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YOU NEED YOUR MARINE BIO BOOK TODAY

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Presentation on theme: "YOU NEED YOUR MARINE BIO BOOK TODAY"— Presentation transcript:

1 YOU NEED YOUR MARINE BIO BOOK TODAY
ABSOLUTELY NO FOOD OR DRINK IN LAB TODAY JQ: Recall: What are the effects of an oil spill in a body of water?

2 GLOVES AND GOGGLES MUST BE WORN TODAY
Tube 1: Tube 2: Tube 3: Tube 4: 2mL Tetra 2mL Tetra 2mL water mL water 10 drops of oil 10 drops oil 10 drops oil drops oil 2 ml Water 2 mL bacteria 2 mL water 2 mL bacteria

3 When finished, read 225-248, answer these questions:
Describe the difference between Rocky intertidal and soft bottom intertidal. Describe some of the unique hardships that intertidal organisms face Describe why space, and not food, is the limiting factor in intertidal zones (for many organisms) What is vertical zonation? How does it reduce competition among organisms? Describe some of the unique hardships that soft-bottom infauna face, and the adaptations they possess.

4 ROCKY INTERTIDAL ZONE Western US rocky intertidal zones –less seasonal changes. The greatest limiting factor is space. Eastern US soft-bottomed intertidal zones - temperature changes cause seasonal population changes. The greatest limiting factor is climate.

5 Rocky coasts are characterized by:
- abundant food supply with good light - tides produce hours of flooding in cool water followed by desiccation (drying out) and high temperatures - tidal pools are created and emptied - temperature and salinity fluctuate - very distinct zonation worldwide - wave shock - competition for space fierce (limiting factor)

6 COPING STRATEGIES / ADAPTATIONS:
WATER LOSS: run & hide, clam up, tolerate allow drying out find tide pools TEMPERATURE tolerate move to moist areas light color SALINITY clam up tolerate RESTRICTED FEEDING (MOST ARE FILTER FEEDERS) only feed when tide is high tide height determines where they can live

7 COPING STRATEGIES / ADAPTATIONS:
WAVE SHOCK: attach (holdfasts, byssal threads, glue) cling (suction cups) fish lack swim bladders find shelter thicker shells compact shape low profile go with the flow / flexible

8 Wave action cuts rocks into sea caves, cliffs and sea stacks that provide shelter. Competition for these limited living spaces is high. Inhabitants must find a place to attach or hide or be crushed between waves and rocks. Methods of attachment include cement, byssal threads, holdfasts, muscular and tube feet, and boring.

9 Adaptations also include symbiosis and reproductive strategies, like hermaphrodites and organisms that change sex. NOAA The rocky coastal communities’ succession has a predictable pattern that is often controlled by sea urchins. Grazing urchins remove algae from rocks.

10 New communities can then begin because one group doesn’t over populate the area.
Pioneer stage - bacteria and algae Juvenile - protozoa and worms Mature - barnacles, rockweed, mussels, seastars and sea urchins Collectively these animals became known as fouling communities because of their harmful effects on ship’s hulls, docks, pilings, and the smell they create at low tide.

11 THE BATTLE FOR SPACE AVAILIBILITY OF SPACE LIMITS POPULATIONS IN INTERTIDAL COMPETITION FOR SPACE DOMINANT BIOLOGICAL FACTOR HOW TO COMPETE - be first to get to open space - effective dispersal - reproduce rapidly - take over - grow over

12 VERTICAL ZONATION UPPER, MIDDLE & LOWER ZONES UPPER LIMIT SET BY PHYSICAL FACTORS LOWER LIMIT SET BY BIOLOGICAL FACTORS (predation & competition)


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