Chapter 9 Marine Ecology
The place where an organism resides Habitat The place where an organism resides
The study of the interaction of organisms with their environment Ecology The study of the interaction of organisms with their environment
Biotic Living
Abiotic Non-living
Anything an organism needs to survive Resources Anything an organism needs to survive Trouble when short
Required substances other than O2, CO2, H2O, & sunlight Nutrients Required substances other than O2, CO2, H2O, & sunlight
Growth Curve A graph representing growth over time
Growth rate depends on its own population due to limited resources Self Regulation Growth rate depends on its own population due to limited resources
Survival of the fittest Natural Selection Survival of the fittest
Genetic changes over many generations due to natural selection Evolution Genetic changes over many generations due to natural selection
Fighting over resources Competition Fighting over resources
Competitive Exclusion When one species becomes extinct due to losing out in the struggle for resources
Resource Partitioning Sharing resources Each species find a way to get its share of resources
Ecological Niche How each species fits in Unique methods that species adapt to
One organism eating another Predation One organism eating another
The organism doing the eating Predator The organism doing the eating
The organism getting eaten Prey The organism getting eaten
Carnivore Meat eater
Herbivore Plant or algae eater
Coevolution When two species are involved in competition or predation, both improve
Living together in some association Symbiosis Living together in some association
Smaller partner in a symbiotic relationship Symbiont Smaller partner in a symbiotic relationship
Larger partner in a symbiotic relationship Host Larger partner in a symbiotic relationship
Types of Symbiosis Mutualism Commensalism Parasitism
A symbiotic relationship in which both partners benefit Mutualism A symbiotic relationship in which both partners benefit
Commensalism A symbiotic relationship in which one partner benefits while the other is unaffected
Parasitism A symbiotic relationship in which one partner benefits at the others expense
Autotrophs Produce their own food Carbon fixers Producers
Heterotrophs Must consume food Consumers
Food Chain Chain of organisms in which successively larger organisms eat smaller ones
Trophic Levels Primary producers Primary consumers, 1st Secondary consumers 2nd etc
Food Web Because most species eat many different species, each species can be linked to many
Determining Trophic Levels Each trophic level is classified as one level above the highest level its organisms consume
The top animal in any food chain Top Predator The top animal in any food chain
The total mass of an entire species or designated group Biomass The total mass of an entire species or designated group
Trophic Pyramid Pyramid of levels designed to show relative biomass of each level
Organisms that help break down other organisms Decomposers Organisms that help break down other organisms
Detritus The combination of sediment, dead organic matter, waste products, and decomposers on the bottom
Productivity A measure of the carbon fixation within an unit volume
Carbon Fixation Converting atmospheric carbon in the form of carbon dioxide to a usable form (organic matter)
Nitrogen Fixation Converting atmospheric nitrogen in the form of nitrogen gas to a usable form (organic matter)
The biomass of organisms that exist at any given time Standing Stock The biomass of organisms that exist at any given time
Chlorophyll The main pigment that absorbs energy in the form of light that is used to drive photosynthesis
Nutrient Cycles Carbon Cycle:
Nutrient Cycles Nitrogen Cycle:
Biological Zonation
Pelagic In the water column
Planktonic Organisms that cannot swim against the currents Floating or drifting organisms
Photosynthetic plankton Phytoplankton Photosynthetic plankton
Heterotrophic plankton Zooplankton Heterotrophic plankton
Organisms that can swim against the currents Nektonic Organisms that can swim against the currents Swimming organisms
Benthic Bottom dwelling
Epipelagic Surface water where light can penetrate Photic zone
Mesopelagic Middle water just below where light can penetrate where shadows exist Twilight zone
Deep water where it is completely dark Bathypelagic Deep water where it is completely dark
Water near the sea floor Abyssopelagic Water near the sea floor
Hadopelagic Water in deep trenches
Splash Zone Area of the shoreline just above the highest tides that get wet with spray from the waves
Area of shoreline between the lowest and the highest tides Intertidal Zone Area of shoreline between the lowest and the highest tides
Subtidal Zone Benthic area from the lowest tides to the edge of the continental shelf (shelf break)
Benthic region along the continental slope Bathyl Zone Benthic region along the continental slope
Benthic areas in trenches Hadal Zone Benthic areas in trenches
Benthic area of the sea floor Abyssal Zone Benthic area of the sea floor
Coastal Zone Area of the oceans near shore or along the coastline Neritic Zone
Area of the oceans away from shore Oceanic Zone Area of the oceans away from shore