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Exploring the Wonders of the Ocean: Biodiversity, Climate, and Resources

Dive into the fascinating world of oceans, which cover 71% of Earth's surface and influence global climate, biodiversity, transportation, and commerce. Discover how ocean water is structured, its essential role in regulating Earth's climate, and the impact of currents and upwelling. Learn about the diverse ecosystems and marine species, from microscopic phytoplankton to deep-sea creatures and coral reefs. Explore the challenges facing our oceans, such as coral bleaching and pollution, and the importance of conservation efforts. Join us on this journey to understand and protect our precious oceans.

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Exploring the Wonders of the Ocean: Biodiversity, Climate, and Resources

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  1. Oceans cover most of the Earth’s surface • The oceans influence global climate, team with biodiversity, facilitate transportation and commerce, and provide resources for us • They cover 71% of Earth’s surface and contain 97% of Earth’s surface water • Oceans influence the atmosphere, lithosphere, and biosphere

  2. The oceans contain more than water • Ocean water is 96.5% water • Plus, ions of dissolved salts • Evaporation removes pure water and leaves a higher concentration of salt • Nutrients (nitrogen and phosphorus) • Dissolved gas • Oxygen is added by plants, bacteria, and atmospheric diffusion

  3. Ocean water is vertically structured • Temperature declines with depth • Heavier (colder saltier) water sinks • Light (warmer and less salty) water remains near the surface • Temperatures are more stable than land temperatures • Water’s high heat capacity • It takes much more heat to warm water than air • Oceans regulate the earth’s climate • They absorb and release heat • Ocean’s surface circulation

  4. The ocean has several layers • Surface zone • Warmed by sunlight and stirred by wind • Consistent water density • Pycnocline = below the surface zone • Density increases rapidly with depth • Deep Zone = below the pycnocline • Dense, sluggish water • Unaffected by winds, storms, sunlight, and temperature

  5. Ocean water flows horizontally in currents • Currents = the ocean is composed of vast riverlike flows • Driven by density differences, heating and cooling, gravity, and wind • Influence global climate and El Niño and La Niña • Transport heat, nutrients, pollution, and the larvae of many marine species • Some currents such as the Gulf Stream are rapid and powerful • The warm water moderates Europe’s climate

  6. The upper waters of the oceans flow in currents

  7. Surface winds and heating create vertical currents • Upwelling = the vertical flow of cold, deep water towards the surface • High primary productivity and lucrative fisheries • Also occurs where strong winds blow away from, or parallel to, coastlines • Downwellings = oxygen-rich water sinks where surface currents come together

  8. Seafloor topography can be rugged and complex • The seafloor consists of… • Underwater volcanoes • Steep canyons • Mountain range • The planet’s longest range is under water • Mounds of debris • Trenches • Some flat areas

  9. Understanding underwater geography • Maps show… • Bathymetry = themeasurement of ocean depths • Topography = the physical geography or the shape and arrangement of landforms • Continental shelves = gently sloping areas that underlie the shallow waters bordering continents • Shelf-slope break = sudden drop off of the continental shelf • Continental slope = connects the continental shelf to the ocean floor

  10. A stylized bathymetric profile of the ocean

  11. Regions of ocean differ greatly • Some zones support more life than others • Photic zone = well-lighted top layer that supports high primary productivity • Pelagic = habitats and ecosystems occurring between the ocean’s surface and floor • Benthic = habitats and ecosystems occurring on the ocean floor

  12. Open ocean systems vary in biodiversity • Microscopic phytoplankton constitute the base of the marine food chain in the pelagic zone • Algae, protists, and cyanobacteria • These organisms feed zooplankton • Which then feeds fish, jellyfish, whales, etc. • Predators at higher trophic levels include larger fish, sea turtles, sharks, and fish-eating birds

  13. Animals of the deep ocean • Animals adapt to extreme water pressure and the absence of light • Scavenge carcasses or organic detritus • Some are predators, while others have mutualistic relationships with bacteria • Some species carry bacteria that produce light chemically by bioluminescence • Hydrothermal vents support tubeworms, shrimp, and other chemosynthetic species

  14. Coral reefs consist of millions of corals • Coral reef = a mass of calcium carbonate composed of the skeletons of corals • Consists of millions of densely packed individuals • Protect shorelines by absorbing waves • Innumerable invertebrates and fish species find food and shelter in reef nooks and crannies

  15. Coral reefs are in worldwide decline • Coral bleaching = occurs when zooxanthellae leave the coral • Coral lose their color and die, leaving white patches • From climate change, pollution, or unknown natural causes • Nutrient pollution causes algal growth, which covers coral • Divers damage reefs by using cyanide to capture fish • Acidification of oceans deprives corals of necessary carbonate ions for their structural parts

  16. Intertidal zones undergo constant change • Intertidal (littoral) ecosystems = where the ocean meets the land • between the uppermost reach of the high tide and the lowest limit of the low tide • Tides = periodic rising and falling of the ocean’s height due to the gravitational pull of the sun and moon • Intertidal organisms spend part of their time submerged in water and part of their time exposed to sun and wind

  17. A typical intertidal zone

  18. Intertidal zones are a tough place to live • But they have remarkable diversity • Rocky shorelines, crevices, pools of water (tide pools) • Anemones, mussels, barnacles, urchins, sea slugs, starfish, and crabs • Temperature, salinity, and moisture change dramatically from high to low tide • Sandy intertidal zones have slightly less biodiversity

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