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Chapter:  Oceanography Table of Contents Section 3:  Ocean Pollution Section 1:  The Seafloor Section 2:  Life in the Ocean
Ocean basins, which are low areas of Earth that are filled with water, have many different features.   The  continental shelf  is the gradually sloping end of a continent that extends under the ocean. The ocean covering the continental shelf can be as deep as 350 m. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor
Beyond the shelf, the ocean floor drops more steeply, forming the continental slope. The  continental slope   extends from the outer edge of the continental shelf down to the ocean floor. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor
The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor
Beyond the continental slop lie the trenches, valleys, plains, mountains, and ridges of the ocean basin. In the deep ocean, sediment, derived mostly from land, settles constantly on the ocean floor. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor These deposits fill in valleys and create flat seafloor areas called  abyssal plains .
Some areas of abyssal plains have small hills and seamounts. Seamounts are underwater, inactive volcanic peaks. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor They most commonly are found in the Pacific Ocean.
Mid-ocean ridges can be found at the bottom of all ocean basins. They form a continuous underwater ridge approximately 70,000 km long. A  mid-ocean ridge  is the area in an ocean basin where new ocean floor is formed. Ridges and Trenches 1 The Seafloor
As crustal plates move, the ocean floor changes. Ridges and Trenches 1 The Seafloor This is the process of seafloor spreading. When ocean plates separate, hot magma from Earth’s interior forms new ocean crust.
New ocean floor forms along mid-ocean ridges as lava erupts through cracks in Earth’s crust. When the lava hits the water, it cools quickly into solid rock, forming new seafloor. Ridges and Trenches 1 The Seafloor
On the ocean floor, subduction zones are marked by deep ocean trenches. A  trench   is a long, narrow, steep-sided depression where one crustal plate sinks beneath another. Subduction Zones 1 The Seafloor
Others can be found only in the deep abyssal regions on the ocean floor. Resources can be found in many places in the ocean.  Some deposits on the continental shelf are relatively easy to extract. Mineral Resources from the Seafloor 1 The Seafloor
Approximately 20 percent of the world’s oil comes from under the seabed. To extract these substances, wells are drilled into the seafloor from floating vessels and fixed platforms. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
Other deposits on the continental shelf include phosphorite, which is used to make fertilizer, and limestone, which is used to make cement. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
Sand and gravel, both economically important, also can be dredged from the continental shelf. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
Sometimes the energy of ocean waves and currents can cause denser mineral grains that have been brought in by rivers to concentrate in one place. These deposits, called placer (PLAHS ur) deposits, can occur in coastal regions where rivers entering the ocean suddenly lose energy, slow down, and drop their sediment. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
Metals such as gold and titanium and gemstones such as diamonds are mined from placer deposits in some coastal regions. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
Elements such as sulfur and metals like iron, copper, zinc, and silver can be concentrated in holes and cracks along mid-ocean ridges. Deep-Water Deposits 1 The Seafloor Other mineral deposits can precipitate from seawater.
Manganese nodules are small, darkly colored lumps strewn across large areas of the ocean basins. Deep-Water Deposits 1 The Seafloor These nodules are rich in manganese, copper, iron, nickel, and cobalt, which are used the manufacture of steel, paint, and batteries. Most of the nodules lie thousands of meters deep in the ocean and are not currently being mined.
1 Section Check Question 1 What is the continental shelf? The continental shelf is the gradually sloping end of a continent that extends under the ocean.  Answer
1 Section Check Question 2 Which structure extends from the outer edge of  the continental shelf to the ocean floor? A. abyssal plain B. continental slope C. oceanic trench D. seamount
1 Section Check Answer The answer is B. The other features lie beyond  the continental slope.
1 Section Check Question 3 What is the area in an ocean basin where new  ocean floor is forming? Answer New seafloor forms at mid-ocean ridges as  lava erupts through cracks in Earth’s crust. NC: 3.03
Life Processes   Organisms that live in the ocean also carry out life processes every day. Obtaining the food necessary to survive can be done in several ways. 2 Life in the Ocean One of the most important processes in the ocean, as it is on land, is that organisms obtain food to use for energy.
Photosynthesis   Marine organisms such as plants and algae use energy from the Sun to build their tissues and produce their own food. This process of making food is called  photosynthesis . 2 Life in the Ocean
Photosynthesis   Organisms that undergo photosynthesis are called producers. Producers also need nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, in order to produce organic matter. 2 Life in the Ocean These and other nutrients are obtained from the surrounding water.
Photosynthesis   Organisms that feed on producers are called consumers.  Consumers in the marine environment include shrimp, fish, dolphins, whales, and sharks. 2 Life in the Ocean
Energy Relationships Energy from the Sun is transferred through food chains. 2 Life in the Ocean Although the organisms of the ocean capture only a small part of the Sun’s energy, this energy is passed from producer to consumer, then to other consumers.
Energy Relationships At each stage in the food chain, energy obtained by one organism is used by other organisms to move, grow, repair cells, reproduce, and eliminate waste. Most organisms depend on more than one species for food. 2 Life in the Ocean
Energy Relationships In an ecosystem, food chains overlap and are connected much like the threads of a spider’s web. These highly complex systems are called food webs. 2 Life in the Ocean
Chemosynthesis Chemosynthesis   (kee moh SIHN thuh sus) involves using sulfur or nitrogen compounds as an energy source, instead of light from the Sun, to produce food. Bacteria that perform chemosynthesis using sulfur compounds live along mid-ocean ridges near hydrothermal vents where no light is available. 2 Life in the Ocean
Chemosynthesis 2 Life in the Ocean The bacteria found here form the base of a food chain and support a host of highly specialized organisms such as giant tube worms, clams, crabs, and shrimp.
Other Life Processes Reproduction also is a vital life process. 2 Life in the Ocean Organisms, such as corals and sponges, depend on ocean currents for successful reproduction.
Other Life Processes 2 Life in the Ocean Other organisms, such a s salmon and the Atlantic eel, travel long distances across the ocean in order to reproduce in a specific location.
Ocean Life Many varieties of plants and animals live in the ocean. 2 Life in the Ocean Although some organisms live in the open ocean or on the deep ocean floor, most marine organisms live in the waters above the continental shelf.
Ocean Life Because light is available for photosynthesis, large numbers of producers live in the waters above the continental shelf. 2 Life in the Ocean These waters also contain many nutrients that producers use to carry out life processes.
Plankton Marine organisms that drift with the currents are called  plankton . 2 Life in the Ocean Plankton range from microscopic algae and animals to organisms as large as jellyfish. Most phytoplankton   plankton that are producers  are one-celled organisms that float in the upper layers of the ocean where light needed for photosynthesis is available.
Plankton One abundant form of phytoplankton is a once-celled organism called a diatom. 2 Life in the Ocean Diatoms and other phytoplankton are the source of food for zooplankton, animals that drift with ocean currents. Magnification
Nekton Animals that actively swim, rather than drift with the currents in the ocean, are called  nekton . 2 Life in the Ocean Nekton can be found from polar regions to the tropics and from shallow water to the deepest parts of the ocean.
Nekton As nekton move throughout the oceans, it is important that they are able to control their buoyancy, or how easily they float or sink. 2 Life in the Ocean Many fish have a special organ filled with gas that helps them control their buoyancy. By changing their buoyancy, organisms can change their depth in the ocean.
Nekton Some deep-dwelling nekton are adapted with special light-generating organs. The light has several uses for these organisms. 2 Life in the Ocean Some deep-sea organisms use this light to momentarily blind predators so they can escape. Others use it to attract mates.
Bottom Dwellers The plants and animals living on or in the seafloor are the  benthos  (BEN-thahs). 2 Life in the Ocean Benthic animals include crabs, snails, sea urchins, and bottom-dwelling fish such as flounder. These organisms move or swim across the bottom to find food.
Bottom Dwellers Sea anemones and sponges, filter out food particles from seawater. 2 Life in the Ocean Bottom-dwelling animals can be found living from the shallow water of the continental shelf to the deepest areas of the ocean.
Ocean Margin Habitats The area of the environment where a plant or animal normally lives is called a habitat. 2 Life in the Ocean Beaches, rocky shores, estuaries, and coral reefs are some examples of the different habitats found along ocean margins.
Beaches Although the beach is great fun for people, it is a very stressful environment for the plants and animals that live there. 2 Life in the Ocean
Beaches 2 Life in the Ocean They constantly deal with waves, changing tides, and storms, all of which redistribute large amounts of sand. These organisms must adapt to natural changes as well as changes created by humans.
Rocky Shore Areas In some regions the shoreline is rock. 2 Life in the Ocean Algae, sea anemones, mussels, and barnacles encrust submerged rocks. Sea stars, sea urchins, octopuses, and hermit crabs crawl along the rock surfaces, looking for food.
Rocky Shore Areas Tide pools are an important habitat for many marine organisms. 2 Life in the Ocean They serve as protected areas where many animals, such as octopuses and fish, can develop safely from juveniles to adults.
Rocky Shore Areas 2 Life in the Ocean Tide pools contain an abundance of food and offer protection from larger predators.
Estuaries An  estuary  is an area where the mouth of a river opens into an ocean. 2 Life in the Ocean Because estuaries receive freshwater from rivers, they are not as salty as the ocean. Estuaries are full of life from salt-tolerant grasses to oysters, clams, shrimps, fish, and even manatees.
Estuaries Newly hatched fish, shrimps, crabs, and other animals enter estuaries as microscopic organisms and remain there until adulthood. 2 Life in the Ocean For these vulnerable animals, fewer predators and more food are found in estuaries.
Coral Reefs Corals thrive in clear, warm water that receives a lot of sunlight. 2 Life in the Ocean Each coral animal builds a hard capsule around its body from the calcium it removes from seawater. Each capsule is cemented to others to form a large colony called a reef.
Coral Reefs A  reef   is a rigid, wave-resistant structure built by corals from skeletal material. 2 Life in the Ocean As coral reef forms, other benthos such as sea stars and sponges and nekton such as fish and turtles begin living on it.
2 Section Check Question 1 Which process involves using sulfur or  nitrogen compounds as an energy source to  produce food? NC: 3.03 A. chemosynthesis B. nitrosynthesis C. photosynthesis D. sulfurosynthesis
2 Section Check Answer The answer is A. The energy source for photosynthesis is the Sun. NC: 3.03
2 Section Check Question 2 Marine animals that actively swim are called  __________. NC: 3.03, 304 A. benthos B. nataton C. nekton D. plankton
2 Section Check Answer The answer is C. Nekton include all swimming  forms of fish and animals. NC: 3.03, 304
2 Section Check Question 3 A(n) __________ is an area where the mouth  of a river opens into an ocean. NC: 3.03 A. alluvial fan B. delta C. estuary D. reef
2 Section Check Answer The answer is C. Alluvial fans and deltas are  sediment deposits. NC: 3.03
Sources of Pollution Pollution   is the introduction of harmful waste products, chemicals, and other substances not native to an environment. A pollutant is a substance that causes damage to organisms by interfering with life processes. 3 Ocean Pollution
Sources of Pollution Pollutants from land eventually will reach the ocean in one of four main ways. They can be dumped deliberately and directly into the ocean. 3 Ocean Pollution Material can be lost overboard accidentally.
Sources of Pollution Some pollutants begin in the air and enter the ocean through rain. Other pollutants will reach the ocean by being carried in rivers that empty into the ocean. 3 Ocean Pollution
Sewage The introduction of sewage to an area of the ocean can cause immediate changes in the ecosystem. Sewage is a pollutant that acts like fertilizer. 3 Ocean Pollution It is rich in nutrients that cause some types of algae to reproduce rapidly, creating what is called a bloom.
Sewage The problem occurs when the algae die. As huge numbers of bacteria reproduce and decompose the algae, much of the oxygen in the water is used up. 3 Ocean Pollution
Sewage When sewage is dumped routinely into the same area year after year, changes take place. Entire ecosystems have been altered drastically as a result of long term, repeated exposure to sewage and fertilizer runoff. 3 Ocean Pollution
Chemical Pollution When it rains, the herbicides (weed killers) and insecticides (insect killers) used in farming and on lawns are carried to streams. Eventually, they can reach the ocean and kill other organisms far from where they were applied originally. 3 Ocean Pollution
Chemical Pollution Other chemicals are released into the air, where they later settle into the ocean. 3 Ocean Pollution
Chemical Pollution In a process called biological amplification (am plah fah KAY shun), harmful chemicals can build up in the tissues of organisms that are at the top of the food chain. 3 Ocean Pollution Higher consumers like dolphins and seabirds accumulate greater amounts of a toxin as they continue to feed on smaller organisms. At high concentrations, some chemicals can damage an organism’s immune and reproductive system.
Oil Pollution As much as 44 percent of oil that reaches the ocean comes from land. 3 Ocean Pollution Other sources of oil pollution are leaks at offshore oil wells and oil mixed with wastewater that is pumped out of ships.
Solid-Waste Pollution The presence of trash ruins a beautiful beach, and solid wastes, such as plastic bags and fishing line, can entangle animals. 3 Ocean Pollution
Solid-Waste Pollution 3 Ocean Pollution Illegally dumped medical waste such as needles, plastic tubing, and bags also are a threat to humans and other animals.
Sediment Human activities such as agriculture, deforestation, and construction tear up the soil. 3 Ocean Pollution Rain washes soil into streams and eventually into an ocean nearby. This causes huge amounts of silt to accumulate in many coastal areas. When large amounts of silt cover coral reefs and fill marshes, these habitats are destroyed.
Effects of Pollution Today, there is not a single area of the ocean that is not polluted in some way. 3 Ocean Pollution As pollution from land continues to reach the ocean, scientists are recording dramatic changes in this environment.
Effects of Pollution Some scientists hypothesize that a relationship exists between increased pollution in the ocean and the number of harmful algal bloom in the last 30 years. 3 Ocean Pollution
Controlling Pollution Treaties prohibit the dumping of some kinds of hazardous wastes from vessels, aircraft, and platforms. 3 Ocean Pollution One treaty requires that some ships and operators of offshore platforms have oil pollution emergency plans.
Controlling Pollution Although the idea of reducing land pollution to better protect the ocean has been discussed, no international agreement exists to prevent and control land-based activities that affect the oceans. 3 Ocean Pollution
What You Can Do You can help by disposing of wastes properly and volunteering for beach or community cleanups. 3 Ocean Pollution You can recycle materials such as newspapers, glass, and plastics and never dump chemicals like oil or paint onto soil or into water.
3 Section Check Question 1 What is pollution? Answer The introduction of harmful waste products,  chemicals or other substances not native to an  environment is pollution. NC: 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
3 Section Check Question 2 What are the four main ways that pollutants  from land reach the ocean? NC: 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
3 Section Check Answer The ways pollutants reach the ocean are  deliberate dumping, accidental spillage, rain,  and runoff.  NC: 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
3 Section Check Question 3 How can sediment act as a pollutant? Answer When excess soil washes into streams, it can  cause large amounts of silt to accumulate in  coastal areas, destroying the habitats of various  organisms. NC: 3.04, 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
To advance to the next item or next page click on any of the following keys: mouse, space bar, enter, down or forward arrow.  Click on this icon to return to the table of contents Click on this icon to return to the previous slide Click on this icon to move to the next slide Click on this icon to open the resources file. Help Click on this icon to go to the end of the presentation.
End of Chapter Summary File

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Chapter 8 Oceanography

  • 1.  
  • 2. Chapter: Oceanography Table of Contents Section 3: Ocean Pollution Section 1: The Seafloor Section 2: Life in the Ocean
  • 3. Ocean basins, which are low areas of Earth that are filled with water, have many different features. The continental shelf is the gradually sloping end of a continent that extends under the ocean. The ocean covering the continental shelf can be as deep as 350 m. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor
  • 4. Beyond the shelf, the ocean floor drops more steeply, forming the continental slope. The continental slope extends from the outer edge of the continental shelf down to the ocean floor. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor
  • 5. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor
  • 6. Beyond the continental slop lie the trenches, valleys, plains, mountains, and ridges of the ocean basin. In the deep ocean, sediment, derived mostly from land, settles constantly on the ocean floor. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor These deposits fill in valleys and create flat seafloor areas called abyssal plains .
  • 7. Some areas of abyssal plains have small hills and seamounts. Seamounts are underwater, inactive volcanic peaks. The Ocean Basins 1 The Seafloor They most commonly are found in the Pacific Ocean.
  • 8. Mid-ocean ridges can be found at the bottom of all ocean basins. They form a continuous underwater ridge approximately 70,000 km long. A mid-ocean ridge is the area in an ocean basin where new ocean floor is formed. Ridges and Trenches 1 The Seafloor
  • 9. As crustal plates move, the ocean floor changes. Ridges and Trenches 1 The Seafloor This is the process of seafloor spreading. When ocean plates separate, hot magma from Earth’s interior forms new ocean crust.
  • 10. New ocean floor forms along mid-ocean ridges as lava erupts through cracks in Earth’s crust. When the lava hits the water, it cools quickly into solid rock, forming new seafloor. Ridges and Trenches 1 The Seafloor
  • 11. On the ocean floor, subduction zones are marked by deep ocean trenches. A trench is a long, narrow, steep-sided depression where one crustal plate sinks beneath another. Subduction Zones 1 The Seafloor
  • 12. Others can be found only in the deep abyssal regions on the ocean floor. Resources can be found in many places in the ocean. Some deposits on the continental shelf are relatively easy to extract. Mineral Resources from the Seafloor 1 The Seafloor
  • 13. Approximately 20 percent of the world’s oil comes from under the seabed. To extract these substances, wells are drilled into the seafloor from floating vessels and fixed platforms. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
  • 14. Other deposits on the continental shelf include phosphorite, which is used to make fertilizer, and limestone, which is used to make cement. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
  • 15. Sand and gravel, both economically important, also can be dredged from the continental shelf. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
  • 16. Sometimes the energy of ocean waves and currents can cause denser mineral grains that have been brought in by rivers to concentrate in one place. These deposits, called placer (PLAHS ur) deposits, can occur in coastal regions where rivers entering the ocean suddenly lose energy, slow down, and drop their sediment. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
  • 17. Metals such as gold and titanium and gemstones such as diamonds are mined from placer deposits in some coastal regions. Continental Shelf Deposits 1 The Seafloor
  • 18. Elements such as sulfur and metals like iron, copper, zinc, and silver can be concentrated in holes and cracks along mid-ocean ridges. Deep-Water Deposits 1 The Seafloor Other mineral deposits can precipitate from seawater.
  • 19. Manganese nodules are small, darkly colored lumps strewn across large areas of the ocean basins. Deep-Water Deposits 1 The Seafloor These nodules are rich in manganese, copper, iron, nickel, and cobalt, which are used the manufacture of steel, paint, and batteries. Most of the nodules lie thousands of meters deep in the ocean and are not currently being mined.
  • 20. 1 Section Check Question 1 What is the continental shelf? The continental shelf is the gradually sloping end of a continent that extends under the ocean. Answer
  • 21. 1 Section Check Question 2 Which structure extends from the outer edge of the continental shelf to the ocean floor? A. abyssal plain B. continental slope C. oceanic trench D. seamount
  • 22. 1 Section Check Answer The answer is B. The other features lie beyond the continental slope.
  • 23. 1 Section Check Question 3 What is the area in an ocean basin where new ocean floor is forming? Answer New seafloor forms at mid-ocean ridges as lava erupts through cracks in Earth’s crust. NC: 3.03
  • 24. Life Processes Organisms that live in the ocean also carry out life processes every day. Obtaining the food necessary to survive can be done in several ways. 2 Life in the Ocean One of the most important processes in the ocean, as it is on land, is that organisms obtain food to use for energy.
  • 25. Photosynthesis Marine organisms such as plants and algae use energy from the Sun to build their tissues and produce their own food. This process of making food is called photosynthesis . 2 Life in the Ocean
  • 26. Photosynthesis Organisms that undergo photosynthesis are called producers. Producers also need nutrients, such as nitrogen and phosphorus, in order to produce organic matter. 2 Life in the Ocean These and other nutrients are obtained from the surrounding water.
  • 27. Photosynthesis Organisms that feed on producers are called consumers. Consumers in the marine environment include shrimp, fish, dolphins, whales, and sharks. 2 Life in the Ocean
  • 28. Energy Relationships Energy from the Sun is transferred through food chains. 2 Life in the Ocean Although the organisms of the ocean capture only a small part of the Sun’s energy, this energy is passed from producer to consumer, then to other consumers.
  • 29. Energy Relationships At each stage in the food chain, energy obtained by one organism is used by other organisms to move, grow, repair cells, reproduce, and eliminate waste. Most organisms depend on more than one species for food. 2 Life in the Ocean
  • 30. Energy Relationships In an ecosystem, food chains overlap and are connected much like the threads of a spider’s web. These highly complex systems are called food webs. 2 Life in the Ocean
  • 31. Chemosynthesis Chemosynthesis (kee moh SIHN thuh sus) involves using sulfur or nitrogen compounds as an energy source, instead of light from the Sun, to produce food. Bacteria that perform chemosynthesis using sulfur compounds live along mid-ocean ridges near hydrothermal vents where no light is available. 2 Life in the Ocean
  • 32. Chemosynthesis 2 Life in the Ocean The bacteria found here form the base of a food chain and support a host of highly specialized organisms such as giant tube worms, clams, crabs, and shrimp.
  • 33. Other Life Processes Reproduction also is a vital life process. 2 Life in the Ocean Organisms, such as corals and sponges, depend on ocean currents for successful reproduction.
  • 34. Other Life Processes 2 Life in the Ocean Other organisms, such a s salmon and the Atlantic eel, travel long distances across the ocean in order to reproduce in a specific location.
  • 35. Ocean Life Many varieties of plants and animals live in the ocean. 2 Life in the Ocean Although some organisms live in the open ocean or on the deep ocean floor, most marine organisms live in the waters above the continental shelf.
  • 36. Ocean Life Because light is available for photosynthesis, large numbers of producers live in the waters above the continental shelf. 2 Life in the Ocean These waters also contain many nutrients that producers use to carry out life processes.
  • 37. Plankton Marine organisms that drift with the currents are called plankton . 2 Life in the Ocean Plankton range from microscopic algae and animals to organisms as large as jellyfish. Most phytoplankton  plankton that are producers  are one-celled organisms that float in the upper layers of the ocean where light needed for photosynthesis is available.
  • 38. Plankton One abundant form of phytoplankton is a once-celled organism called a diatom. 2 Life in the Ocean Diatoms and other phytoplankton are the source of food for zooplankton, animals that drift with ocean currents. Magnification
  • 39. Nekton Animals that actively swim, rather than drift with the currents in the ocean, are called nekton . 2 Life in the Ocean Nekton can be found from polar regions to the tropics and from shallow water to the deepest parts of the ocean.
  • 40. Nekton As nekton move throughout the oceans, it is important that they are able to control their buoyancy, or how easily they float or sink. 2 Life in the Ocean Many fish have a special organ filled with gas that helps them control their buoyancy. By changing their buoyancy, organisms can change their depth in the ocean.
  • 41. Nekton Some deep-dwelling nekton are adapted with special light-generating organs. The light has several uses for these organisms. 2 Life in the Ocean Some deep-sea organisms use this light to momentarily blind predators so they can escape. Others use it to attract mates.
  • 42. Bottom Dwellers The plants and animals living on or in the seafloor are the benthos (BEN-thahs). 2 Life in the Ocean Benthic animals include crabs, snails, sea urchins, and bottom-dwelling fish such as flounder. These organisms move or swim across the bottom to find food.
  • 43. Bottom Dwellers Sea anemones and sponges, filter out food particles from seawater. 2 Life in the Ocean Bottom-dwelling animals can be found living from the shallow water of the continental shelf to the deepest areas of the ocean.
  • 44. Ocean Margin Habitats The area of the environment where a plant or animal normally lives is called a habitat. 2 Life in the Ocean Beaches, rocky shores, estuaries, and coral reefs are some examples of the different habitats found along ocean margins.
  • 45. Beaches Although the beach is great fun for people, it is a very stressful environment for the plants and animals that live there. 2 Life in the Ocean
  • 46. Beaches 2 Life in the Ocean They constantly deal with waves, changing tides, and storms, all of which redistribute large amounts of sand. These organisms must adapt to natural changes as well as changes created by humans.
  • 47. Rocky Shore Areas In some regions the shoreline is rock. 2 Life in the Ocean Algae, sea anemones, mussels, and barnacles encrust submerged rocks. Sea stars, sea urchins, octopuses, and hermit crabs crawl along the rock surfaces, looking for food.
  • 48. Rocky Shore Areas Tide pools are an important habitat for many marine organisms. 2 Life in the Ocean They serve as protected areas where many animals, such as octopuses and fish, can develop safely from juveniles to adults.
  • 49. Rocky Shore Areas 2 Life in the Ocean Tide pools contain an abundance of food and offer protection from larger predators.
  • 50. Estuaries An estuary is an area where the mouth of a river opens into an ocean. 2 Life in the Ocean Because estuaries receive freshwater from rivers, they are not as salty as the ocean. Estuaries are full of life from salt-tolerant grasses to oysters, clams, shrimps, fish, and even manatees.
  • 51. Estuaries Newly hatched fish, shrimps, crabs, and other animals enter estuaries as microscopic organisms and remain there until adulthood. 2 Life in the Ocean For these vulnerable animals, fewer predators and more food are found in estuaries.
  • 52. Coral Reefs Corals thrive in clear, warm water that receives a lot of sunlight. 2 Life in the Ocean Each coral animal builds a hard capsule around its body from the calcium it removes from seawater. Each capsule is cemented to others to form a large colony called a reef.
  • 53. Coral Reefs A reef is a rigid, wave-resistant structure built by corals from skeletal material. 2 Life in the Ocean As coral reef forms, other benthos such as sea stars and sponges and nekton such as fish and turtles begin living on it.
  • 54. 2 Section Check Question 1 Which process involves using sulfur or nitrogen compounds as an energy source to produce food? NC: 3.03 A. chemosynthesis B. nitrosynthesis C. photosynthesis D. sulfurosynthesis
  • 55. 2 Section Check Answer The answer is A. The energy source for photosynthesis is the Sun. NC: 3.03
  • 56. 2 Section Check Question 2 Marine animals that actively swim are called __________. NC: 3.03, 304 A. benthos B. nataton C. nekton D. plankton
  • 57. 2 Section Check Answer The answer is C. Nekton include all swimming forms of fish and animals. NC: 3.03, 304
  • 58. 2 Section Check Question 3 A(n) __________ is an area where the mouth of a river opens into an ocean. NC: 3.03 A. alluvial fan B. delta C. estuary D. reef
  • 59. 2 Section Check Answer The answer is C. Alluvial fans and deltas are sediment deposits. NC: 3.03
  • 60. Sources of Pollution Pollution is the introduction of harmful waste products, chemicals, and other substances not native to an environment. A pollutant is a substance that causes damage to organisms by interfering with life processes. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 61. Sources of Pollution Pollutants from land eventually will reach the ocean in one of four main ways. They can be dumped deliberately and directly into the ocean. 3 Ocean Pollution Material can be lost overboard accidentally.
  • 62. Sources of Pollution Some pollutants begin in the air and enter the ocean through rain. Other pollutants will reach the ocean by being carried in rivers that empty into the ocean. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 63. Sewage The introduction of sewage to an area of the ocean can cause immediate changes in the ecosystem. Sewage is a pollutant that acts like fertilizer. 3 Ocean Pollution It is rich in nutrients that cause some types of algae to reproduce rapidly, creating what is called a bloom.
  • 64. Sewage The problem occurs when the algae die. As huge numbers of bacteria reproduce and decompose the algae, much of the oxygen in the water is used up. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 65. Sewage When sewage is dumped routinely into the same area year after year, changes take place. Entire ecosystems have been altered drastically as a result of long term, repeated exposure to sewage and fertilizer runoff. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 66. Chemical Pollution When it rains, the herbicides (weed killers) and insecticides (insect killers) used in farming and on lawns are carried to streams. Eventually, they can reach the ocean and kill other organisms far from where they were applied originally. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 67. Chemical Pollution Other chemicals are released into the air, where they later settle into the ocean. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 68. Chemical Pollution In a process called biological amplification (am plah fah KAY shun), harmful chemicals can build up in the tissues of organisms that are at the top of the food chain. 3 Ocean Pollution Higher consumers like dolphins and seabirds accumulate greater amounts of a toxin as they continue to feed on smaller organisms. At high concentrations, some chemicals can damage an organism’s immune and reproductive system.
  • 69. Oil Pollution As much as 44 percent of oil that reaches the ocean comes from land. 3 Ocean Pollution Other sources of oil pollution are leaks at offshore oil wells and oil mixed with wastewater that is pumped out of ships.
  • 70. Solid-Waste Pollution The presence of trash ruins a beautiful beach, and solid wastes, such as plastic bags and fishing line, can entangle animals. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 71. Solid-Waste Pollution 3 Ocean Pollution Illegally dumped medical waste such as needles, plastic tubing, and bags also are a threat to humans and other animals.
  • 72. Sediment Human activities such as agriculture, deforestation, and construction tear up the soil. 3 Ocean Pollution Rain washes soil into streams and eventually into an ocean nearby. This causes huge amounts of silt to accumulate in many coastal areas. When large amounts of silt cover coral reefs and fill marshes, these habitats are destroyed.
  • 73. Effects of Pollution Today, there is not a single area of the ocean that is not polluted in some way. 3 Ocean Pollution As pollution from land continues to reach the ocean, scientists are recording dramatic changes in this environment.
  • 74. Effects of Pollution Some scientists hypothesize that a relationship exists between increased pollution in the ocean and the number of harmful algal bloom in the last 30 years. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 75. Controlling Pollution Treaties prohibit the dumping of some kinds of hazardous wastes from vessels, aircraft, and platforms. 3 Ocean Pollution One treaty requires that some ships and operators of offshore platforms have oil pollution emergency plans.
  • 76. Controlling Pollution Although the idea of reducing land pollution to better protect the ocean has been discussed, no international agreement exists to prevent and control land-based activities that affect the oceans. 3 Ocean Pollution
  • 77. What You Can Do You can help by disposing of wastes properly and volunteering for beach or community cleanups. 3 Ocean Pollution You can recycle materials such as newspapers, glass, and plastics and never dump chemicals like oil or paint onto soil or into water.
  • 78. 3 Section Check Question 1 What is pollution? Answer The introduction of harmful waste products, chemicals or other substances not native to an environment is pollution. NC: 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
  • 79. 3 Section Check Question 2 What are the four main ways that pollutants from land reach the ocean? NC: 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
  • 80. 3 Section Check Answer The ways pollutants reach the ocean are deliberate dumping, accidental spillage, rain, and runoff. NC: 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
  • 81. 3 Section Check Question 3 How can sediment act as a pollutant? Answer When excess soil washes into streams, it can cause large amounts of silt to accumulate in coastal areas, destroying the habitats of various organisms. NC: 3.04, 3.05, 3.07, 3.08
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