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Published byCathleen Sharp Modified over 9 years ago
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PLANKTON Ocean Wanderers
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Going with the Flow Weak or non- swimmers May move up and down in the water column
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Holoplankton Spend their whole life as plankton
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Meroplankton Limited planktonic existence (larvae)
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Can ya see ‘em? Micro (large protists, small metazoans) –20 – 200 um –Not visible to naked eye
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Nanoplankton Small protists (2-20 um)
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Picoplankton Marine bacteria (0.2 – 2 um) Some bioluminescent
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Femtoplankton Marine viruses (really teeny tiny – less than 0.2 um)
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Yep! You can see ‘em! The big guys –Megaplankton –Macroscopic –Visible –20+ cm. –Jellyfish
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Macroplankton Pteropods (2 – 20 cm; sea butterflies; snails with small shells)
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Mesoplankton Copepods (0.2 – 2 cm)
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Where Everywhere –Foundation of ocean food web
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Phytoplankton Diatoms silica shells (tests) single cells or chains yellow-green or brown
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Diatomaceous Earth Formed from fossilized diatom skeletons Soft, chalky sedimentary rock Used for –Filtration –Cat litter –Mild abrasive, etc.
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Phytoplankton, cont. Dinoflagellates –Single-celled –Brown –Cause “red tides” –Produce saxitoxin (paralytic) –May be bioluminescent –Some have cellulose shell
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Still more Phytoplankton Cyanobacteria –Small (~2 um) –Unicellular, but may grow in large colonies (visible) –Important producer
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And more (phytoplankton) Coccolithophores –Ca shell (coccoliths) –Blooms may give water a milky appearance –When eaten, plates excreted and fall to ocean floor –Warmer water
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Zooplankton Radiolarians –Single-celled –Silica tests –May have zooxanthellae –Name comes from shape
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More Zooplankton Foraminiferans –Single-celled –Ca shell –Have pseudopods –Warmer water
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The White Cliffs of Dover Formed from the shells of: –coccoliths –forams –Other Ca shells Include layers of silica from: –Diatoms –Radiolarians, etc.
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Still more Zooplankton Zooflagellates Ciliates –Engulf food –Propelled by cilia or flagella
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Macrozooplankton I Jellyfish –12 mm to 2m (2.5m?) across –Up to 40m (60m?)long –Up o 300 – 500 lbs. –Toxin may affect Nervous system Muscles Blood cells Cause tissue necrosis
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Macrozooplankton II Siphonophores –Colonies of animals –Cnidarians –Includes Portugese Man-of-War –may be Earth’s most abundant predator –bioluminescent
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Macrozooplankton III Copepods –Small crustaceans –Omnivores –Rudimentary eyes
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Macrozooplankton IV Krill –Shrimplike crustaceans –Up to 5cm and 1g –Dense schools in cold water –Most are filter-feeders –An important food for other animals
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Still more Macrozooplankton Larvae of larger marine critters (fish, mollusks, crustaceans, echinoderms, etc.)
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Macrozooplankton…. Salps –Tunicates (primitive chordates) –Individual or in colonies –Microscopic up to 12cm
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? What will happen if climate change causes the oceans to become more acidic? (Presently, ocean water is slightly alkaline.)
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