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THE DEEP
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Aphotic Zone (Deep Pelagic)
Below 1000m (3280 ft) Explored < 1%
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Pressure At 1000 m is 100X greater than sea level pressure
Surface organisms would be crushed
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After nearly 5,000 m down
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Adaptations Fluid is almost incompressible
Fluid in animals’ bodies match surrounding water
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Dive 1000m, over an hour Lungs collapse flat
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Cold 1 - 2 C (34-37 F) Body temp close to water Metabolism slow
Reproduce less and later Live longer
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Food is Scarce 5% of food produced in the euphotic zone No migrators
Need to conserve energy…How?
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Be Blobby
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“Blobby” Flabby, watery flesh Weak skeletons No scales No swim bladder
Sit and float
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Be small Many angler fish are 10 cm or less!
Largest is 1m (3 ft) and 9 kg (20 lb.)
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Eat anything!
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Huge Mouths and expandable stomachs
Swallower Eel
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Use vibrations to find food
Hairy angler has sensitive antennae Use lateral line to sense vibrations
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Go fishing! Dragonfish Anglerfish
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It’s Dark! Small eyes Black, red color Bioluminescence:
--To attract prey or find mate --Not for counterlighting
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Sex in the Dark 1) Use Bioluminescence to ID species
2) Be a hermaphrodite 3) Release chemicals to find mate
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Sex in the Dark 4) Attach yourself to your mate!
Males Goal: Search for female Have muscular bodies, large eyes, and organ to “smell”
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Sex in the Dark Male bites female and they become fused
Male provides sperm to female
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World’s Smallest Fish Male, sexually mature is 6.2 mm (less than a ¼ inch) Female is 46 mm (1.8 inches)
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Disphotic Zone (Mesopelagic)
150 m depth Not enough light for photosynthesis 10-20% food from surface is available
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Size and Shape Small 10 to 15 cm Long flattened body
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Lantern fish
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Large eyes Hatchetfish Light sensitive for dim light Winteria
Look up at surface and spot silhouettes of prey Two fields of vision
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Mouths Large, hinged extendible jaws Needle-like teeth Eat anything
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Sabertooth Viperfish Only a couple of inches long
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Color Black, or black with silver sides
Counterillumination/counterlighting
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Other things besides fish may be transparent
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Bioluminescence
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Bioluminescence Photophores for camouflage Attract prey Attract mates
Defense
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Migrators vs. Nonmigrators
Swim up to surface to eat at night Well-developed muscles and bone Swim bladder Sit and wait Less muscle,flabby No swim bladder Weak bones
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Lantern fish Migrators
Largest migration of life on earth 1700 m to 100 m (3 hour trip) Create a false bottom on sonar
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Deep-Sea Floor rabbit fish and tripod fish
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Deep sea fish Rat tail fish and hagfish
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Deep sea fish Cruise the bottom
Fecal pellets and the occasional whale for food Larger, long bodies, strong muscles, small eyes Not much bioluminescence Dark brown, black
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Hydrothermal Vents
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Mid-Ocean Ridge System
Oceanic plates are pulling apart
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Hydrothermal Vents At mid-ocean ridges Seawater seeps through cracks
Gets super heated Forced back up through crust
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Black Smokers Warm 50-68 degrees F Hot! 662 degrees F
Heated water dissolves minerals When it cools, minerals deposit around vents
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Hydrogen sulfide 1. Energy-rich molecule 2. Toxic to most organisms
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Bacteria - Chemosynthesis
Basis of food chain Use hydrogen sulfide for energy
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Bacteria as producers 1. Live inside animals Symbiotic
Bacteria get hydrogen sulfide, animals get food
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Pompeii worm
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Pompeii Worm
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Tube Worm
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Up to 2 m tall Riftia tube worm
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Bacteria as producers 2. Filter feeders (mussels, clams)
3. Eaten directly (shrimp scrape bacteria off chimneys)
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Mussels (filter feed) and eel
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Submersible
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Mussels
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Vents don’t last Organisms get “cooked” 20 - 75 years
Organisms get very large
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Cold Seeps
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Cold Seeps At continental margins
Hydrogen sulfide and methane for chemosynthesis Grow slower, old and stable
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Cold Seeps
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Whale carcasses Decomposing - hydrogen sulfide
Supports chemosynthetic bacteria Link to vents?? One about every 25 Km
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Worms at whale carcass No eyes No mouth, stomach
Green “roots” grow into bone and digest fat and oils with the help of bacteria
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Worms at whale carcass Females, 2-7 cm with large egg sac
Microscopic male worms living inside the females Eggs/larvae float until they find another whale Related to tube worms at hydrothermal vents
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Whale bone with worms Females, 2-7 cm with large egg sac Microscopic male worms living inside the females Eggs/larvae float until they find another whale Related to tube worms at hydrothermal vents
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