Introduction to Biological Oceanography Biological Oceanography 10-3 Global Patterns of Productivity It is possible to estimate plant and fish productivity in the ocean. • The size.
Download
Report
Transcript Introduction to Biological Oceanography Biological Oceanography 10-3 Global Patterns of Productivity It is possible to estimate plant and fish productivity in the ocean. • The size.
Introduction to
Biological Oceanography
Biological Oceanography
10-3
Global Patterns of Productivity
It is possible to estimate plant and fish productivity
in the ocean.
• The size of the plankton biomass is a good indicator of the
biomass of the remainder of the food web.
• Annual primary production (APP) is equal to primary production
rate (PPR) times the area for which the rate is applicable.
– APP = PPR x Area (to which applicable )
• Transfer efficiency (TE) is a measure of the amount of carbon
that is passed between trophic levels and is used for growth.
• Transfer efficiency varies from 10 to 20% in most food chains.
10-3
Global Patterns of Productivity
• Potential production (PP) at any trophic level is equal to the
annual primary production (APP) times the transfer efficiency
(TE) for each step in the food chain to the trophic level of the
organism under consideration.
– PP = APP x TE (for each step)
• Although rate of productivity is very low for the open ocean
compared to areas of upwelling, the open ocean has the
greatest biomass productivity because of its enormous size.
• In the open ocean the food chains are longer and energy
transfer is low, so fish populations are small.
• Most fish production is equally divided between area of upwelling and coastal
waters.
• Calculations suggest that the annual fish production is about
240 million tons/yr.
• Over-fishing is removing fish from the ocean faster than they
are replaced by reproduction and this can eventually lead to
the collapse of the fish population.
10-4
Biological Productivity of
Upwelling Water
Upwelling of deep, nutrient-rich water supports
large populations of phytoplankton and fish.
• The waters off the coast of Peru normally is an area of
upwelling, supporting one of the world’s largest fisheries.
• Every three to seven years warm surface waters in the Pacific
displace the cold, nutrient-rich water on Peru’s shelf in a
phenomenon called El Nino.
• El Nino results in a major change in fauna on the shelf and a
great reduction in fishes.
• This can lead to mass starvation of organisms dependent upon the fish as their
major food source.
13-1
Biology of the Continental Shelf
The waters of the neritic zone are fertile and
support a rich community of organisms.
• The plankton are floaters and weak swimmers which are
helplessly transported by ocean currents.
• Nekton have the ability to swim against currents and actively
search for a more hospitable environment.
• Many fish display schooling, another form of patchiness.
13-2
Biology of the Open Ocean and
the Deep Sea
The open ocean is the largest habitat on Earth, but
life is sparse because of low nutrient concentration
and great depth.
• In the open ocean, diversity is high but the number of individual
per species is low.
• The only seaweed in the open ocean sea is Sargassum
gulfweed.
• The major phytoplankton are diatoms, dinoflagellates and
coccolithophores and the major zooplankton are foraminifera
and radiolaria.
• Diatoms dominate the shallow coasts, but decrease in abundance seaward.
• Top predators are mackerel, squid, jellyfish, tuna, porpoise,
shark and man.
13-2
Biology of the Open Ocean and
the Deep Sea
The biomass on the sea floor tends to decrease with
depth faster than it does with distance from shore.
• The benthic food chains largely depend upon food from the
surface which reaches the bottom.
• Characteristics of the benthic organisms include: year-round
reproduction, smaller broods, slow growth, and longer life.
• Diversity of the benthos is greater than expected because the
high predation rate prevents any group from dominating
through competitive exclusion (when one group out-competes
most others and drives them to extinction).
13-2
Biology of the Open Ocean and
the Deep Sea
• Four traits common to all abyssal depths are: perpetual
darkness., low temperature, high hydrostatic pressure, and
sparse food supply.
• Rate of bacterial decay is greatly reduced under high
hydrostatic pressure.
• This means that organic material that settles onto the sea floor remains for a long
time before it decays and is thus more likely to be consumed.