Marine Primary Producers Study Guide
What does it mean to be a plankton
-weakly swimming or drifting organisms that go with the current or can swim vertically (lifestyle), some microscopic, some easy to see, and they are nekton (organisms that can swim)
Causes and Effects of Algae Blooms
1. increased amounts of nutrients from fertilizer and runoff which means more nitrates and phosphates 2. warmth 3. sunlight 4. decrease in water movement
brown algae (kelp) (macro algae):
50m deep, additional pigment adaptation meaning they can go deeper down into the water and still absorb sunlight far down
Phytoplankton are responsible for what percentage of primary productivity globally?
80-90
No zooplankton are:
AUTOTROPHS
how do plankton move around?
CURRENTS
NOT a holoplankton?
Crab Larvae, holoplankton is dino, diatoms and krill
Types of Phytoplankton
Diatoms, dinoflagellates, cyanobacteria, coccolithophere
Zooplankton
Heterotrophic (animal-like) ex: copepods, ciliates and larvae, consumers including herbivores and carnivores, micro and macro organisms, vertically migrate to a depth of 200m during day for protection but then near surface again at night to feed (MEROPLANKTON)(HOLOPLANKTON)
Seaweed Adaptations:
Lower wave shock: huge holdfasts, flexible stipe, regeneration Drying out dessications: high sugar content, thick cell walls, hollow core, trap sand, rehydration Predators: secretes tough CaCO3, bitter/bad taste Competition for attachment space: attach to other seaweed, keep blades near sun
Positive and Negative Effects of Algae Blooms
POSITIVE: increasing primary producers and decrease in Co2 in atmosphere NEGATIVE: decreased dissolved O2, fish and marine life die, industry decreases because there are no fish and decreased food source which means no food for animals
Meroplankton
Part of life, nekton-can swim and benthic can crawl
Primary producers by trophic level
Plankton-Zoo/phyto
Phytoplankton
Plant-like, autotrophic with some heterotrophs, ex: diatoms, dinoflagellates, green algae- producers, single cells or chain of cells smallest plankton (pico plankton)-REMAIN NEAR SURFACE, they capture sunlight to produce chemical energy and they consumer carbon dioxide, and release oxygen
Diatoms
Protista, enclosed like a pill box, green, one upper one lower, SiO2 glass, the silica shell is called frustule made of two halves-they store food as oil, the frustule allows photosynthesis, the valves in the shell differ, 55% of the light they absorb is turned into energy which is the best rate. they form chains, spine and oil to help float, they reproduce by dividing in half and drifting apart-smaller over time, or sexual repro
Dinoflagellates
Protista, single-celled autotrophs, external plates made of cellulose, they store food as oil OR starch, whip-like flagella in order to vertically swim, some produce toxins and some are bioluminescent, repro: binary fission, one per day, depends on conditions, many dinoflagellates are bioluminescent, (symbiotic zooxanthellae) which gives coral sugar
Holoplankton
Whole life
macro algae definition
algae is weightless, floats in water,sugar is in all leaves and no need for transport system, plants with no veins for water, no need for roots, O2 diffuses out and CO2 diffuses in through the blades
What can cause an algae bloom?
an increase in sunlight, nutrients, and temperature
green algae (Chlorophyta)
answer
which of the following organisms spend a portion of their lives as plankton?
barnacles, snails, and crabs
rapid increase in a phytoplankton population that leads to water discoloration is called?
bloom
Cyanobacteria
blue-green algae, abundant in ocean responsible for nitrogen fixation, small and unicellular and often grows in colonies, photosynthetic, chlorophyll a, reddish or green photosynthetic pigment
Algae that is kelp?
brown
Zooplankton? (kahoot) are....
carnivores, herbivores, and omnivores
accessory pigment in seaweed
chlorophyll a/b/ carotenoids
mangroves (forests) stabilize:
coastal wetlands
Calcium carbonate covering
coccolithophore
characteristics of zooplankton?
consumers, NOT single celled or remain near surface
Compensation Depth
depth at which oxygen is being created and consumed at the same rate (diatoms have greater compensation depth than dinoflagellates) -AUTOTROPHS use some of the carbs and O2 they produce
zooplankton eat..
each other or other phytoplankton
What does it mean to be plankton
ecological connection
zooplankton protect themselves by..
floating up and down in water column vertically
macro algae types:
green algae, brown algae (kelp), and red algae
red algae (macro algae)
has a red glow that is used for a lot of paints, it can grow at great depths
Biomagnification
is the increasing concentration of a substance (toxic chemicals) in the tissues of organisms that are higher in the food chain
light availability
little photosynthesis below 100 meters, too much light can overwhelm photosynthetic chemistry, color of light matters
green algae (macro algae):
lives in shallow depths in intertidal zone, smallest number of species, good food for tide pool animals "ancestor of true plants"
how do dinoflagellates obtain nourishment?
photosynthesis
Toxic Algae Bloom question:
phytoplankton give off domain acid, biomagnification occurs because all the phytoplankton begin to eat eachother contaminating all the other plankton making everything toxic resulting in bioaccumulation
nutrient availability:
plankton bloom can cause lack of nutrients, common in colder water
Marine plants are...
plants that are vascular
NOT members of phytoplankton..
radiocarians
algae blooms
rapid increase in the algae population, two types of algae: phytoplankton and seaweed
Types of Algae Bloom (red tide) (HABS)
red tides: bloom of red pigment algae (HABS) harmful algae blooms: they have poisonous toxic algae ex: DOMOIC ACID
Bioaccumulation
refers to the accumulation of substances such as pesticides or other organisms, when an organism absorbs a toxic substance faster than the substance excretes itself
Phytoplankton means autotrophic which means..
self-fed
diatoms shells are made of
silica or glass
what causes HABS to be toxic?
specific species of phytoplankton
seagrass forms
submerged meadows
What happens to meroplankton?
they become nekton and benthic
why do large animals die?
they die because of the dead zones caused by the phytoplankton, and they have no food to eat so they starve
zooplankton where they get energy from:
they eat (heterotrophic) and get energy from that
what describes meroplankton?
they spend part of their life drifting
zooplankton size and population:
tiny to large in size, and they have seasonal basis for population
why do zooplankton resurface at night?
to feed
Coccolithophore
unicellular eukaryotic protists, CONTAIN CALCIUM CARBONATE PLATES