemical specialties

Some form carbonate shells, others produce toxins, and other are able to fix nitrogen (N2)

Rocky Intertidal Zones (5) + Tide Pools

Spray zone: receives moisture only from the splash of waves at the highest tides, during storms or from rainfall, during storms or from rainfall Upper Intertidal (periwinkle zone): located near the high tide line, submerged regularly at high tide, animals and algae that live here must be able to survive without water for ten to eleven hours at a stretch. Middle Intertidal: this band comprises the greatest part of the intertidal zone, often dominated by barnacles and brown algae Lower Intertidal: rockweeds are replaced by the red algae, area is exposed only at very low tides, well-developed beds of blue mussels and organisms that live in association with the mussels are found here Subtidal: always underwater, except for the extreme spring tides of winter, much more stable than the rest of the rocky shore.

Organsims living in tide pools

Starfish, mussels, and clams

Who is primarily responsible for laying the foundations of, and building up reef structures?

Stony Corals

Kelp Anatomy

Stripe= parallel to the stem of a plant Blades= parallel to the leaves, responsible for both nutrient uptake and photosynthesis Holdfast= resembles the roots of a plant, only used to anchor the kelp to the rocks, not to take up nutrients bladders= serve as flotation devices to keep the blades near the surface so that they receive sufficient light

Which organisms feed on organic compound at the seafloor?

Suspension feeders, deposit feeders, prokaryotes

Global Warming

The anthropogenic increase of CO2 in the atmosphere caused by, e.g., fossil fuel burning has lead to a significant increase in global temperature

Which benthic habitat has the largest microbial organic carbon turnover?

The benthic microbial organic carbon turnover is the highest on the shelf and lowest in the deep sea.

Why is there no high productivity in the southern ocean despite high nutrient concentration?

The reason is the lack of iron, a micro nutrient (trace element)

Climate Change

The sum of effects of CO2 increase in the atmosphere

How are massive reef structures formed?

They are formed when each individual stony coral organism - or polyp- secretes a skeleton of calcium carbonate

How do fossil oil and gas reservoirs form?

They form from deposited organic matter in the seafloor (dead algae, etc)

3 types of Ocean Waves

Wind Waves Tsunamis Tides

How does Phytoplankton conduct photosynthesis?

Uses the light of the sun (blue and red wavelengths) with the chlorophyll pigment

Salt Marshes

a coastal ecosystem in the upper coastal intertidal zone between land and open seawater or brackish water that is regularly flooded by the tides, among the world's most productive ecosystems in terms of the sheer amount of nutrient-rich decaying plant material they produce -dominated by dense stands of salt-tolerant plants such as herbs, grasses or low shrubs -plants living here are adapted to live in a saline environment

Fecal Pellets (Zooplankton poop)

a fast mechanism to transport organic matter from the surface to the deep ocean, because of their relative sinking speed *represent another significant transport mechanism of organic matter into the deep ocean

Chlorophyll

a green pigment that captures photons and transfer their energy to electrons, and through a series of steps creates carbohydrate molecules and oxygen

Coral Polyps

accumulation of individual animals embedded in calcium carbonate called polyps arranged in diverse shapes

What cannot grow in mudflats because the substrate is constantly sifting?

algae that so easily attaches to rocks and floats

Suspension Feeders

an animal that feeds on particles of organic matter that are suspended in water

Deposit Feeders

an aquatic animal that feeds on small specks of organic matter that have drifted down through the water and settled on the bottom

Plankton

any organism that is not strong enough to swim against the currents

Phytoplankton (plant plankton)

bacteria and single-cell algae that need light for photosynthesis -cyanobacteria (common in warm tropical waters) -diatom (requires silicon to build shell, fast growing) -dinoflagellate -coccolithophore *primary producers

Biological Pump

binds carbon (from CO2) into biomass (soft-tissue pump) and carbonate shells (carbonate pump) and exports it from the surface to the deep ocean

Benthic Filter feeders are example of

brittle stars (including the basket starfish), sponges, sea feathers (coral relatives)clams, and many annelid worms

Animals who live in tidal mudflats are equipped with adaptations for what?

burrowing or anchoring Ex: Clams (have an inflatable foots which anchors the clam inside the mud, breathe and ingest food through a siphons) Worms of the polychaete group (a worm's gut constantly processes food from the grains of sand and sediment that it ingests) Seagrass

Organisms are metabolically divided depending on

carbon and energy source

Plants, Algae, and cyanobacteria use _________ for photosynthesis.

chlorophyll

Tidal Mudflats

coastal wetlands that form when mud is deposited by tides

Dissolved Organic Carbon (DOC)

dissolved organic produced in the surface ocean is recycled in the microbial loop above the thermocline

Physical Pump

dissolves CO2 from the atmosphere and transports it to the deep ocean at places of deep-water formation

Common large animals in the Antarctic

emperor and adéle penguin, Weddell seal, baleen whales, orcas, sea leopards and large benthic fauna such as sponges, anemones and echinoderms

Tide Pools

form on the rocky interidal zone (Inhabitants must be able to deal with a frequently changing environment- fluctuations in water temperature, salinity, and oxygen) Hazards include waves, strong currents, exposure to midday sun and predators.

Zooplankton in food chains

forms an important link between primary productions and higher levels of consumers (nekton)

How will humans run out of fossil fuels in the near future?

fossils fuels are produced much more slowly than humans consume them

Who feeds on soft-shelled clams and razor clams?

gulls, plovers, sanderling, and sandpipers

Common large Animals in the Arctic

harp and ribbon seals, walrus, narwhal, beluga whale, bowhead whale, polar bears, polar fox and, Greenland sharks

Narwhals

have a long tusk, which is actually a canine tooth that spirals counterclockwise up to nine feet forward from the head of adult males, and a small percentage of females

Organisms living in the intertidal zone are exposed to harsh extremes because...

high/low salinity, temperature, and physical forces (wave splash)

Liquid Brine Fraction

home to a diverse array of organisms, ranging from tiny archaea to larger fish and invertebrates. These organisms can tolerate high brine salinity and low temperature but do best when conditions are milder

Massive sulfides form at...

hydrothermal systems(black smokers) when dissolved metals are expelled and react with sulfide to form minerals, which precipitate and sink to the seafloor to form massive layers *contain significant amounts of silver and gold

Sea Otters

key stone organisms that protect the kelp forest function by feeding on the kelp consumer, i.e sea urchin, prevents them from becoming abundant

Primary productivity (Photosynthesis)

limited by the penetration of light into the ocean

Wracklines

lines of dead seaweed and other flotsam, under and within these there is a microcosm of animals feeding on the decaying seaweed (most common: beach flea)

Particulate Organic Carbon (POC)

major component of marine snow, consists of dead or dying animals and plankton, protists, and fecal matter

Oscillation

movement back and forth at a regular speed

Anglerfish

named for their characteristic mode of predation, in which a fleshy growth from the fish's head (the esca or illicium) acts as a lure - The deep sea anglerfish emit light from their esca to attract prey

Pleuston/Neuston

organisms that live in the thin surface layer existing at the air-water interface/ rely on surface tension to float

Rocky Intertidal

organisms with some method of attaching to hard surfaces live here because rocks offer a hard substrate

Wrack Zone (part of sandy beach)

part of the shore just above the mean high tide line where kelp is deposited on the sand, this area is identified by the piles of kelp and other debris

Organisms Found in the Spray Zone

periwinkles, a few barnaclas

At the compensation depth...

photosynthesis equals respiration

At the critical depth...

photosynthesis integrated over the entire eater column equals their total respiration

One of the shortest food chain in the oceans is...

phytoplankton -> krill -> baleen whale

What is the main source for Marine snow?

phytoplankton- delivers organic carbon to the deep ocean

Zooplankton

primary consumer of phytoplankton *makes daily vertical migrations to avoid predation day= in the deeper twilight zone (during the day, they sink to the bottom so predators don't see them) night= at the surface (during the night, they migrate to the top)

Nekton

refers to actively swimming aquatic organisms in a body of water (i.e against currents)

Pacific Plate Boundary

ring of fire

Habitats of The Intertidal Zone

rocky intertidal, sandy beach, mud flats, salt marches

Benthic Deposit feeders are example of

sea cucumbers, polychaete worms, crabs, sand dollars, ghost shrimps

Urchin Barren

sea urchins can become extremely abundant and cause an intense disturbance to the kelp-forest ecosystem by feeding on the holdfasts and causing the kelp to detach from their rocky anchors

Salt water freezes at...

slightly lower temperatures. As a result, seawater does not typically freeze before reaching -1.9°C

Zooplankton (animal plankton)

small animals that feed on other plankton -copepods -krill (small crustaceans, feeds on phytoplankton_ -dinoflagellates (capable of movement using flagella) -radiolarians -foraminiferans *primary consumers

Primary production (photosynthesis)

takes up carbon, nitrogen, and phosphorous in a 106: 16: 1 ratio

Interidal Zone (Littoral Zone)

the area above water at low tide and under water at high tide

Coral Bleaching

the phenomenon when the algae symbiont leaves the stressed coral. Without the symbiont, the coral can't survive very long and eventually dies. -major cause of world-wide coral bleaching phenomena is the rise in ocean temperature, but it can also be triggered by pollution, strong exposure to sunlight or extreme lowtides

Remineralization

the process of converting organic material back to inorganic substances (ÇO2 + nutrients) remineralization= respiration

Bioluminescence

the production and emission of light by a living organism. Principle chemical reaction involves some light-emitting molecule and an enzyme *Some animals use bioluminescence to warn or evade predators, to lure or detect prey, or to communicate with each other

What is the most obvious direct consequence of increasing CO2?

the reduction of pH due to the increase in H+

The ocean has a large capacity to store CO2 through its three pumps:

the solubility pump, the soft-tissue (organic matter) pump, and the carbonate pump

Greenhouse Effect

the trapping of heat (from sunlight) by CO2 and other "greenhouse gases" (e.g. methane and water vapor) in the atmosphere

Sandy Beach

the zone from the lowest low water to the highest high water, controlled by the energy of the waves that attack the beach

How is the biomass of zooplankton directly coupled to phytoplankton?

their biomass usually peaks shortly after phytoplankton blooms

Organisms in the ocean are subdivided depending on

their lifestyle and habitat

Animals that live in symbiosis with chemosynthetic bacteria and have completely reduced their digestive system

tubeworms, clams and mussels

Microbial biomass in sediments declines exponential with...

water depths and linear with POC flux

Nekton mainly consists of

vertebrates (fish, some reptiles, some birds, mammals) mollusks (such as squid) crustaceans (like the swim crab)

Swells

waves that have left their birthplace

Large Food Falls

when nektonic animals die, they can sink fast to the deep ocean (if not consumed by predators) and provides a voluminous food source for scavengers in the deep ocean

Wind Sea

wind & storm create and grow new waves


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